Water temperature:
SSI Responsible Diver Code. I pledge to:
If you observe signs of panic in your buddy while on the surface:
Terminology:
Divelog examples:
Divelog templates / empty pages:
My compilation of above samples can be downloaded from here (OpenOffice source)
Wetsuit sleeves should be rolled over the outside of the gloves.
Most find wearing the computer on the right side more convenient since your left arm/hand can be occupied with the inflator hose. You do need to closely monitor your depth during ascents/descents, safety stops / deco stops, and you often need to operate the inflator/dump to control your depth at the same time.
CNS-O₂ hit in deep water may not be less serious symptoms to serve as a warning before a full convulsion is precipitated. According to oxygen physiologists Stephen Thom and James Clark, “Minor symptoms did not always precede the onset of convulsions, and even when a preconvulsive aura did occur, it was often followed so quickly by seizures that it had little practical value.” Oxygen convulsions, per se, are not inherently harmful. But imagine the implications for an untended diver or even one with a buddy nearby. Management of an airway and rescue in such an extreme situation is nearly impossible, and the diver will almost certainly drown.
100% reported by a dive computer is a maximum threshold limit.
Most dangerous symptoms:
The number of the Total dives at the Achievements section on the app will only show the verified number of dives.
The number of dives will only change if:
Many divers just log their dives and once in a while the go to any SSI Center to get verification on their latest dive (to update the Total Dives in the Awards), their deepest or longest of these values were updated.
The longest / deepest dive shown will update only, if the dive was verified by scanning a SSI Divecenter / Dive Pro QR Code.
Diver panic:
Diver is attacked:
Drowning / run out of air:
Ways to introduce your help (especially in USA):
CPR rates:
Do not use AED an oxygen rich environment, which means remove the oxygen mask before doing the electrical shock.
Perform CPR for about one minute before going for assistance if you have to leave the victim, unless you witness the victim suddenly collapse. In last case you know there is some time in reserve.
See also:
P50:
* Insist that all drowning victims obtain medical attention, even seemingly minor incidents. Complications that can cause death may occur hours after any drowning incident e.g. due to heart fibrillation. * A person who has drowned will have some water—even only a small amount—in their lungs which causes an irritation and the lungs do not inflate as easily as normal. * The problem is a decreased ability to transfer oxygen from the lungs to the blood, which can compound itself with time. * Victims swallow all the water that they can hold in the process of drowning. * Fluids coming out of a drowned victim typically come from the stomach, not the lungs. * Do not push on the victim’s distended abdomen.
P.55: If the bleeding is still not controlled, remove the dressing and bandages to ensure the actual bleed site is covered and start again. – Could be a waist of time? P.56: Avoid giving the victim anything to eat or drink unless response is delayed. – What is that delay? 30 mins? P.59: Rinse the affected area immediately with cool running water for 20 minutes. – Contradiction with what said in the class.
* If person is conscious, should we ask him something to detect spinal injury? Like “Do you feel your legs?” * If you attach AED and it detects a healthy heart beat / activity, how does it signal that to you? * How effective is CPR if airways are not effectively cleaned after back blows or abdominal thrusts? * Checking AED state - who is responsible for checking it? * Advise for children for best position when uncomfortable in the water? * Types of emergency situations, sorted by frequency. * Freediving course: Provided you have a 2nd helper: blow at victim check and gently slap it * Arterial Gas Embolism falls (can cause an immediate loss of consciousness) under neural trauma?
respiratory arrest cardiac arrest morbidity reckless behavior erratic behavior jeopardy oropharyngeal airway chest recoil yelling relinquish responsibility agitated mucus membranes lucid numbness summoning EMS choking on vomit vomiting person venomous bites or stings pelvis and limbs (extremity) thigh fetus cadaver supine victim swelling bruising rigidity incoherent speech pupil dilation ischaemic injury gasping breaths sternum jaw-thrust method mandible nostrils regurgitate sternum abdomen inanimate objects decreased gag reflex aggravated towing spurting blood irrigation syringe saline tube platelets seal blood vessel bruises charred muscle twitching seizure charred, leathery skin perineum tugging peeling skin strain contusion (bruise) spasm (cramp) pulled muscle (strain) sprain choking vertebrae Caustics intestines barb Itching groin armpits rehearsal flaunt murky rigorous rigidjerky perishable apprehensive supine kelp tow thrashing stranded kelp maladies
Lack of mental preparedness, mental control, and mental coping
Documentary:
Movies:
By engineering and design, the car is meant to float on water, and the rear window will always face the exit.
