You just enjoy living on the edge!I've been in the skinniest of places come out covered in smatterings of rust and oil scratched up tanks
and rounded yoke knobs
Oh crap I forgot about The Curmud
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You just enjoy living on the edge!I've been in the skinniest of places come out covered in smatterings of rust and oil scratched up tanks
and rounded yoke knobs
Oh crap I forgot about The Curmud
I think we're all assuming he's not actually doing technical wreck penetration, like in tight spots with hazardous materials around. If he is doing that without the requisite training (the regulator question implies he has no technical training) then yoke vs DIN is the least of his problems.But would you rathr bump the overhead with a yoke or a DIN reg? Would you rather scrap up against some sharp, rusty metal with a thin wing or with one covered with heavy, rip-resistant material?
I encourage people to buy DIN, especially if it’s at a comparable price to the yoke counterpart, and then spend another $50 on an adapter. Best of both worlds, at only a slight expense. Only time the adapter comes into play is when you’re forced to use yoke, but the only time that’s going to happen significantly is when doing more recreational/easy dives. If the diving you’re doing would normally need a DIN regulator, the tanks that’ll be available/used will also be DIN.I think the message should be then: don't buy a DIN regulator just for that one week of wreck swim-throughs in the Red Sea. If wreck diving (or any regular diving in an overhead environment) is in your future, though, DIN's the way to go.
Speaking for the hordes... ThanksWill you be penetrating wreck interiors or just doing the occasional swim through a wide open space that is commonly traversed by recreational divers? If you were penetrating, you probably wouldn't be asking this question, as you would already have the training and the gear for diving in overhead environments, so my guess is you're just diving those wrecks the way hordes of divers do every day on the Red Sea wreck safaris, and I'm sure not all of them have any special gear or training or give much consideration to the type of regs they're using.
I don't know how far "in" the wrecks we will go. It Is a week liveaboard. I am a good diver who is probably more safety conscious than most people. I get annoyed at folks who ignore their buddy and don't do predive safety checks.I think Cheizz is on target.
There is undeniably additional risk to a yoke IN a wreck, but if the OP is sensible he will not be IN a wreck, just passing through some wide-open spaces. HIS words were "in" a wereck, not "passing through."
I can't speak to the OPs sensibility, of course, nor how is is going to dive in the Red Sea, and I am unswayed by hundreds of divers "passing through each week." What if just one of those divers, once a month, or once a year, had a yoke knocked off? Don't you agree the risk is higher, just not so high as to make it unacceptable to most, especially if they assume "it will not happen to them"?
You are correctI think we're all assuming he's not actually doing technical wreck penetration, like in tight spots with hazardous materials around. If he is doing that without the requisite training (the regulator question implies he has no technical training) then yoke vs DIN is the least of his problems.