- Messages
- 254
- Reaction score
- 64
- # of dives
- I'm a Fish!
You are correct in that millions and millions of dives have been made on the USN tables. At the same time, that data is misleading. There is little research or data available on those dives. The dive stats you mention are not research dives made to the limits of the tables to test the validity of those tables and then give us a realistic DCS incidence rate, like the USN did. They were just dives made by divers who did or did not appropriately pad the tables. The development was still done with about 100 dives.
The USN Tables have shortcomings. First, they are entirley based on a 1 FPS ascent rate, which conventional wisdom tells us is not the best approach. The USN tables will not work with a slower ascent rate. Period. You cannot use the USN tables, and use safety stops, or modified rates of ascent. When the USN uses the USN tables they ascend at 1 FPS.
At the same time, the USN is transitioning from the USN Tables, to the VPM Tables. The reasoning for this is because although the USN tables have served us well, there are better options based on current knowledge and research.
Cheers
JC
The USN Tables have shortcomings. First, they are entirley based on a 1 FPS ascent rate, which conventional wisdom tells us is not the best approach. The USN tables will not work with a slower ascent rate. Period. You cannot use the USN tables, and use safety stops, or modified rates of ascent. When the USN uses the USN tables they ascend at 1 FPS.
At the same time, the USN is transitioning from the USN Tables, to the VPM Tables. The reasoning for this is because although the USN tables have served us well, there are better options based on current knowledge and research.
Cheers
JC
The statement that the Navy tables are based on only 100 dives with a 5% hit rate is a bit misleading. Millions of dives have been made by the Navy on its tables and there is not a 5% hit rate. They are one of the most used and most documented set of tables out there.
According to Larry Taylor, Diving Safety Coordinator at the University of Michigan, ŵhe US Naval Safety Center report on diving illness and safety (as described in SPUMS, Sept 1997, p. 179) stated that for the period 1990-1995, there were 648,488 logged dives with 382 reported cases of decompression sickness. That is more like a 0.06% hit rate.