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  1. #1
    Member
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    May 2006
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    North Florida
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    Default DPV gas planning

    How do you plan?

    I'm pretty conservative and always plan to be able to swim out even when I'm towing a 2nd scooter. I've had some wonky things happen with scooters and other mechanical equipment that I just don't trust them enough, especially when it comes to my life. I know not everyone is this conservative. In fact, I've heard some gas plan the same whether they're doing a swim dive or a scooter dive.

    So what do you do? And why?

    Rob Neto
    Chipola Divers, LLC
    Check out my new book - Sidemount Diving - An Almost Comprehensive Guide
    "Survival depends on being able to suppress anxiety and replace it with calm, clear, quick and correct reasoning..." -Sheck Exley

  2. #2
    Member
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    Mar 2010
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    Eustis, FL
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    Default

    I plan on CCR dying, buddy not noticing, scooter crapping out.... aka, enough gas to swim out at max penetration.


  3. #3
    Member
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    Jan 2008
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    NYC/TCI-Provo
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    Default

    Always plan to survive the worst possible day of your life...


  4. #4
    Moderator CDF-STAFF Member
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    The World's Most Beautiful Beaches?
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    Default

    I always scooter with untouched backgas. One stage will get me, for example, p4,000' and back at JB. For anything more, I take another stage.

    Whoever said money can't buy love never bought a puppy.

  5. #5

    Default

    In a team of 3 divers on CCR and scooters, I plan for one CCR failure and one scooter failure.

    If the dive is big enough to need to plan for team bailout rather than being self sufficient, then some serious predive planning takes place and methods are practiced before the dive at hand.


  6. #6
    Member
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    Mar 2009
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    Panama City Beach, Fl.
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    Default

    I was taught plan for any two failures if you have three it is your day to go.


  7. #7
    Member
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    Oct 2005
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    St Pete, Fl
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    Default

    Depends on the dive and it depends on the cave.

    Sometimes enough gas to swim out. Sometimes enough scooters so that I won't have to swim out.

    IMO, planning to swim out on a deep cave dive is not realistic. The deco times and gas requirements become absolutely bananas rather quickly. I always tow on deeper cave dives, and often on shallow ones too.

    I also dive with pretty good buddies, which factors in a bit. So realistically we'd have to lose a pile of scooters to end up swimming.


  8. #8

    Default

    I still plan it the way you taught me in DPV class. Assuming a two man team with at least one diver in backmounted doubles, one scooter for each diver: plan gas to be able to swim out with one total loss of backgas and 2 scooter failures at max penetration.


  9. #9
    Moderator
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    Oct 2004
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    south Georgia
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    Default

    The only thing I hate to see is gas planning based on math exclusively versus some real testing. So many people will say I can exit from the Heinkel on an AL80 stage because I have a SAC of X, swim rate of X, flow rate of X..... my calculations show I have a enough gas. There are so many variables that I found when I simulated swims like this from different systems that I found that my mathematical planning would have left me short of a safe exit.

    "Not all change is improvement...but all improvement is change" Donald Berwick

  10. #10
    Member
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    Oct 2004
    Location
    Winter Haven, FL
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    540

    Default

    I once scootered to he Henkel, and swam out to see how much gas and time it would take in case of an emergency. It took me 48 minutes, and more gas than the third of a stage I used coming in. Also had a long deco. And this was a relaxed environment. Knowing you have a real emergency, most folks won't be as relaxed and will probably use more gas.

    Quote Originally Posted by Kelly Jessop View Post
    The only thing I hate to see is gas planning based on math exclusively versus some real testing. So many people will say I can exit from the Heinkel on an AL80 stage because I have a SAC of X, swim rate of X, flow rate of X..... my calculations show I have a enough gas. There are so many variables that I found when I simulated swims like this from different systems that I found that my mathematical planning would have left me short of a safe exit.

    "If you are not living on the edge, you are taking up too much space"

    www.floridacavediver.com


 

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