Question for anyone that can answer this.
What does it feel like to actually run out of air? Do you have a nice full breath and then the next there is nothing or can you began to feel like you are having to "suck harder" on the last few breaths thus letting you know you have a real problem?
Thanks.
:laughing: It's probably a good idea to actually practice this but having your buddy turn off your valve is not really the same. I guess it'd be fool hardy to dive to 60 ft with a 500# tank and wait for it tho. :shocked2:
From my limited & stupid experience, after arriving on Coz the night before too late to get my pony sent to the fill shack, then making a group dive to 50 ft, incurring one little problem after another, finally getting everything sorted out and my camera aimed, but failing to check my spg, :silly: I felt a hard drag and thought
"Oh caca!" I actually had done this once before several years ago and remembered that stupid feeling. :blush: I check my spg, thought
"Damn! Screw this!" waived bye to the DM I was buddied with but too far from (I think I was too embarrassed; see
"Pride cometh before a fall"), and headed up on my unplanned CESA.
To summarize the rest of that story, I did keep my reg in my mouth at least, exhaling, ascending slowly enough that I ran out of lung air,
stopped to suck a breath of recovered air from the tank - something to remember if you do use a SA for a fast CESA, then continued with my slow exhale and up, surfacing with enough left to inflate my BC and blow an inline whistle at the boat. One thing I did not think of and should have done is remove at least one weight pocket to hold onto so if I badly screwed up and passed out I would at least drop it and float to the surface. A drowned diver on top is easier to find and try to revive than one below. What I really should have done was skip the morning boat, get my head & gear better organized to dive safer, and wait for my pony - but there's my dumb story.
So, don't screw up,

but if you do - have your pony ready, or a SA you can rapidly deploy.
