You know what, you're right about that. I think they're the only ones suggesting 60 ft./min. I don't think it matters as much as what you said next.
When the RDP was developed the standard ascent rate (U.S. Navy) was 60 fpm, so the RDP was designed for that same rate.
So you are saying their tables do not reflect their models? In that case, there is no such thing as a mandatory stop or a safety stop or anything else, it's all hokum? That their model predicts that whether I ascend continuously at 60 ft./min. from depth, stop for a fraction of a second at 15 ft., or stop for a few minutes, my risk of DCS will be negligible provided I ascend smoothly at no more than 60 ft./min.?
The tables reflect the models. You are correct in your assumption that if you stay within the no-D limits of the RDP and you ascend no faster than 60 fpm you'd . be in pretty good shape. Would a three minute at 10 fsw stop hurt you? No. Would it help you? Probably not ... you don't have a problem, well you probably don't have a problem ... it is a statistical thing.
I must admit I am surprised at the strategy they chose for getting divers to contrpol their ascent rate and training divers on the purpose of the safety stop. Am I the only person wandering around thinking that they teach divers to believe that the off-gassing during the safety stop is meaningful?
PADI was just following the bandwagon, it was not their strategy.
This doesn't change my opinion that
all diving is decompression diving in the slightest, of course. I will reword what I said about the PADI protocol. It predicts that:
- For some dives, the model PADI uses predicts that the decompression required to keep the risk of DCS to a negligible level consists of a diver trying their best to ascend at a constant rate of 60ft./minute, and;
- For some other dives, the model PADI uses predicts that the decompression required to keep the risk of DCS to a negligible level consists of a diver trying their best to ascend at a constant rate of 60ft./minute, then trying their best to stop at 15', then trying their best to rise to the surface under control.
Either way we put it, the PADI protocol calls for decompression and not bolting to the surface.
There is no scientific or medical basis for (2), that was added by the lawyers not those with a background in decompression.
But a three minute, ten foot stop will not hurt you, at least from a decompression or practice standpoint.
"Safety Stops" are antique artifacts. In this day of 30 FPM, computer controlled ascents "safety stops" are really irrelevant. I say that as one of those who was in on originating them. The idea of safety stops came out of some research that showed that recreational divers were, in point of fact, making their ascents between 100 and 120 feet per minute, back when a standard ascent was 60 fpm. The ascent problem was noted by the National Underwater Accident Data Center, it was investigated and confirmed by Glen Egstrom at UCLA, the safety stop was suggested by Andy Pilmanis of the USC Catalina Lab Chamber back in the 1970s. It was first adopted by NAUI after the AAUS Decompression Computer Workshop where Bruce Bassett (as I recall) suggested perhaps a stop between 20 and 10 feet for two to three minutes would be every bit as effective as actually getting divers to slow down to 60 fpm. In addition it would cover most errors of one depth too deep or one time too long.
Then along came dive computers with ascent meters and such and the reason for the stop was forgotten, just the procedure was remembered.
The reality is that with a 30 FPM ascent you're not going to have detectable bubbles anyway. If you are using 60 FPM based tables (and remember that the original U.S. Navy tables were almost based on 120 FPM to satisfy the needs of Doug Fane's UDT folks) Spenser did show that a 60 fpm ascent following 50 min at 2.8 ata would exhibit bubbles in some cases. But ... I believe that the PADI tables were doppler tested and a 60 fpm ascent within the limits of those tables did not show bubbles, making a stop a waste of time.