Adobo
Contributor
MikeFerrara:I'd rather have a HP hose blow than an LP hose but in either case I would just shut down that post. That is something that I practice on every dive. I can do that with no help at all but in all likelyhood my buddy will be right there with long hose ready and to help make sure that I get the right thing shut down and the leak does indeed stop or to provide light, line reference or whatever. IF I was too slow about it or somehow lose too much gas, there's my buddies reserve gas (he/she) is a backup to a backup). If it happened to both of us at the same time (never even heard of that one), we would both be running on one post, sharing gas or even buddy breathing and obviously at less than full strength but we would be alive and on our way home (another three or four failures could do us in for certain, LOL). If we're on a dive where getting to the surface quick isn't practical we each have a bunch more gas than we need for the dive so one or even both of us can actually lose a LOT of gas before it becomes any real threat.
Mike,
To be fair, I think this discussion should start with the assumption that both divers are in singles.
What I have heard with my recreational diving training is that with any issue as serious as a blown hose, the dive is over. If diver 1 blows an LP hose and is losing gas rapidly, he should still have more than ample time to do a gas share with diver 2.
The scenario that was brought up really means, what do they do if diver 2 now experiences a malfunction that leads him to have an OOG emergency as well.
Assuming the worst case scenario with divers that were not being stupid, diver 1 might have experienced the OOG emergency at 130 feet (why he's diving a single to that depth is a whole 'nuther issue). Assume that it takes 1 minute for the donation to occur. Assume that they go straight to the surface (recreational procedures) with the ascent rate of 33'/min. That means there is a window of about 5 mins for diver 2 to all of a sudden experience an equipment failure. And not just any equipment failure, one that leads to a second OOG emergency.
There has to be some analogy that could adequately illustrate how ridiculous this scenario is.