What is Avanced Buoyancy Class?

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all4scuba05

Contributor
Messages
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Location
Wallingford, Connecticut
# of dives
100 - 199
The buoyancy topic taught in OW isn't enough?
 
well.... most OW classes don't really teach bouyancy. they just weight you
down and make you swim to stay level.

true bouyancy involves optimum weighting (so you don't get dragged down by all that weight) and trim (so you can stay horizontal in the water colum).

once you have those issues down, you can then practice controlling your
bouyancy so you can stay plus or minus 5 feet of a target depth at all times.

you can then decrease the plus or minus to 2 feet.

and then, ultimately, you just nail the depth at all times. this takes a lot
of diving, but if you have the fundamentals dialed in right, it comes naturally.
 
H2Andy:
well.... most OW classes don't really teach bouyancy. they just weight you down and make you swim to stay level.

Unfortunately, you're correct. Folks should avoid those "classes."
 
folks getting IN those classes have no idea they are.
 
I'd venture to say the majority of class are of that type.
 
Air in. Air out. Big puffs. Small puffs. there's not much more to it. I do agree that its takes practice. But if you dive every month. It shouldn't take a year to learn.
Too bad the agencies don't make those skills part of the OW test. Isn't that how some have died or gotten sick?
 
Cavern and DIR-F (from what I've heard) are advanced buoyancy classes. That class is a part of OW that should have been learned in OW but it had to go when people wanted to learn to dive in a weekend.
 
I teach a remedial buoyancy/trim class. We have fun in spring, play with our gear, learn new ways of kicking and play all day. It's a fun class and most are far better divers with a little focused attention. I limit the class to 4.
 
PerroneFord:
folks getting IN those classes have no idea they are.

I know.

Jason B:
I'd venture to say the majority of class are of that type.

True.
 
I dare say that the title of the "Advanced Buoyancy Class" does not begin to indicate the value derived from such a class, especially if it's taught by a certain instructor in Connecticut that I have a very high estimation of. Wish he was offering it a bit closer to my home.

-- Dan
 

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