SM Essential Skills List

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What one should practice depends on a variety of factors, including what you wish to improve. Here's a list I'd perhaps suggest:
  • Donning an doffing gear "quickly," including in multiple environments (boat, dock, bench, no-bench, etc) You can even do some of this practice at home, and make adjustments (ex: if a certain boltsnap is a pain).
  • Clipping and unclipping tanks in the water.
  • Regulator switching: Including being able to reliably find and swap regulators by feel alone. Also determining which regulator you have by feel.
  • Checking and fixing tank-trim by feel. (non-visual)
  • Deploying & stowing any tool or device by feel. If you struggle, try moving the location of the dive, or how the device is attached.
  • Valve drills.
  • Finning Techniques
-failed bungee [this is awesome and very interesting...I will look into this]
This happened to me once, and it was my fault due to not tying things properly.

I had a bolt-snap tied at the top of the tank so the only real effect was the tank was out of trim for the rest of the dive.
 
This happened to me once, and it was my fault due to not tying things properly.

I had a bolt-snap tied at the top of the tank so the only real effect was the tank was out of trim for the rest of the dive.

If I have not used my SM bcd in a while (which rarely happens) I check the bungees prior to kitting up. If I am doing multiple dives over multiple days, I check the bungees at the start of day 1 and then after the last dive of each day. This is also what I teach my students to do so that they can eliminate, as much as possible, the failed bungee scenario.

I use double enders for the top of my cylinders as I hate the sound a boltsnap makes hitting the cylinders on a dive. I take the double enders off on descent and clip them to my drop d-rings. With a failed bungee, I have two options that depends on the type of dive I am doing.

1. Reef dive- I would just grab the double ender and hard clip in and end the dive
2. Wreck penetration- I have a bungee in my pouch with a boltsnap on each end. If the bungee fails, I pull it out, attach one boltsnap to the chest d-ring, pass it around my back and clip the other to the opposite chest dring (going under the armpits), then wrap the bungee around the proper cylinder. Essentially I am making a continuous loop bungee system. This holds the cylinder(s) closer to where they typically sit rather than letting them hang down like hard clipping would do. This allows for a safer exit when penetrating.

The second one is something I teach my students. We make the backup bungee system during the gear setup and fitting and then dial in the length as needed on subsequent dives.
 
Well, that is the reason for the practicing of these skills...so that the skills are always sharp. In tec diving, I learned about incidents where folks had been excellent beginner divers...spent many years NOT practicing the essential skills...had a minor incident that led to a major accident/fatality because they were not sharp on their skills.

I am very grateful for all the replies and thoughtful insights! I am adding to the list below, please, keep them coming!

-mask removal, replacement including deploying a spare mask
-out of gas scenario, long hose sharing
-removing the left tank and replacing it
-removing the right tank and replacing it
-deploying cutting tools and replacing
-deploying a spare light and replacing it
-regulator switches [tho, I do this a few times each dive anyway]
-gas sharing while swimming
-failed bungee [this is awesome and very interesting...I will look into this]
-reclipping tanks as the drain down and then get out of trim
I mostly dive ccr now but my friends and i go at leat once a month to local lake and practice all kinds of stuff - we have a bunch of laminated cards with problems on one side and solutions on the other that we randomly throw out its a good chance to practice and socialise - we have a BBQ and stuff
 
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