JeffG
Contributor
or get your buddy to hold you down.I think one of the DSAT videos or manuals also says to hook your leg around something to avoid buoyancy changes during drills/gas switches.
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or get your buddy to hold you down.I think one of the DSAT videos or manuals also says to hook your leg around something to avoid buoyancy changes during drills/gas switches.
Yeah, every time I look at that footage it looks uglier and uglier, but it reminds me of stuff to look out for. Our instructor actually gave us the video and encouraged us to post it up.
Question for you - at around the 8 minute mark, the team begins to share gas. After completing the donation, the donating diver goes to the back and the recipient goes to the front. The donating diver then picks up the reel and starts reeling in.
Is that the procedure in tech 1? (It's an honest question. "Go take the class and find out for yourself" is a reasonable response.)
It should always be the single file procedure.
on a line, you should be single file.
For airshares...the donor is in the rear.
for reeling in a reel....the "reeler" should be in the rear.
When the isolator is opened, the the pressure is only reduced in the left tank. The pressure on the right is increasing. This will heat the right tank, and cool the left tank
.
There will not be much effect on the temperature of the regulator because the pressure is always reduced when gas flows through the regulator.
The postulation is if your isolator is closed and you open it "will it contribute to a free flow?"
Now assume your regs are correctly configured and you have been breathing your right post and the left is still at full pressure. You open the isolator. The left tank cools. But the left tank's gas and valve temp isn't relevant as you aren't breathing on it (and the person in the video wasn't either)
The temp of the gas in the right tank will minutely rise as the left tank discharges into it and its pressure rises. Ergo opening your isolator during a dive makes no difference on the likelihood of a primary reg free flow.
No, when the team is reeling in/out a line. They have to be in single file.Do you mean that when a team is following a line they should always be in single file?
I have the PADI DSAT video. They show the drills on their knees at the bottom of a pool
Yeah, every time I look at that footage it looks uglier and uglier, but it reminds me of stuff to look out for. Our instructor actually gave us the video and encouraged us to post it up.
the pressure is dropping, but the volume is increasing. to first order that is much more important than the temperature drop (up to around a 20x drop in pressure, less than a 2x drop in temperature).