SeanQ
Contributor
This thread has turned into a :bomb:
There is nothing special about a 7 foot hose that makes it safer than a standard length hose. It doesn't guarantee an OOA diver gets the regulator or or that the gas they breath is safe for their profile.
A 7 foot hose does guarantee that when the OOA diver gets a regulator it will work. It won't be clogged with sand, grit, or other debris. It ensures that when they get a regulator, they get a working regulator that allows them a greater freedom of movement. The regulator they need is always in the same place.
Your comparison between a caver and a newbie lacks a point. Obviously a newbie is not as experianced as a cave diver yet that it not a valid arguement against using a long hose. When was the last time you saw a cave diver breathing from their short hose while letting the long hose drag? The comparison doesn't hold up.
The long hose is safe for a newbie provided they practice using it before a real OOA situation. The cave divers you were watching were probably not routing the long hose properly. Watch this video to see how easy it is to properly route the long hose after deploying it.
novadiver:I stongly disagree. go to any spring in FL and watch how many cavers come back up after the S drill to reroute that long hose. and now tell me that you think it's a good idea to put on on a newbie
There is nothing special about a 7 foot hose that makes it safer than a standard length hose. It doesn't guarantee an OOA diver gets the regulator or or that the gas they breath is safe for their profile.
A 7 foot hose does guarantee that when the OOA diver gets a regulator it will work. It won't be clogged with sand, grit, or other debris. It ensures that when they get a regulator, they get a working regulator that allows them a greater freedom of movement. The regulator they need is always in the same place.
Your comparison between a caver and a newbie lacks a point. Obviously a newbie is not as experianced as a cave diver yet that it not a valid arguement against using a long hose. When was the last time you saw a cave diver breathing from their short hose while letting the long hose drag? The comparison doesn't hold up.
The long hose is safe for a newbie provided they practice using it before a real OOA situation. The cave divers you were watching were probably not routing the long hose properly. Watch this video to see how easy it is to properly route the long hose after deploying it.