David Carron
Registered
Hello all,
I had a bit of spare time on my hands and I just got through generating a whole slew of ascent profiles over a range of depths and dive durations. For each dive profile I calculate a total decompression time using ZHL16C in 80/80 then redistribute that time across all possible stops to find the profile with the lowest possible integral supersaturation.
One of the most interesting (to me, in any case) things about the generated profiles is that whilst a very general pattern that emerges is to push the deeper stops shallower, the minimum integral supersaturation is systematically found when the shallowest stop is executed at 6m instead of 3m.
I'm certainly not going to be actually diving any of these ascents (quite apart from anything else, the optimisation is way too intense to be credible in real-time on my dive computer), but I absolutely could switch to doing my last stop at 6m.
Is anybody aware of any proper research on the optimal depth for the last stop?
David.
I had a bit of spare time on my hands and I just got through generating a whole slew of ascent profiles over a range of depths and dive durations. For each dive profile I calculate a total decompression time using ZHL16C in 80/80 then redistribute that time across all possible stops to find the profile with the lowest possible integral supersaturation.
One of the most interesting (to me, in any case) things about the generated profiles is that whilst a very general pattern that emerges is to push the deeper stops shallower, the minimum integral supersaturation is systematically found when the shallowest stop is executed at 6m instead of 3m.
I'm certainly not going to be actually diving any of these ascents (quite apart from anything else, the optimisation is way too intense to be credible in real-time on my dive computer), but I absolutely could switch to doing my last stop at 6m.
Is anybody aware of any proper research on the optimal depth for the last stop?
David.