I have been away for a while, and come back to find that this thread has slipped into surrealism. I somehow never dreamed this would turn into a snorkel debate. And then there is this:
As surprising as this may seem, there is a serious point related to this. The term DIR is not registered anywhere that I know of, so there is nothing stopping anyone from teaching it and advertising it as such. I had no idea that TDI had an official DIR course, but the concept is intriguing in what it suggests might be the future of the term.
It also shows something about the evolution of the agency since those early days.
If you read the TDI Trimix course manual, which was written in 2002, you will see at least two sections that are clearly mocking DIR without saying so directly. One is almost funny if you know the context, when it talks about macho people thumping their chests and shouting about using 100% O2 for deco instead of 80%. (No, the phrase "baker's dozen" does not appear, but...) The course has several teaching points in it that would not be consistent with DIR. In contrast, the Advanced Trimix course manual, which was written two years later in 2004, has no such mocking references, and the parts that are not consistent with DIR are pretty much toned down to the point of near agreement.
My first tech training was TDI, from an instructor who had been partially GUE trained under AG. He made it clear to us that we were learning DIR, although unofficially so. I later dived with the TDI IT who had certified him as a TDI instructor, and this man was the most thoroughly DIR diver I have ever met. I don't feel comfortable naming him here, but I will say that many people who are devoted DIR divers and EE customers know him very well.
I think it would be a mistake to assume that the wars of the 1990s are still so much in effect today.
I think the quotation you were looking for might be from Woody Allen: "The lion and the calf shall lie down together but the calf won't get much sleep."WTF is a TDI Intro to DIR (Fundamentals Course)???
Are we talking the same TDI founded by Brett Gilliam? The same one who's been GI3's best buddy throughout the decades? What's next? Dogs and cats lying together?
As surprising as this may seem, there is a serious point related to this. The term DIR is not registered anywhere that I know of, so there is nothing stopping anyone from teaching it and advertising it as such. I had no idea that TDI had an official DIR course, but the concept is intriguing in what it suggests might be the future of the term.
It also shows something about the evolution of the agency since those early days.
If you read the TDI Trimix course manual, which was written in 2002, you will see at least two sections that are clearly mocking DIR without saying so directly. One is almost funny if you know the context, when it talks about macho people thumping their chests and shouting about using 100% O2 for deco instead of 80%. (No, the phrase "baker's dozen" does not appear, but...) The course has several teaching points in it that would not be consistent with DIR. In contrast, the Advanced Trimix course manual, which was written two years later in 2004, has no such mocking references, and the parts that are not consistent with DIR are pretty much toned down to the point of near agreement.
My first tech training was TDI, from an instructor who had been partially GUE trained under AG. He made it clear to us that we were learning DIR, although unofficially so. I later dived with the TDI IT who had certified him as a TDI instructor, and this man was the most thoroughly DIR diver I have ever met. I don't feel comfortable naming him here, but I will say that many people who are devoted DIR divers and EE customers know him very well.
I think it would be a mistake to assume that the wars of the 1990s are still so much in effect today.