Raise the Divebar - Scuba at Its Best - Professional and Recreational - Florida

Diver Propulsion Vehicle


Propel your way through the water and glide over reefs, buzz around a large wreck or weave through a kelp forest. You must be at least 12 years old and a PADI (Junior) Open Water Diver or higher.


Diver Propulsion Vehicles (DPVs) offer a thrilling way for scuba divers to see a lot of underwater territory in a short amount of time. They scoot you through the water allowing you to glide over reefs, buzz around a large wreck or weave through a kelp forest. Whether making a shore or boat dive, a DPV is a great way to see more and have fun doing it.

If you are at least 12 years old and a PADI (Junior) Open Water Diver or higher, you can enroll in the PADI Diver Propulsion Vehicle course.

Academic


The PADI Diver Propulsion Vehicle course guides you in choosing the right DPV for you. You will make two dives and learn:

Maintaining your DPV

How to plan dives, including procedures for staying with your buddy

DPV-handling skills, such as making proper descents and ascents

Potential problems and ways to deal with them

Get credit. The first dive of this PADI Specialty Diver course may credit as an Adventure Dive toward your Advanced Open Water Diver certification. Ask your instructor about earning credit.


Equipment


Of course, you will need a DPV along with your basic scuba equipment. If you have your own DPV, your instructor will have you complete all your training using it. Ask your PADI Instructor or local dive center staff which DPVs are available, and what other additional equipment you may need for your scuba diving exploration with a DPV.

Check with me about the gear you will use during this course, and get advice about everything you need in order to dive into your new adventure.


To talk with our PADI Course Director, click below or contact Michael Casey by calling (267) 257-9782.

Contact

Getting Started


Contact me now to enroll in the course, pick up your Diver Propulsion Vehicle Manual and start learning. By studying independently, you are better prepared to get in the water with your instructor and start “scootering.”