The recommended depth for OWD is 18 meters, and with Deep Diving specialty is 40 meters.
Check also Calculators.
(1.4/0.21-1)×10 = 56.66
meters max depth with normal air(1.4/0.32-1)×10 = 33.75
meters max depth with Nitrox EAN32)(1.6/1-1)×10 = 6
meters max depth with 100% oxygenThere are three considerations in choosing diving gases: oxygen toxicity, narcosis, and decompression. The more oxygen you can have in your breathing mixture, the less decompression you have to do. The choice of other gases to use in a breathing mixture is not very broad – there aren't that many gases from which to choose, and many of them are toxic. Of the ones which aren't poisonous or anesthetic, many are narcotic. It has come down to nitrogen and helium because they are available, nontoxic, relatively affordable, and helium is virtually non-narcotic. Although there are controversies about the comparative behaviour of nitrogen and helium in decompression, I think it's legitimate to say that both require attention to ascents rates and times. Minimizing inert gas makes for shorter deco, but raises oxygen toxicity risk. GUE, the agency through which I have some of my training, chooses to keep a relatively low ppO₂ (1.2 or lower) for long exposures, but most of us will tolerate 1.4 for shorter dives, and 1.6 on deco, where there is very little exertion and the exposures are generally fairly short.
See also:
From SSI Deep Diving specialty:
Cylinder | Buoyancy when full | Buoyancy with 50 bar |
---|---|---|
Aluminium 12 Liter (200 bar) | -1 kg | +1.4 kg |
Steel 12 Liter (200 bar) | -5 kg | -2.6 kg |
See also:
Name | Price | Depth (m) | LED | Lumens | Weight (g) | Color | Flux bin | Battery type | Switch type | Power | Modes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Underwater diving flashlight LED | $12.50 | 80 (IP68) | CREE XM-L2 | 1200 | 162 | Cold white (5000K) | T6 | 1×18650 | Twisty | ![]() | High-Middle-Low-Strobe-SOS XM-L T6 LED model – $11.47 |
Probe Shiny underwater 500M 5000LM XM-L T6 LED diving waterproof flashlight torch 170126 | $11.69 | 500 (IPX8) | CREE XM-L | 5000 ![]() | 190 ![]() | ![]() | T6 | 1×18650 | Twisty | ![]() | 100%-50%-30%-20%-Strobe-SOS |
DX1 aluminum alloy waterproof LED diving flashlight | $23.79 | 100 | CREE XM-L2 | 2200 ![]() | 420 ![]() | White | ![]() | 2×18650/26650 | Twisty | 15W | Low-High-Strobe |
Waterproof underwater 100m LED Scuba Torch Diving | $18.92 | 100 (IP68) | CREE XM-L2 | 1200 | 280 | Cold white | T6 | 2×18650 | Twisty | ![]() | High-Middle-Low-Strobe-SOS |
Kingtop FOXA112 LED waterproof underwater diving flashlight torch | $16.14 | 50 (IP68) | CREE XM-L2 | 2000 ![]() | 80 ![]() | Cold white | U3 | 1×18650 | Twisty | 7W | High-Middle-Low-Strobe-SOS, 6061T aluminum alloy |
Sofirn MS1 scuba diving flashlight torch Cree XM-L2 LED | $19.87 | 70 (IPX8) | CREE XM-L2 | 1000 | 185 | Day white (5500K) | ![]() | 1×18650 | Twisty | 10W / 3A | High-Middle-Low-Strobe ![]() |
YUPARD white light yellow LED waterproof diving flashlight | $13.80 | ![]() | CREE XM-L | 1200 | 210 | White | T6 | 1×18650 | Twisty | ![]() | High-Middle-Low-Strobe-SOS |
