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I have enough to do calculating BO dynamically. Doing deco "manually" beyond making sure I don't exceed my BO deco gas is a no for me.
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There is math you need to be able to do, and there is math you don't need to do.what about recalculating gas on a stage cave dive should we not attempt to do that? too distracting?
There's no way to automate this on a machine actually designed and suited for the purpose - so this is totally apples and oranges. Although this is a fairly advanced skill and many stage divers should probably keep their dives simple and avoid this.what about recalculating gas on a stage cave dive should we not attempt to do that? too distracting?
@crofrog at nitrox depths the ratios are generally fine because GF-Lo doesn't matter, the issue is at trimix depths when the GF-lo's are much lower than the current recommendation of 70-80% of the GF-hi.
If you disagree, I would love to hear your argument on why it is better than properly planning dives with software and then executing that dive with a computer that is running the same algorithm as the software.
Paying attention to what? Your physical environment? Your teammate(s)? Animal life? Your route? You have lots of things to pay attention to during a dive, particularly a technical dive. Constantly doing math throughout the dive only distracts you from those things. If anything important arises during the dive that seriously occupies your time and attention, what happens to your constant math computations?
Sure, but that just means different ratios could (and should) be selected to remove the deep stops. My only real issue with your statement is this part: "Ratio Deco is at best extremely risky and goes against everything we understand about decompression theory."
The first half of that statement—“extremely risky”—is certainly hyperbole. Based on the empirical data the Navy has published in the last 15 years, almost all of the technical diving we do is "extremely risky." To align with their empirically validated tables, your GF-high would need to be much lower than what most people commonly dive with today. I think it’s hard to categorize Ratio Deco vs ZHL vs [insert algorithm here]—as long as they produce a similar total decompression time, and shallow (30-20ft) stop times—as one being extremely riskier than the others.
I don’t disagree with that sentiment. I agree with you about using Ratio Deco primarily as a sanity-checking tool, and potentially as a backup in the event of computer failures. Although at this point, like many people, I dive with two computers. I plan the dives using DecoPlanner, calculate the Ratio Deco on the way to the first stop, and compare both to what we had planned—then select the longest schedule of the three.
Back when I was training with UTD, I was specifically (and emphatically) told that computers can make mistakes, that is why it is better to use "the computer between the ears," which does not.That however does not make it "extremely risky". What does make it extremely risky is being under the delusion that the human brain can make those kind of repetitive calculations without screwing them up, and that's the real risk with using ratio deco as a primary means of creating an ascent profile.
Right. If only this were true.Back when I was training with UTD, I was specifically (and emphatically) told that computers can make mistakes, that is why it is better to use "the computer between the ears," which does not.