My wife had at the time not dove deeper than 30 ft. I took her to vortex FLA to the cave entrance. she nearly crapped when she saw she was at 60' and when we surfaced she was amazed as to why she had so little air. had she ignored her spg and was at 100 ft diving like she was at 30 she would have gone OOA. Its the little things that, to most of us, make no difference but to new divers are new life preserving discoveries. So many like to cling to the REC diving limit and will not consider that with the courses OW AOW DEEP you are only partially certified as a rec diver with only OW.
So the argument here for me is that the c-cards don't mean much. How can an agency or any of its affiliates recognize me as having the qualifications (CERTIFY) of diving at any depth, whether it be,
OW, where one only performs 4 checkout dives (in my case 2 of the 4 reaching a 60 ft depth) or AOW where one only has to perform 1 deep dive (mine reaching 82 ft, but now because I did this and 3 other specialty dives in 45 ft water and one specialty on the boat, I can be certified to 100 ft.)
doesn't make a lot of sense to me. The OW manual doesn't get to a point where it says, "STOP!, You may not go below 60 ft.so there is no need to know how things are different at a greater depth," but instead gives information regarding changes below that point.The AOW manual doesn't get to a point where it says, "Stop, you may not go below 100 ft," but does read, "Although 40m/130 ft has been set as the maximum, for general purposes, you probably want to treat 30m/100 ft as the optimal maximum limit....." It goes on to give 4 practical reasons you shouldn't go below 100 ft., which is the same information given in the OW manual (although in my old manual, there is no depth attached to the info.)
Did you tell your wife you were going deeper? I don't see that situation having anything to do with being certified to a depth but instead simply not having enough experience. More diving, with an explanation (dive plan) of how deep a dive will be and/or an instructor will lead to a diver becoming more comfortable. The knowledge gained in a course/book can't be dismissed obviously, but getting in the water and applying skills learned (checking spg, breath control, safety stops, checking NDL, etc...) is what, IMO, will qualify a diver to complete dives at various depths.
How, before getting an AOW certification a couple of weeks ago, was I not qualified to go below 60 ft. when I possess the same skills needed in scuba whether going to 60 ft or 100 ft and have had the experience of a large portion of my dives being below 60 ft? That is an argument that goes on quite a bit on SB.
No answers here; just spouting off!!