Sidemount diving isn’t just about looking cool with tanks on your hips. Done right, it’s a game-changer for streamlining, redundancy, and access. Done wrong? It’s a tangled mess of hoses, trim issues, and frustration.
What works for a 6’4” instructor in a drysuit probably fails for you in a 3mm wetsuit. Adjust your tank height, bungee tension, and clip positions for YOUR reach and flexibility. Sidemount is personal. If it feels awkward on land, it’ll be dangerous underwater.
If you’re vertical or tilted, you’ve already lost. Success starts with a flat, stable platform. Adjust your tanks, wing, and weight so you can hover motionless at 10 feet. Your spine should be parallel to the surface—always. Sidemount- Principles For Success
Drop a 💧 if you’ve made the switch to sidemount… or 👎 if you’re still untangling your hoses.
You don’t have one cylinder—you have two independent lifelines. Never breathe one tank below 1/3 of its starting pressure unless you’re in a deliberate failure drill. Symmetrical consumption isn’t the goal; discipline is. Sidemount diving isn’t just about looking cool with
Sidemount Success: 5 Principles That Actually Move the Needle
After countless dives (and fixing my own bad habits), here are the that separate successful sidemount divers from the “doorway dangles.” It’s a tangled mess of hoses, trim issues, and frustration
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Sidemount success isn’t a checklist—it’s a mindset. Start simple, drill the basics, and always prioritize control over convenience.