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#1
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I have a Hans Christian 38T I want to dive from. Anyone know the options
for getting back aboard w/ full scuba? Any "plan B" suggestions? Thanks, Brad s/v Aldonza |
#2
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![]() padeen wrote: I have a Hans Christian 38T I want to dive from. Anyone know the options for getting back aboard w/ full scuba? Any "plan B" suggestions? Thanks, Brad s/v Aldonza Hi: Do you have a topside tender? If not..................... remove all gear and put in a bag/net/brail. Crawl out of water on to boat. Pull in the sport scuba stuff. Got a tender? If so, thats his problem. Your a diver not a tender! Bob DIT 107/80 |
#3
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I agree with Bob, been there-done that, got the t-shirt! Sounds like Bob is
or was a Navy Diver. I use a line with a snap hook, like a fish stringer: ditch my weights (toss on the boat first), then string tank, bc, mask, and fins last. All while maintaining contact with the boat, of course. MMC "Bob" wrote in message oups.com... padeen wrote: I have a Hans Christian 38T I want to dive from. Anyone know the options for getting back aboard w/ full scuba? Any "plan B" suggestions? Thanks, Brad s/v Aldonza Hi: Do you have a topside tender? If not..................... remove all gear and put in a bag/net/brail. Crawl out of water on to boat. Pull in the sport scuba stuff. Got a tender? If so, thats his problem. Your a diver not a tender! Bob DIT 107/80 |
#4
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![]() MMC wrote: I agree with Bob, been there-done that, got the t-shirt! Sounds like Bob is or was a Navy Diver. Hi MMC: Close.......... I went to a trade school in Ballard WA 1980. All the instructors were ex Navy salvage guys with a couple SEALS doing the Mark V indoc dives and open circuit scuba. Later I went to the GOM to seak my fortune in the offshore oil field. Interestingly enough I may head down there again next year................. But certainly not as a knight of the deep. A bit too much water under the bridge for that. Shallow Water Bob Ex mud duck |
#5
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Mark V? So it's been a couple years? I got Mark V training in '82. I think
we were the last class. MMC "Bob" wrote in message oups.com... MMC wrote: I agree with Bob, been there-done that, got the t-shirt! Sounds like Bob is or was a Navy Diver. Hi MMC: Close.......... I went to a trade school in Ballard WA 1980. All the instructors were ex Navy salvage guys with a couple SEALS doing the Mark V indoc dives and open circuit scuba. Later I went to the GOM to seak my fortune in the offshore oil field. Interestingly enough I may head down there again next year................. But certainly not as a knight of the deep. A bit too much water under the bridge for that. Shallow Water Bob Ex mud duck |
#6
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![]() MMC wrote: Mark V? So it's been a couple years? I got Mark V training in '82. I think we were the last class. MMC Hi MMC: Were you in the Navy, go to Divers Institute of Technology or another civilian dive schools? For me I was in class 107/80 at DIT. I can still hear that over enthusiastic ex SEAL yelling "sit up straight .......... you make the suit look bad!" Humm.... No more Mark V orientation? That's too bad. At the time I was at DIT, 1980, I think there were only 1-2 other civilian schools that had their students experience it... So goes the dinosaurs. There was a guy I found on another group who had actually dove the HeO2 version of the Mark V while in the Navy. Now that must have been a monster of a suit. Positive buoyant Bob |
#7
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Plan B suggestions:
Well, for starters this may sound obvious, but do not remove your fins until you finished with everything else. I've seen a few solutions while out cruising. A clever one was a small floating platform that was lowered over the side or transom and attached along side the boat. Diver climbed up onto it, removed gear onto boat, then hauled it back up from davits. This same float arrangement was used as a dingy dock for arriving guests. It was about 5' x 3' x 4", made of Styrofoam blocks covered in fiberglass, with a padding area running around the sides and cleats attached inboard of the edges. Another was a dive ladder that had a davit above it. Diver attached his BCD and weight belt, then flippers to it, climbed aboard, the hauled up his gear. Hope this helps. Robb padeen wrote: I have a Hans Christian 38T I want to dive from. Anyone know the options for getting back aboard w/ full scuba? Any "plan B" suggestions? Thanks, Brad s/v Aldonza |
#8
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We don't have a double ender, but we also don't have a swim platform.
We always put the dinghy in the water and put the gear into the dinghy and then climb the swim ladder and haul up the dinghy onto the davits. Dinghy davits and swim ladders do not have to be off the stern. They can be on the side of the boat. We have tried using a ladder that hooks onto the rail, but it wasn't long enough for me to use - i.e. it didn't extend below the water. But that might work depending on how much freeboard you have. AMPowers wrote: Plan B suggestions: Well, for starters this may sound obvious, but do not remove your fins until you finished with everything else. I've seen a few solutions while out cruising. A clever one was a small floating platform that was lowered over the side or transom and attached along side the boat. Diver climbed up onto it, removed gear onto boat, then hauled it back up from davits. This same float arrangement was used as a dingy dock for arriving guests. It was about 5' x 3' x 4", made of Styrofoam blocks covered in fiberglass, with a padding area running around the sides and cleats attached inboard of the edges. Another was a dive ladder that had a davit above it. Diver attached his BCD and weight belt, then flippers to it, climbed aboard, the hauled up his gear. Hope this helps. Robb padeen wrote: I have a Hans Christian 38T I want to dive from. Anyone know the options for getting back aboard w/ full scuba? Any "plan B" suggestions? Thanks, Brad s/v Aldonza grandma Rosalie |
#9
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![]() padeen wrote: I have a Hans Christian 38T I want to dive from. Anyone know the options for getting back aboard w/ full scuba? Thanks, Brad Hi Brad: Have you thought of a much simpler idea? Forget the sport scuba stuff. As you have found: Heavy, expensive, where do you get a source of 3000 psi air, cubersom in the water, too much to store on board a 38' boat, too much opportunity to get fouled in the water, and now the colors on the sports equipment are for sissies or girls. In my humble opinion a very dangerous method to put a diver at depth. Try free diving. Mask Snorkel Fins............. optional but very powerful The more you do it the easier it is. Be sides..... Something about our blood and ocean salinty simular Didn't we have gills at some time while a fetus? Sounds commpelling to me. Bob |
#10
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![]() "Bob" wrote in message Forget the sport scuba stuff. As you have found: Heavy, expensive, where do you get a source of 3000 psi air, cubersom in the water, too much to store on board a 38' boat, too much opportunity to get fouled in the water, and now the colors on the sports equipment are for sissies or girls. In my humble opinion a very dangerous method to put a diver at depth. Try free diving. Mask Snorkel Fins............. optional but very powerful How far d'ya get Bob? I can just hack 10m, but I've had loads of practice tying trips to anchors. If its a fiddly knot, its only going to be 7m. -- JimB http://www.jimbaerselman.f2s.com/ Describing some Greek and Spanish cruising areas |
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