YUPARD diving 50 meter flashlight torch T6 | $16.80 | ![]() | CREE XM-2 | 1200 | 390 | White | T6 | 1×18650 | Twisty | 10W | High-Middle-Low-Strobe-SOS ![]() |
Waterproof 8 modes XM-L T6 LED underwater torch | $12.46 | 80 | CREE XM-L | 1000 | 170 | White | T6 | 1×18650/26650 | Twisty | ![]() | High-Middle-Low-Strobe-Shimmering / SOS-Strobe-Fast Flshing-Burst flashing |
JA 6 underwater T6 LED diving flashlight | $12.31 | 500 (IPX8) | CREE XM-L | 5000 ![]() | 200 ![]() | White | T6 | 1×18650/26650 | Twisty | ![]() | 100%-50%-30%-20%-Strobe-SOS |
RichFire SF-749 LED 8-Mode diving flashlight | $13.07 | 60 | CREE XM-L | 800 | 193 | Cold white | T6 | 1×18650/26650 | Twisty | 2.5A | High-Middle-Low-Strobe-SOS |
FandyFire XM-L2 U2 LED diving torch | $17.12 | 180 | CREE XM-L2 | 1200 | 220 | Cold white | U2 | 1×26650 | Tail twisty | 4A | High-Low-Strobe-SOS ![]() |
YUPARD underwater diving flashlight torch T6 Q5 waterproof | $14.50 | ![]() | CREE XM-L2 | 1200 | 220 | White | T6 | 1×18650 | Side push button | ![]() | High-Middle-Strobe |
ZHAOYAO 3-Mode Scuba Diving LED Flashlight | $21.33 | 100 | CREE XM-L | 1200 | 380 | White | T6 | 1×18650 | Side push button | 15W | High-Low-Strobe |
KINFIRE S180 dimming diving flashlight | $23.58 | 170 | CREE XM-L2 | 1100 | 215 | Cold white | U2 | 1×18650 | Side push button | ![]() | Long press the switch to adjust the brightness from low to high |
Elfeland waterproof XM-L2 2000LM Diving LED Flashlight | $12.54 | ![]() | CREE XM-L2 | 2000 ![]() | 240 ![]() | White | ![]() | 1×18650 | Magnetic slide | ![]() | Low-High stepless dimming |
RichFire SF-928 LED diving flashlight | $34.85 | 100 (IP68) | CREE XM-L2 | 1200 | 257 | Neutral white | U2 | 1×18650/26650 | Magnetic slide | 3A | Low-High stepless dimming |
Probe Shiny LED 5 modes waterproof flashlight | $13.00 | ![]() | CREE XM-L2 | 6000 ![]() | 175 ![]() | White | ![]() | 1×18650 | Back push button | ![]() | High-Middle-Low-Strobe-SOS |
| $18.43 | 2 (IPX8) | CREE XM-L2 | 1747 | 140 | Day white (5350-5700K) | ![]() | 1×18650 | Back push button | 18W / 5.6A | Low-medium-high (group 1) or moonlight-low-medium-high-SOS (group 2), hidden strobe |
pi/2*3 = 4.7
kg pressure and this button may be occasionally pressed by water and the torch will turn off.
Either digit can be replaced by an X if it has not been rated, such as IPX8. It is not an IPX rating.
You don’t need high-drain cells for e.g. Sofirn Q8, but they will perform better (higher output) with good high-drain cells. With lower-drain cells, the battery will sag voltage so the FET driver in the light won’t provide as much current to the emitter(s). This means less current demand from the battery, which keeps things safe.
There are some really high-powered FET-driven lights where I wouldn’t want to use a low-drain cell. Those are all multi-emitter lights, like the Emissar D4 or Astrolux S43. And, avoid high-output lights that use a boost driver, such as Zebralights. Those will suck more current from your cell than is safe.
