Mike Boswell
Contributor
Most of the people advocating the usefulness of rules of thumb do have Vplanner, computers and tables.
If you are on a dive and your computer fails I'm sure the common answer is the dive is over but what does it hurt for the diver to actually understand what the computer would be showing at the moment if it was working?
Additional knowledge is always good. Being able to have enough info to cross check is always good.
You might be a student of martial arts and perhaps you have a long list of tried and true techniques for when you are suddenly confronted with danger. I would guess that a good rules of thumb might be if you forget everything else...run!
What is the issue with rules of thumb?
Hi GCBrian,
I have no problems with "rules of thumb", when they work, but I don't think this rule works: Not even close. This rule says your NDL at 80 feet is (120-80=) 40 minutes, when the DSAT table says it is 30 minutes.
Is the correct answer 30, or is it 40? To me, that extra 10 minutes at 80 feet is a big difference. The DSAT 30-minute answer is based on our best science and many years of experience. The 40-minute answer was derived because someone with a straight-edge and a pencil drew a straight line through a curve to try to best fit the data. Which approach will you bet your life on?
Even worse, though, are all of the exceptions and explanations surrounding this so-called "easy" rule. (For more on that read: Precision Diving | NDL)
I have a computer and I have the tables, and I'll continue to use those, and if, in the unlikely event that I don't have either, I will use my buddy's computer or call the dive.