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How do I get advanced open water SSI?

4 min read

Asked by: Angie Ball

After completing the four SSI Specialty programs that interest you, as well as 24 logged dives, you will automatically receive the SSI Advanced Open Water Diver recognition rating, along with your SSI Specialty program certifications.

How many dives do you need for advanced open water?

five PADI

The Advanced course takes a minimum of two days and consists of five PADI Adventure dives. PADI offers many types of Adventure Dives to choose from. Underwater Navigation and Deep Dive are required, giving you three more Adventure Dives that you can choose.

How long does it take to get advanced open water?

The PADI Advanced Open Water Course consists of 5 different adventure dives. You are required to do a knowledge review for each dive, which your instructor will go over with you before getting in the water. The course can be done over 2 or 3 days, with up to 3 dives being completed in one day.

How do you get a SSI Specialty diver rating?

SSI Specialty Diver
SSI’s intermediate diver rating is higher than any other agency’s advanced courses. To earn the certification for Specialty Diver, you must complete 2 specialty courses and have done a total of 12 dives.

What is involved in advanced open water?

Advanced Open Water Diver eLearning includes interactive lessons on 13 popular specialty dives: altitude, boat, digital underwater imaging, drift, dry suit, fish ID, night, buoyancy, search and recovery, underwater naturalist and wreck diving.

Is SSI Advanced Adventurer the same as Advanced Open Water?

Advance Adventure Diver Training (SSI) is equivalent is PADI’s AOWD. SSI has additional requirements for their AOWD. Deep Diver Specialty: The AOWD certification allows diving to 100 feet 30 meters.

How deep can you dive with open water SSI?

18m / 60 feet

The SSI Open Water Diver is our most popular certification level. This globally-recognized certification will allow you to dive with another certified diver, worldwide, to depths of up to 18m / 60 feet and is valid for life.

What’s the difference between open water and advanced open water?

In comparison to open water diving, advanced open water diving is a PADI course you can take after completing the PADI Open Water Diver Certification. The advanced open water diver course takes your diving knowledge and skills to the next level.

What comes after open water certification?

If that’s your goal and you want to get there quickly, Rescue Diver is the obvious next step. You’ll often hear this mentioned as the most challenging, yet most rewarding course divers ever take. Rescue divers learn to prevent and manage problems and develop more confidence in their dive skills.

Can open water divers do night dives?

Can Open Water Divers night dive? Yes, but proper training will make your first night dive more enjoyable. You’ll learn how to navigate in the dark, where the most interesting creatures hang out, and gain night diving tips from your instructor.

How many dives do you need for rescue diver?

There are four open water dives that you have to complete for the PADI Rescue Diver course. During the first two dives, you’ll just repeat all of the skills that you did in your confined water component, so it’s pretty straightforward.

What are the 4 open water dives?

There are four components to the PADI Open Water Diver course: theory, confined water work, waterskills asessement, and open water dives.

How deep can a rescue diver go?

40m/130ft

WHAT DO I EARN AT THE END? You will be certified as a PADI Deep Diver, to a maximum depth of 40m/130ft within no-stop limits.

Can you fart while diving?

Farting is possible while scuba diving but not advisable because: Diving wetsuits are very expensive and the explosive force of an underwater fart will rip a hole in your wetsuit. An underwater fart will shoot you up to the surface like a missile which can cause decompression sickness.

What’s the deepest free dive?

702 feet

The maximum depth reached by anyone in a single breath is 702 feet (213.9 metres) and this record was set in 2007 by Herbert Nitsch. He also holds the record for the deepest dive without oxygen – reaching a depth of 831 feet (253.2 metres) but he sustained a brain injury as he was ascending.