Hello all,
I went diving on Saturday, April 26th with Jupiter Dive Center on an afternoon dive. I was given two cylinders of nitrox with approximately 36% of oxygen each and I set my Oceanic Pro Plus 3 computer accordingly as well as setting a conservative partial pressure of 1.40 as I was taught in the nitrox class. Both dives were expected to bottom out at a maximum depth of 75 feet at deepest portion of the reef. My first dive went well. After a 1 hour surface interval, we descended once more to the reef. However, my computer was beeping at me every time that I went below 60 feet, showing me that I was reaching my partial pressure of 1.40. I tried to stay above 60 feet the rest of the dive, but I was concerned that I would not be able to descend further to get a closeup view of the reef. What would be the reason that I was reaching the PP02 of 1.40 at 60 feet, while the other divers (who i assumed were breathing the same 36% mixture as everyone had either rented the cylinder from the shop or had them filled there) were able to descend below me to about 70+ feet? This really took out the fun out of the second dive.
I would be grateful with any assistance with the mechanics behind this.
Thanks!
Hey! Live and learn.
Computers are nice to have but be prepared to ignore it I'm when it misbehaves.
We should do some math-stuff first
1.4/0.36=3.889 so about 28 meters or 90 ft
The computer decided that 70 feet is too deep. We'll, it is wrong.
At this point in the dive, you ignore the computer, maybe just use the depth and ignore deco and Oxygen calculations.
A pre dive plan would have given you a max depth+runtime combination.
Just two numbers to remember and it gives you the ability to ignore the computer and continue the dive as planned.
You did the right thing in the moment. All the RTFM people are wrong along with the "buy a Shearwater" crowd. No amount of gear can compensate for lack of training.
The computer is not essential dive gear. It is nice to have a functioning computer (that you know how to use) to make life a bit easier. If it was essential life saving gear, you would take two or three.
A Shearwater or Suunto or Garmin will not help you if you can't figure out when to ignore it.
You analyzed a cylinder and wrote "MOD=90 ft". You may have even signed your name on a clipboard at the shop attesting to this measurement. And now you are in the water at 70 ft and the computer decided that you're too deep...so what if the computer is beeping at you?
Think of it as a learning experience.
Plan your dive.