wazeediver
Registered
Gastronomy,
Keeping the operation simple will certainly help in keeping your team safe. Continued practice and the use of the KISS system will be all the communication a good diver and tender needs. Of course a comm system will give you a great piece of mind and ability to let the diver know if he is doing something wrong like not keeping line tight enough or a reminder to check is air.
The diver has to rely on the tender to know which way he is to go. Any time a diver gets confused and the pattern is broken the tender needs to bring him back over the uncompleted pattern. So really the tender is the main man to assure this and the diver needs to have that confidence in his tender.
When you don't have the diver on a comm system we have the diver check his air whenever he receives the one pull and respond with the one pull. ERDI was the first organization that I got involved with that introduced the one pull for OK. I like that one pull because if you are the tender and are ever in doubt, like if your diver stops for a short time you can just give one pull. If all is OK he will give the tender one pull back and you know that he has checked his air and all is good.
It has been quit a while sense I did my last DRI course so I'm not sure if they are using the one pull know or not. Blades can help us with that.
The key to keeping your signals straight is this
Keep it simple
Practice and Practice some more
Use a que card attached to the line tenders rope bag
Tender has to review that card with every diver every dive!
You will get to know your divers and which ones are the air hogs, your team needs to keep in mind that a more stressful dive the diver will suck more air than a training dive and so on.
Speaking from the ERDI side with a diver in the lake he will be tethered with a line that could have a loop in it or not that he will want to keep one hand on the line. If you don't have contact with the line and it is just attached to the harness the diver will not feel the line tender signals. The diver then searches with one hand out in front of him.
Hope this helps!
Just another guyÃÔ opinion
Keeping the operation simple will certainly help in keeping your team safe. Continued practice and the use of the KISS system will be all the communication a good diver and tender needs. Of course a comm system will give you a great piece of mind and ability to let the diver know if he is doing something wrong like not keeping line tight enough or a reminder to check is air.
The diver has to rely on the tender to know which way he is to go. Any time a diver gets confused and the pattern is broken the tender needs to bring him back over the uncompleted pattern. So really the tender is the main man to assure this and the diver needs to have that confidence in his tender.
When you don't have the diver on a comm system we have the diver check his air whenever he receives the one pull and respond with the one pull. ERDI was the first organization that I got involved with that introduced the one pull for OK. I like that one pull because if you are the tender and are ever in doubt, like if your diver stops for a short time you can just give one pull. If all is OK he will give the tender one pull back and you know that he has checked his air and all is good.
It has been quit a while sense I did my last DRI course so I'm not sure if they are using the one pull know or not. Blades can help us with that.
The key to keeping your signals straight is this
Keep it simple
Practice and Practice some more
Use a que card attached to the line tenders rope bag
Tender has to review that card with every diver every dive!
You will get to know your divers and which ones are the air hogs, your team needs to keep in mind that a more stressful dive the diver will suck more air than a training dive and so on.
Speaking from the ERDI side with a diver in the lake he will be tethered with a line that could have a loop in it or not that he will want to keep one hand on the line. If you don't have contact with the line and it is just attached to the harness the diver will not feel the line tender signals. The diver then searches with one hand out in front of him.
Hope this helps!

Just another guyÃÔ opinion