BCD Failure : Multi-Stage Technical Diver
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- čas přidán 1. 07. 2024
- This is Lesson 25 from our 100% free, 25 part online training series. Demonstration showing various ways to handle a complete BCD Failure at 40m /130 feet with 4 cylinders.
00:00 Overview - Lets Test A BCD Failure For Real
00:50 This Video Is Only Part Of Our Failure Series
01:29 Diver In Drysuit With Multi Stages Starts Dive
03:20 What Options Do We Have For Redundant Buoyancy
03:51 We Simulate Failure Of Divers BCD
06:05 BCD Failure - Use Backup Redundant Bladder
08:27 If Diver Was Overweighed - What Would Happen
09:30 BCD Failure - Using A Lift Bag For Buoyancy
11:17 Does A Drysuit Diver Really Need A Wing
11:36 BCD Failure - BCD Removal, Use Drysuit Only
13:46 Wing Removed, Now We Only Have The Drysuit
14:46 Correct Weighting Makes All This Possible
15:41 With Major Failure Dive Can Still End Safely
17:19 We Discuss, All Benefits The Drysuit Gives You
18:16 Don't Get The Wrong Message From This Video
19:52 Thank You And Don't Try This At Home
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Grea stuff. Very informative (and fun to watch too)
Amazing video, explanations and technique. Cheers
Great video I've struggled with air in a wing hard to dump , and pockets of air in the drysuit , fantastic information
Great video. The most common dive error I see as a recreational diver is over weighting. Keep spreading the message of proper weighting.
Thank you for filling in the gaps
Great video and thanks for showing. A BCD failure is something I really want to do more training with (not doing as you did obviously!) as it's the little bugbear that is on my mind during a dive, rational or otherwise. I've only just finished OW training and about to do dry suit training. Once I have my own gear I'll feel a lot more comfortable with knowing my own correct weightings for different scenarios and always want to make sure I'm not overweighted. Having to switch borrowed gear makes it more difficult to track and be certain about with limited dive numbers and I hope that having a number of dives with mostly (+/- undersuit volume) my own gear will give a lot more confidence.
"He could only do it because he was correctly weighted. Could you have done it if I added 4 kilos?"
"Certainly."
lol, called out instantly
Amazing experiment
thanks for this info..
Good stuff
just a beginner here, but this was very fascinating to watch!
Great info. Would like to hear final thoughts on when a 2 redundancy bladder becomes a must, i am assuming it is depth related?
Wow, I used to think diving in a drysuit would take a LOT more lead, so I was surprised the diver here only needed 2kg lead blocks, as that's the same amount I need diving a single al80 in a 3mm wetsuit. I'm aware of the negative buoyancy characteristics of steel tanks, but the image of drysuit divers carrying plenty kilos of lead was somehow seared into my brain. On that note, I've never had to dive in a drysuit, but would definitely like to try it someday. Thanks for the demonstration!👌
This is why it is always best to be trained in any activity before trying it. We all have dangerous misconceptions & mental lapses that we might not until too late.
He knows the bases of diving (theory and fisiology) very well, like everybody should knows.
Awesome video guys! For the SMB, isn't it better to just shoot it up and use the line for buoyancy? This way you don't risk loosing it and also you don't need to dump any air out as you assend?
4:14
"I tried it at home"
in my bath tub.
I died.
and what the problem if he HAS a dry suit?
i dont use wing, especially if correct weight, or even i have +1 or +2 kg in cold water...
Cool concept but actually going into deco without your wing was pretty silly. You could have done an ndl dive for this experiment... if you had a neck seal failure you would have had an unnecessary problem?
BCD failure is rare they are all most foolproof,
He could use his suit as a BCD ,the most gojng yo happen is he gets wet little cold ,but staying 15 minutes at 45 ft then ,decompressed
So technical divers don't carry weight belt?
4 tanks of more or less 11 - 12 L filled at 200bar it's nearly 11kg of air... I find it to be very strange to be able to compensate with your lungs.
You're saying he is correctly weighted, but It really makes me wonder if he would have enough weight to stay stable at 3m with nearly empty tanks.
Could you explain how can anyone compensate 11kg of air with a lung volumen which is rarely more than 6L (and that would be compared with a completelly empty pair of lungs).
Hi,
So yes, you are adding up all the gas weights (2.7kg for 200b in an Alu S80, 2.9kg for 200b in a 12L).
But we are not suggesting you can lift that volume of weight without some buoyancy. We are suggesting that the gas in the dry suit, plus kicking up, along with the lungs (and either SMB or backup bladder) is enough to establish buoyancy. We would be ending the dive at this point and not taking so much more gas out of the cylinders.
We also need to consider that we won't weight ourselves for zero bar, but at something more realistic like 50b for the main tanks. If we used this much gas on the dive, then the deco obligation would not be so high as to need more than 50b from each deco cylinder (plus we would have had something interesting happen to make us go so much over plan).
Additionally, at around 100b the Alu cylinders are neutral and for the maximum bottom time we would get when obeying a minimum gas rule, we would not take more than 50b out of each deco cylinder. If we were in a situation where these deco cylinders did become positive, then we also have the option to ditch those.
I do accept that the total pressure you weight yourself for will change the weights you may want to carry, but at the same time you have to consider all the other aspects when you are making this type of technical dive and what is likely vs unlikely (e.g. to have more than 100b needed of deco gas you had to of overstayed your bottom time by a huge amount etc.).
Lastly, we wanted to keep the idea on the suitability of the dry suit and other methods rather than go into all the considerations of the dive itself - because as you say, that is a bigger subject - and for sure if the wing failed, I would be heading up and not making these kinds of movies at the time :-)
Hope that helps explain a bit more. Cheers.
If you actually paid attention... even in a failed wing you can still hold volume and that helps aswell... long story short.
How about removing your weight belt and dropping one or two of the weights? Or am I being dumb lol
No need, if you are correctly weighted. As a tech diver, losing the weight is the last thing you want actually.
Because you won't be able to hold your stop higher up....
What about when diving in a wetsuit?
Hi, these are in the other BCD Failure videos - we do them in 1, 2 and 3 cylinders on the same CZcams Channel. Hope you get a chance to watch them.
I dont really get it, you can easy just dive with the drysuit if you want.. its not to recommend.. but its quite easy..
If your drysuit leaks, then what?
From what I can see, it really looks like he have a lot more air in his dry suit than is necessary to compensate for the squeeze... When diving technical you have 2 of everything that is important. This even mean double gear for buoyancy. So this isn't any more special than what's in the training for diving technical.
Yes, he puts more air into his drysuit that is needed that is kind of the whole point in the video, to show in a failure it could be done and still a safe ascent be made. If you watch again and listen to everything we say and example we show it should be clear. Cheers, Steve
Hi, I do not agree with the philosophy of this video because :
- In case of a BCD failure, the buddy can help too
- Having a buoyancy redundancy is compulsory for wetsuit (Tec)divers in areas with downward currents