I wonder how much of what we’ve got here is the disagreement between the old style tech divers and current practice.
I know a local guy in his 60s who’s done a ton of deep Great Lakes diving. He just switched to a BP/W in the last year or two as he wanted to not get hassled on charters for his gear if he didn’t want to take his own boat out, as well as for safety reasons. He said he used to dive doubles with just a drysuit for buoyancy. Said he realized one day on deco that if his neck seal went on a dive, he was a goner.
He teases me about me working on my frog kick. He said he was taught to work as little as possible. They just pulled themselves along on the wreck with their hands. I get the impression that was standard practice, not just in current. Also did a lot of light deco dives with just a large back tank and a deco bottle. Doubles weren’t used all the time. Guy knows a ton, but the way he did things was totally different than how we’re taught nowadays.
I know a local guy in his 60s who’s done a ton of deep Great Lakes diving. He just switched to a BP/W in the last year or two as he wanted to not get hassled on charters for his gear if he didn’t want to take his own boat out, as well as for safety reasons. He said he used to dive doubles with just a drysuit for buoyancy. Said he realized one day on deco that if his neck seal went on a dive, he was a goner.
He teases me about me working on my frog kick. He said he was taught to work as little as possible. They just pulled themselves along on the wreck with their hands. I get the impression that was standard practice, not just in current. Also did a lot of light deco dives with just a large back tank and a deco bottle. Doubles weren’t used all the time. Guy knows a ton, but the way he did things was totally different than how we’re taught nowadays.