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- From: story@sgi.com (David (Duis) Story)
- Subject: Re: Any information about Cancun or Cozumel
- Message-ID: <so02nns@twilight.wpd.sgi.com>
- Sender: news@twilight.wpd.sgi.com ( CNews Account at twilight.wpd.sgi.com )
- Organization: Silicon Graphics, Inc.
- References: <9211190742.AA26645@deepthought.cs.utexas.edu>
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 92 20:08:15 GMT
- Lines: 56
-
- In article <9211190742.AA26645@deepthought.cs.utexas.edu> RFLNG@CLEMSON.CLEMSON.EDU (Reef Fish , Large Nassau Grouper) writes:
- >kkwwkk@mixcom.com (TA Shaw) <1992Nov18.151430.14419@mixcom.com> says
- >
- >> b) I was told that from time to time, the currents that run off the
- >> wall can be dangerous. That if the conditions are right, it actually
- >> can be like flushing a toilet, ie the current is so strong running
- >> over the and down the wall that it will drag divers down even if
- >> their BC is inflated? Anyone else heard of this?
- >
- >IMO this "death grip down current" is one of the popular diving myths,
- >I've done hundreds of dives in Cozumel ... the current can be VERY swift,
- >at times, but I've NEVER experienced the slightest "current running over
- >and down the wall", in Cozumel, or in other swift-current sites.
-
- I know it's dangerous, but I feel I have to relate personal experience
- which might contradict Bob's well-researched conclusions.
-
- Diving in heavy surge in Monterey over the top of a pinnacle, I
- noticed very strong "downdrafts" on either side of the pinnacle. I
- was neutrally buoyant, hovering at about 30', while heavy surge was
- moving me approximately 40' in the horizontal direction on each swing.
-
- >In all reported cases I've heard or read about "strong down current", an
- >analysis could be made that the diver simply lost buoyancy control (usually
- >an inexperienced diver, forgetting to inflate the BC at depth to compensate
- >for wet/dry-suit/BC-compression) to cause the "down draft", and by the time
- >such diver realizes s/he is being "dragged down", no inflation of BC is
- >going to arrest the descent instantaneously -- and so the current gets
- >blamed for the down-dragging, and inexperience/panic distorted the rest of
- >the explanation.
-
- Despite being an experienced Monterey diver, with my BC and drysuit
- properly inflated for neutral buoyancy, and being very aware of my
- depth relative to a fixed object (the hard corals on the pinnacle were
- demanding my attention :), I was still "dragged down" after each pass
- across the top of the pinnacle. Likewise, I was "forced up" on each
- return trip, only to be dragged down again.
-
- The net effect, of course, was a downward motion -- since the suit
- compressed on the downdraft, I fell slowly in the idle period between
- the surges, and if I had not maintained my depth between surges, I
- would have descended enough to have been smacked into the pinnacle on
- the return trip!
-
- I agree with Bob's research, but feel that he may be overlooking that
- the *initial onset* (say the first 10-15') of "down draft" may be
- quite a real phenomenon, and hard to fight. After that initial down
- draft, however, I concur that an experienced diver would be able to
- recover quite well, and that any diver with decent buoyancy control
- would have no troubles.
-
- Cheers,
-
- David Story NAUI AI Z9588, PADI DM 43922, EMT
- story@bent.wpd.sgi.com Better diving through tolerance.
-
-