Typically the weight is
lead or iron, and weighs around 20 kg (44 lb). To prevent the assembly sinking and being lost, the
buoy should provide more
buoyancy than is required to make the complete system float. For example, if a 20 kg/44 lb weight is used, the buoy must provide more than 20 kg buoyancy: it needs to be more than 20 litres/4.4 gallons in volume, as it must also support its own weight. Some agencies and codes of practice recommend a buoy that can not be dragged underwater by the divers relying on it for depth control. In surface-supplied diving this may be a considerable weight if diving heavy. If used in a current, the shot must be prevented from being dragged away. This can be done by attaching it to a small anchor by a short line. Another method used is to tie the shot off to an object on the bottom by a thin line, which can be either released by the last diver, or broken when the shotline is recovered. The line should be longer than the depth of the dive site at the deepest state of the tide during the dive, and at least 10 mm (0.4 inch) in diameter. A thick line is used because the shot weight is often lifted by pulling the line by hand and the pressure of a thin line can cause pain and injury to the hands when the shot is recovered. Floating line, such as
polypropylene, although cheap, can foul the propellers of boats and is an entanglement hazard to divers if it is allowed to accumulate near the surface. There are several ways of avoiding this: • coil the excess line after deployment, this can be done on a storage and deployment reel. • use a "top tensioning" arrangement: the line runs freely through a ring on the buoy and is weighted at the top end by a small weight • use a "bottom tensioning" arrangement: the line runs freely through a ring on the weight and is lifted at the bottom end by a small, rigid buoy. Line which sinks will accumulate excess length at the bottom which may snag, making recovery of the shot difficult or impossible. In most cases a small amount of wind or current will put some tension on the line, which can put the buoy an inconvenient horizontal distance from the shot. A large float will go up and down with the passing waves. This can be disconcerting and inconvenient for the divers if they need to hold onto it in a current, as they will to some extent go up and down with the line. This effect is minimised if a small diameter spar buoy is used as the primary buoy to tension the line, as it will tend to react less to the waves, with a large volume safety buoy on a short tether, which will prevent the spar buoy from being dragged down if the tension gets too much. If a large float is used the divers can clip off to the shotline using a
jonline, a short length of rope or webbing with a clip or loop that will hold one end to the shotline, allowing the diver to hold the other end at a short distance downstream. Vertical movements of the clipped end are absorbed by the horizontal length of the jonline. ==Deployment==