johndiver999
Contributor
All this stuff about avoiding the situation is good, but that is not the question. Something to consider- once the victim takes your regulator, you really, really do not want him cranking on the hose. He could tear the hose from your first stage. IF that were to happen the situation becomes very serious.
So for that reason, you don't want a tug of war, certainly don't plan on it. It is to your benefit to try to control the victim especially once they "got you by your hose".
If the diver grabs the reg and bolts, I would do my best to match his ascent speed, grab his harness, if they don't calm down, you are going for a ride. I would wrap my legs around their midsection in a scissor hold. This will lock you into a perpendicular position which allows you then to lean back a little, and extend legs and feet/fins and create as much drag as possible.
Then, if we are arising in a cloud of bubbles, you know the ascent rate is excessive and I would use one hand to hold the victim and the other to dump from my BC - I don't use a dry suit. I would concentrate on taking shallow breaths, so as to hopefully avoid a lung injury. If possible, I might also grab their BC inflator and try to dump on the ascent if it seems too fast and if you have access to it.
Once on the surface after a rapid ascent, you might want to snatch the reg and re-descend to 20 feet if you feel like nitrogen is an issue. Hopefully the victim won't die on the surface with a full BC.
I have actually done something very similar, ridding a diver up in a very buoyant situation. Doing the scissor hold keeps your body still and is not that strenuous.
So for that reason, you don't want a tug of war, certainly don't plan on it. It is to your benefit to try to control the victim especially once they "got you by your hose".
If the diver grabs the reg and bolts, I would do my best to match his ascent speed, grab his harness, if they don't calm down, you are going for a ride. I would wrap my legs around their midsection in a scissor hold. This will lock you into a perpendicular position which allows you then to lean back a little, and extend legs and feet/fins and create as much drag as possible.
Then, if we are arising in a cloud of bubbles, you know the ascent rate is excessive and I would use one hand to hold the victim and the other to dump from my BC - I don't use a dry suit. I would concentrate on taking shallow breaths, so as to hopefully avoid a lung injury. If possible, I might also grab their BC inflator and try to dump on the ascent if it seems too fast and if you have access to it.
Once on the surface after a rapid ascent, you might want to snatch the reg and re-descend to 20 feet if you feel like nitrogen is an issue. Hopefully the victim won't die on the surface with a full BC.
I have actually done something very similar, ridding a diver up in a very buoyant situation. Doing the scissor hold keeps your body still and is not that strenuous.