halocline
Contributor
Hi all,
Firstly, apologies in advance as I am sure these topics are discussed regularly and heavily.
I have actually spent a fair amount of time reading through this forum amongst others in order to write what I am going to below.
I appreciate there are many theories, and at the end of the day, it's all theory, but just wanted to write what I have accumulated / compiled from various other sources and check with those more knowledgable, I'm not a) dangerously wrong; or b) missing anything super important? I plan to incorporate some monitoring of GF99 and SurfGF when I get a new dive computer.
As context (hopefully you can see from my profile anyway), I'm only at PADI AOW, looking to progress onto rescue diver as I want to have the tools available to be more self reliant should I need to (even though I always dive with a DM/guide and buddies, I think it's generally good practice in anything to be able to do it with my own skillset). I am looking into getting a new dive computer, and toying with garmin mk3i descent (as may add AI later but not straight away), or the fenix 8 (as I currently only dive max 40m, oxygen/nitrox, and no plans for tec yet anyway, not sure if AI is a dealbreaker yet), and this led me into the deep topic of GF's, conversatism and what it all means. Thanks for suggestions on dive computers, I've read endless reviews/articles and the shearwater/garmin pros/cons. This thread isn't for discussing any of the dive computers please.
I plan to dive on the garmin presets low/med/high, and don't plan to change to my own GF's (just yet - until I understand moreso), I believe the descent mk3i can add GF99 and SurfGF to the data screens and understand these too be helpful tools in limiting risk of DCS.
Anyway.... that's enough context, so, is the below correct, or have I messed something up?
....
DCS doesn't occur because of nitrogen in blood, it occurs when nitrogen makes large bubbles in the blood, the small bubbles just causes fatigue post dive. A greater pressure difference (ascending too rapidly) causes a greater pressure difference and thus larger bubbles are at risk of forming. However the greater pressure difference, the faster nitrogen off-gasses.
GFLo - depth of first stop (higher number better as means shallower - no longer deemed best practice to deep stop)
GFHi - overall conservatism (100% is equal to the M value which is the maximum safe, lower number means less bottom time but safer)
Normally preset on computers are:
Low - 45/95
Medium - 40/85
High - 35/75
GF99 - tells you how much nitrogen in the body and the size of bubbles in the body
0% - normal nitrogen in body
1-49% less and smaller bubbles
50-100% more and large bubbles
>100% emergency
GF99 therefore lets you see: If you are on or off-gassng and how efficiently
Higher GF99 means faster nitrogen release, it will rise as you ascend as the pressure difference increases and off-gassing speed increases. Put simply, a lower GF99 means slower gas release, so smaller bubbles, less small bubbles but longer time. A higher GF99 (up to 100%) means quicker gas release, so bigger bubbles, more small bubbles (so more fatigue) but less time.
Aim to keep GF99 when off-gassing between 33-50% of your GFHi, i.e. at medium GFHi of 85, GF99 should be 28-42%. Lower than this means it takes too long to off-gas and not worthwhile, higher than this risks large bubble formation
SurfGF - tells you what the pressure difference is if you surfaced immediately
Same percentages as GF99. Effectively your dive computer will tell you to ascend when your SurfGF matches your GFHi setting. It will be at the highest when you come from the bottom of the dive and as you ascend and off-gas nitrogen it will reduce. Aim to keep SurfGF at minimum to your GFHi, lower increases the safety margin
Thanks in advance
Joe
After reading this thread, I get the impression that there are two issues you’re interested in, one is a greater understanding of basic decompression theory and terminology, and the other is to increase your safety on OW, NDL dives. I think you should separate these issues in your mind; enjoy the intellectual exercise of learning more, but in terms of your own diving as a new diver, keep things very simple.
For the first, there are two resources I think you might enjoy reading. One is a chapter in the old PADI encyclopedia of recreational diving; I’m not even sure if that book is available anymore. I got it when I did my DM training many years ago. The chapter on deco theory is pretty basic and does a good job at simplifying the concepts of tissue compartments and I believe there’s even some summarized history in there. The other is a very good book called ‘Deco for Divers’ by Mark Powell. Anyhow, once you’ve read those, you’ll have a good grasp of the basics and you can enjoy (if you’re a real deco nerd) more current writing and conversations about more esoteric concepts.
For the second, dive safety, at a new diver level it really is pretty simple. Watch your profile, make sure you have enough gas, generally dive conservatively, and extend your safety stop. In fact, you can go a little further and do a brief stop, say 1-2 minutes, at 20 feet, then descend slowly to 10 feet and do a longer stop. On 2nd dives on air in places like Cozumel I have often extended this stop to 7-10 minutes. Almost all recreational computers have some sort of N2 loading graph, often there’s a red section which means you are under mandatory deco, a yellow caution section, and a green section. Years before I understood anything about gradient factors, I found I felt better after a day of diving if I waited until my computer went into the green before surfacing. And when you do surface from your stop, take a full minute or more to go from 10 feet to the surface.