Marty Kolenut
Registered
how is this even a thing?
![]()
Northeast USA Diving .. guess you gotta be here to understand
Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.
Benefits of registering include
how is this even a thing?
![]()
I’ve also been on boats that still release cups which will be recovered and used for the next dive
Not sure I follow you here. Captain drives over the wreck which is, let's say.. 130' deep. Crew drops shot line with a 40lb chain attached to one end and a tuna ball on the other. Boat comes back around and a diver goes in at the tuna ball, follows the shot line down to the wreck, Finds a solid spot to tie the chain into the wreck. At this point you have a diver at 130' who has been working depending on how far he has had to swim or drag the chain to find a good spot to tie. You also have a boat full of divers waiting to get in the water.
The "Shot Line" is actually the anchor line. After the crew spots the bottles, the boat is pulled up along the tuna ball and it's pulled up on deck with the Shot (anchor) line attached (and the other end now tied to the wreck). The tuna ball end is cleated and was-lah .. we're tied in.
Yes, the used condom can be easily recovered from the gut of a dead sea turtle.
The styrofoam cups have been around a long time. Part of the problem is you need to retrain the dive community from using something that is very reliable, very cheap and stupid simple. It does have the down side of not being environmentally friendly. But how many plastic water bottles are carried on boats every dive?
We do the same thing except our chain probably doesn’t weigh that much.
What we do is attach a 25ish lb weight to roughly 8-10’ of chain at the bottom of our shot line with a tuna ball at the end. This is tossed overboard when we’re over the wreck. We then go down, tie in and then shoot the weight to the surface once we’re tied in. This is the same procedure for our deeper technical wrecks too.
Not sure I follow you here. Captain drives over the wreck which is, let's say.. 130' deep. Crew drops shot line with a 40lb chain attached to one end and a tuna ball on the other. Boat comes back around and a diver goes in at the tuna ball, follows the shot line down to the wreck, Finds a solid spot to tie the chain into the wreck. At this point you have a diver at 130' who has been working depending on how far he has had to swim or drag the chain to find a good spot to tie. You also have a boat full of divers waiting to get in the water.
The "Shot Line" is actually the anchor line. After the crew spots the bottles, the boat is pulled up along the tuna ball and it's pulled up on deck with the Shot (anchor) line attached (and the other end now tied to the wreck). The tuna ball end is cleated and was-lah .. we're tied in.
{scratching my head} I agree with @CuzzA . It isn't difficult at all and this is what we do too. The 1st diver down ties into the wreck. Once set, he shoots a bag (smb) on a reel to the surface and hooks off the reel near the boat tie in.
The last diver on the wreck agrees to release the tie in slip knot and set it free. He then grabs the reel (The SMB is still inflated and not touched by the boat). He then drifts off the wreck with the SMB so the captain knows where to follow him. Every wreck diver knows how to shoot an SMB with an OPV. And if you suck at tying in to a wreck you can use 2 different colored SMB's which all the tech divers do to indicate what kind of problem they have.
P.S. If you are using any part of a chain or anchor to tie in, that's your main problem to get rid of.
It was suggested earlier to use a larger metal ring over the shot line so it wouldn't get hung up on a kink. Why wouldn't this work?