UTD Journal Volume 2, Issue 5, May 2014 | Page 7

Let’s look at each of these four points. 1. Lungs are primary for buoyancy control. A properly weighted and balanced diver will be neutral at every depth. This means small changes and adjustments in buoyancy can be easily and quickly accomplished by changing lung volume. On descent, gas is added to the BC and the dry suit only to keep the diver neutral. Initiating a descent or ascent is by lung volume – want to go up? Inhale (then start exhaling as soon as the ascent begins). Want to go down? Exhale. Depending on body size, most lungs can adjust buoyancy from between four and eight pounds (two and four kgs). This is plenty to start ascents or descents, or make small changes to adjust for swell or other water movement. 2. The BC carries the weight of the gas. It is not used for buoyancy control (it’s a buoyancy ‘compensator,’ not ‘controller’). A properly weighted diver should be neutral at 10’/3m with the cylinders almost empty. This allows for precise buoyancy control at the shallow stops. When weighting a diver, we do it with the BC empty and NO GAS IN THE TANK. If using aluminum tanks, we do it without the tanks. If using steel tanks, which are part of your weighting system, we do it with 500 psi/35b. We get the diver neutral at 10’/3m. Then, when we add a full tank, the weight of the gas is ‘compensated’ for in the BC. So with a single AL80, the divers adds about 5lbs/2.5kgs of lift to the BC. 3. The dry suit has nothing to do with buoyancy – the dry suit inflation system is only to maintain the suit at the same buoyancy throughout the dive. If the diver is wearing a dry suit and a single 80 cft/11l tank, the BC starts at 5lbs/2.5kgs and is vented throughout the dive, so at the end of the dive the BC is empty. With a wet suit, the BC also has to carry the loss of positive buoyancy of the wet suit at depth, but that’s temporary, as the wet suit will expand on the way up and the BC will have to be vented to compensate, again leaving the BC empty at the shallow stops with the suit is not compressed. 4. The breathing cycle continues regardless of whether there is a regulator in your mouth. This is where most people unravel in the water. Some divers have been taught to blow a small stream of bubbles any time the regulator is removed from the mouth, in order to prevent a lung over-expansion injury in the event of a loss of buoyancy control. But if you start neutrally buoyant and take the regulator out of your mouth and blow a stream of bubbles, it will force a change in buoyancy and you’ll descend. It’s been ingrained into most divers: never hold your breath. But the real rule is never hold your breath ON ASCENT. TM