Do you dive 32 all the time because it's just simpler or is there a different reason for it?
Yes, standardizing on 32% simplifies a lot of things, provided both buddies are on the same page. Its very versatile.
You can really do almost any recreational dive with it. The MOD at pO2 of 1.4 is 111 feet and the contingency MOD for emergencies is still 132 feet. So down to about 100' or maybe 110', 32% is a no brainer. And the difference in N2 between 32% and air is still significant enough that the benefits are measurable when you are doing four or five dives a day, day after day. Or two deep dives a day, two days in a row. Or whatever.
As long as my dive buddy has the same training and thought processes I do, dive planning is straight forward. The NDL/MDL times for 32% are simple to memorize, and the EAD adjustment from air tables to 32% works out to be an even 20% -- that's math I can easily do in my head, even underwater.
From my experience, its also easy to get 32% fills. Most places that bank nitrox seem to at least bank 32%. It's also GUE's standard for nitrox; almost all of their standard trimix gasses can be mixed starting with a given pressure of pure helium, then topping with 32%. Why that matters at this level is that most GUE-friendly shops will have thousands of cu ft of 32% banked, ready for fills.
So, yes, I guess I could try to eke out a little more no-stop time with 36% or 40% or to save a little money with air fills. For me, the tradeoff isn't worth losing the flexibility that a standard gas gives to a team. It sounds strange that a standard for nitrox would give a team more flexibility, but it works out that way. Right now I have two AL80s sitting in my mudroom with 32% that were originally supposed to be for practice drills followed be a fun dive in a quarry with a friend, but instead they will probably be used for a pair of deeper lake dives.
As always, YMMV.
