I work with handicapped divers. None of them need that device. Certainly not on an isolation manifold.
If you can't reach your valves you shouldn't be in doubles. Show me a training manual that says put a slob knob on your equipment.
Given what the visibility is when students are around...if they get close to it and see something from ten feet away Id call it a pass. Most of the nav course is buddy compass work anyway.
Use as many underwater waypoints as you can. Its a class not navy seal training. The last thing you want is students burning through air in a panic looking for stuff.
Tapatalk is just the interface. Its likely easier to list and ad photos in the web version.[COLOR="Silver"]
---------- Post added June 6th, 2015 at 12:19 AM ----------
A rEvo.
There are excellent gue instuctors in Ottawa and Toronto. They probably have all the gear you need available to rent and staying in Canada to train saves you a tonne of cash. If you jump onto the guess website you'll find them. I think there's also on in nova Scotia.
I've seen many horrors of open water around the world. Show me the video evidence from your ow students in the last ten years not kneeling nor overweighted. Or keep the orifical eminisions to yourself.
No. I didn't miss it all. Taking ow in it likely means you were horridly overweighted and knelt on the bottom. In a badly fitted suit.
Taking the drysuit class...which most shops would give you for free if you bought it from them...DUI does financing in the USA as well...will hopefully teach...
The only air in your drysuit should be to keep the insulation loft full. Not for.bouyancy. that's what your BCD is for. I'll bet the first thing your class did was add ankle weights and ten pounds of lead. Useless. Before you dive open the valve and kneel down and squeeze all the air out...
The only reality scuba show I would watch would be a competition between instructors from different agencies competing in various dive sites at tasks instructors should be qualified to do. Behind the scenes sidebars from divers and.non divers and potential divers about their impressions of the...
Read a gue or uti tech manual. Lights go there there and there. Knife goes there. And dump valves go on left humerus area so you can dump BCD and drysuit with same hand and watch depth and time at all times.
What was the reason for SDI to update a drysuit manual?
My point in posting was that scuba regs aren't serviced with common home repair tools and shouldn't be taken apart without guidance and help the first time.
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