What is the deepest you can do an OOA?

What is your deepest OOA possible?

  • 40'

    Votes: 19 16.4%
  • 60'

    Votes: 23 19.8%
  • 80'

    Votes: 16 13.8%
  • 100+

    Votes: 59 50.9%

  • Total voters
    116
  • Poll closed .

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

howarde:
It may not be intuitive, but it SHOULD be taught in Basic Open Water training.

As it is...but for some, learning it once during a few weeks of classroom and pool work and two days of OW checkouts isn't enough to keep the memory fresh.
 
it would be a high stress maneuver

If you talk to people who have done them, (and for me) It is amazingly low stress. I think that is because you expect to have air hunger and you don't..... I know it is not desirable, but at the time it feels pretty good. Your brain says "hey? What's the big deal?..this is a piece of cake....this is going very well here" Only when you get to the surface do you think "geez, hope I did not screw myself."
 
gangrel441:
As it is...but for some, learning it once during a few weeks of classroom and pool work and two days of OW checkouts isn't enough to keep the memory fresh.
Then people like that should take a refresher course. If you don't know the basic principles that effect SCUBA divers, then you shouldn't be certified. Pressure change with depth is a very basic principle of SCUBA... If you don't know it, I would learn it.

BTW - I did all of my classroom in 2.5 days. I know how air pressure is effected by depth and/or altitude.
 
howarde:
It may not be intuitive, but it SHOULD be taught in Basic Open Water training.


Not all agencies.

And i applaud the forward thinking ones that no longer require it instead concentrating on the several much better solutions.
 
catherine96821:
If you talk to people who have done them, (and for me) It is amazingly low stress. I think that is because you expect to have air hunger and you don't..... I know it is not desirable, but at the time it feels pretty good. Your brain says "hey? What's the big deal?..this is a piece of cake....this is going very well here" Only when you get to the surface do you think "geez, hope I did not screw myself."

Aaaah, but did you do them because you had to, or just practice?
 
Any training agency that REMOVES something that might help in a life threatening situation is going BACKWARDS not forward.

Just my opinion.
 
EastEndDiver:
Any training agency that REMOVES something that might help in a life threatening situation is going BACKWARDS not forward.

Just my opinion.


Any training that removed un-needed and potentially dangerous training and replaced by far safer more practical solutions is a big step forward in my view.

Like dual hose regs and J valves, modern practices and equipment make cesa a relic.
 
EastEndDiver:
cesa is a relic..........ok.............


Guees you know it all.

Ah, fugeddaboutit, Eastie...I've been trying for 9 pages. These guys know everything.

:shakehead
 

Back
Top Bottom