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Well, I guess experiences vary with the individual. My main
point was that if the poster (purple stars) was experiencing pain trying to free-dive he should be very careful and learn to equalize the pressure or he would get to learn about barotrauma from a medical specialist ;-) The time I think I hurt my ears I was in about 12 feet of water at Stingray City in Grand Cayman. It was a long time ago, but the tinnitus is with me still sigh. PS - I agree with you that its much easier to equalize ascending rather than descending. Don W. Dave wrote: On Wed, 22 Feb 2006 23:35:10 GMT, Don W said: I am, however, trained as a technical diver and remember being trained (and experiencing) that it is necessary to equalize both descending and ascending. I went through the NSDS training and spent several years as a diver, including SCUBA, Jack Brown, regular hard hat and helium hard hat. Also spent some time as diving officer and have many hours going both up and down in a recompression chamber. Both my experience and training tell me that on ascent the ears clear themselves well before experiencing pain, because the pressure in the inner ear exceeds that in the throat, and absent something extremely unusual (which I've never seen) that pressure gets relieved very much as in my balloon illustration. On the way down, on the other hand, the pressure buildup tends to close the Eustachian tubes at the entrance to the throat because the intersection with the throat is very much like the "duckbill" valve in a marine head. So if you don't know how to open up that duckbill valve you get low pressure in the inner ear compared to the greater external pressure on the ear drum. If a diver's tubes are clogged, he knows it on the way down. If one or both ears is blocked, and the pressure difference is enough, a barotrauma or possibly a ruptured eardrum is the result. Also, think about it. If what you said is true then people would not need to equalize during ascent on an airplane. As a pilot I can tell you that people do very much need to equalize during ascent in an unpressurized airplane and that if a person does not know how to equalize a very painful experience is the result. Again, on the ascent the clearing virtually always occurs automatically well before the threshold of pain is reached. Whether he knows how to equalize or not, his ears "pop" when the pressure differential between the throat and the inner ear is sufficient, because he inner ear is like the inside of that balloon. I suppose one could get some slight buildup on the ascent if he has very inflamed tubes. But note that the aircraft situation is the reverse of diving in that the external pressure is decreasing first, as you ascend, and increasing as you descend, creating the possibility of having a problem on the way down when there wasn't a problem on the way up. Take your kids flying in a small plane sometime when they have a head cold. Then see if they automatically equalize on the ascent ;-) |
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