XM-L2:
XM-L:
More information:
See also:
Name | Price | Nitrox FO₂ adjustment | ppO₂ adjustment | Compass | No fly | Pre-configured maximum depth alarm | Fresh/salt water calibration | Altitude adjustment | Multi-gas | Max depth | Logbook storage | Battery | Weight | Height | Other |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Mares Puck Pro | €139+€18, €149.90 | 22-99% | 1.2-1.6 | ![]() | time | ![]() | ![]() | 0-3700m in 4 ranges | 2 | 150m | 35 hours with 5s sampling rate | CR 2450 (1.5 years / 300 dives) | 113g | 18mm | ![]() |
Cressi Leonardo | €165 | 21-50% | 1.2-1.6 | ![]() | icon | ![]() | ![]() | 0-3700m in 4 ranges | ![]() | 120m | 70 hours / 60 dives | CR 2430 (2 years / 50 dives annually) | 135g | 27mm | ![]() ![]() |
Suunto Zoop Novo | €199 | 21-50% | 0.2-3.0 | ![]() | time | ![]() | ![]() | 0-3000m in 3 ranges | ![]() | 100m | 140 hours with 20s sampling rate | CR 2450 (1.5 years) | 120g | 29mm | ![]() ![]() |
Suunto D4i | €289 | 21-50% | 0.2-3.0 | ![]() | time | ![]() | ![]() | 0-3000m in 3 ranges | ![]() | 100m | 140 hours with 20s sampling rate | CR 2450 (1.5 years) | 85g | 16mm | ![]() |
Suunto D6i Novo Stone | €499 | 21-99% | 0.2-3.0 | ![]() | time | ![]() | ![]() | 0-3000m in 3 ranges | 3 | 150m | 140 hours with 20s sampling rate | CR 2450 (1.5 years) | 128g | 16mm | ![]() |
Garmin Descent Mk1 | €878 | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | time | ![]() | ![]() | Automatic | 6 | 100m | 10.000 dives | Built-in rechargeable LiIon (5 years) | 94g | 18mm | ![]() ![]() |
All dive computers have the following functions:
Schmitt NAND should be powered with +3.3V to align logical level with Mares.
After Mares is entered to PC connection mode, then DIO pin should be connected to Mares pin with positive voltage (around +3V). When Mares Pro is placed facing down and pins on the left, then bottom one is DIO.
Diving center | 6 dives package (excl equipment) | 1-day equipment rental | 3rd dive | OWD (2 days incl equipment) | Nitrox 32% tank | 15L tank | Specialty course (excl equipment) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sharm Scuba Service, Sharm el Sheikh (Egypt) | €150.00 | €20 | €25.00 | €220.00 (SSI) | €5.00 | €5.00 | |
Dahab Divers Lodge, Sharm el Sheikh (Egypt) | €150.00 | €20 | €280.00 + €75 (PADI) | €5.00 | €5.00 | ||
UnderWater Emotions, Boca Chica (Dominican) | $228.00 | $58.00 | $3.00 | $120.00 | |||
Ocean Diving, Boca Chica (Dominican) | $290.00 | $90.00 | $370.00 (~€319) | $190.00 (~€164) |
Name | Renting price for complete set | Renting price for extra tank |
---|---|---|
Dive Post info@divepost.nl | €30 per day | €13 (200 bar 10L) |
Dutch Scuba Divers (facebook) info@duikschool-denhaag.nl | ![]() | €15 |
Fata Aquana info@fata-aquana.nl | €45 per day | |
Never replied | ||
Easy Diving info@easydiving.nl | ![]() | €15 |
Haai Society bestuurhaaisociety@gmail.com | ![]() | |
Duikschool Oostvoorne duikschool@duikschooloostvoorne.nl | €50 per day | €10 |
Never asked | ||
Onderwaterwereld duikcentrum@onderwaterwereld.com | ![]() | ![]() |
The Wave duikcentrum@onderwaterwereld.com | €50 per day | €10 |
Name | Price | Distance from hotel | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Infinity Divers info@infinitydivers.net | €200 (![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | 14.9km / 17min | |
Red Sea Marine info@redseamarinesharm.com | €162 (![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | 19.8km / 23min | First day of the course will be conducted by the shore dive and as soon as you show us perfect buoyancy control skills we can continue second day of Open water and of course Adventure diver already by daily boat trips. |
Magic Divers sharm@magicdivers.at | €189 (![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | 15.8km / 18min | You need one day for the upgrade and 2 days for the Advanced Adventure. |
Werner Lau office@wernerlau.com | €220 (![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | 11.5km / 20min | The second day of your referral course as well as two days of your Advanced Adventurer Course you will be on the boat and do your dives from there. On the boat, lunch and soft drinks are provided and you will have to pay 75 Egyptian Pounds per day for lunch and drinks. |
