havnmonkey
Contributor
if they run out of air and can't inflate the bc (if it is necessary) do they even need the BC? Dumping weights should be enough to give anyone positive bouyancy so the BC wouldn't need to inflate anyway; and you should do a "swimming ascent" anyway.
MANY people do not know how to react in a stressful/panic situation. A diver gets to the surface and takes his reg out of their mouth without infalting his/her BC, they start to sink and rapidly kick and claw their way back to the surface with at the most half a breath in their lungs. The panicking diver gulps for air and gets some air but mostly water, the windpipe will involuntarily close to keep the water out of the lungs and as a result the diver chokes, loses consciousness, and sinks to the depths below.
I'm a lifeguard on a really busy beach, thats how we have drownings in rip currents.
On a good note, someone who has just gone under will usually regain breathing on their own once above the surface.
MANY people do not know how to react in a stressful/panic situation. A diver gets to the surface and takes his reg out of their mouth without infalting his/her BC, they start to sink and rapidly kick and claw their way back to the surface with at the most half a breath in their lungs. The panicking diver gulps for air and gets some air but mostly water, the windpipe will involuntarily close to keep the water out of the lungs and as a result the diver chokes, loses consciousness, and sinks to the depths below.
I'm a lifeguard on a really busy beach, thats how we have drownings in rip currents.
On a good note, someone who has just gone under will usually regain breathing on their own once above the surface.