Circle Divers info@circledivers.com | €205 (![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | 20.1km / 23min | The first day will take place at Sharks Bay and the second day will be on one of the Local dive sites. The third day would be at Ras Umm Sid where you will complete the navigation, enriched air nitrox and night dive. The forth day will be from the boat where you will finish the deep and wreck. The days you would be on a boat, there is lunch and drinks being served on the boat which would cost 75 Egyptian Pounds (~ €3.50) and has to be paid cash on the boat. |
Sharm Scuba Service booking@sharmscubaservice.com | €190 (![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | 4.1km / 9min | After the OWD course the instructor will suggest the best choose for your dive carrier. All our instructors are Italian native and speaking English fluently. See also Claudia Serpieri (Claudia Serpieri) and Gabriele Del Duca profiles. |
Dive One Academy sharm@dive1one.com | €230 (![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | 9.9km / 15min | |
Sunshine Divers info@sunshine-divers.de | €220 (![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | 10.6km / 15min | As you continue directly with the next level course, you can just skip certification card (€45) for the referral. We don't offer “Enriched Air Nitrox” as an adventure dive. This is a full course with some theory and it usually takes you a full day to study (costs €160 including materials and certification), so we would recommend you to replace it with “Perfect Buoancy”. Two days of diving from the reef, and two from the boat (on the boat they will charge you for lunch 75 le ~ €4). Usually the training lasts from 9:30 till 16:30. |
Mr.Diver info@misterdiver.com | 10.5km / 14min | ||
Sharm Divers contact@sharmdivers.com | 14.3km / 21min | ||
Dahab Divers Lodge info@dahabdiverslodge.com | €210 (3 days / 6 dives €150 + equipment rent 3×€20) | Dahab Divers Lodge - Padi 5* dive centre Dahab | |
Dahab Divers info@dahabdiverslodge.com | €270 (3 days / 6 dives €190 + equipment rent 3×€30) | Dahab Divers Lodge - Padi 5* dive centre Dahab |
The entry point “Bells” is a small crack in the reef-table that continues under water like a chimney down to 28 m and can be exited at any depth. There are corals to the left and right and nothing but blue in front of you. You will turn to the right as soon as you reach your maximum depth and then dive along a fantastic wall with loads of coral overhangs surrounded by the full variety of Red Sea fish. It is worth looking into the blue sometimes as there is a possibility to see some bigger fish. Also do not miss to turn around and look up to the surface and enjoy to see rays of light playing with the shape of the wall. The dive will take you gradually shallower until you reach the beautiful coral saddle into the Blue Hole at about 7 m. There you can do your safety stop and either swim through the blue or stay with the wall to the right- or left-hand-shoulder until you reach your exit point. This is a dive-site only suitable for Advanced Open Water Divers.
The Dahab Canyon is the classic canyon, an essential dive for all fanatics of caves and cavern diving. The Canyon is itself quite a phenomenon. Up to 10 meters high and virtually closed over at the top, it snakes its way up from the depths, to emerge in a large glassfish filled coral dome. The Canyon dive site offers an easy entry and exit point through a shallow, sandy lagoon. This leads out to beautiful coral gardens inhabited by Butterflyfishes, Unicornfishes, Octopus, Pufferfish and of course Red Sea Anthias, which can only be fully explored after several visits. The Canyon itself is positioned about five minutes north-east from the exit of the lagoon. The entry to the Canyon is done through it largest point at about 20 meters. The progression through the Canyon is easy and the light effect caused by the sun rays is fantastic.
This site is a favorite among guides and guests alike. A coral maze which truly shows the Red Sea coral at its best. Three giant pinnacles have grown together over the ages to create a playground of valleys and lagoons full of every reef fish you can imagine. One of the lagoons is home to thousands of juvenile barracuda, with trevally and large snapper always in attendance guarding their larder! An earthquake 10 years ago collapsed huge sections of the reef exposing holes and cracks that are rapidly filling up with renewed coral growth. This dive site never disappoints and as one of the shallower dives it is accessible to all certification levels.