copter53
Guest
Dove last night. 60ft started going up. 40ft to 25ft zoomed up by mistake. Stupid on my part. Stayed at 25ft for like ten minutes to make up then took another 5 minutes to get to surface. Whats the rule here?
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this is intended to be a question, and is in no way offering advice:
would dropping back down to 40' and starting over with a slow ascent be an option?
It seems to me that there is a delay in bubbles forming during a fast ascent, and dropping back down may prevent formation. Please feel free to correct me if I am way off.
Usually, mate, that would be a tactic employed on a runaway ascent from a little deeper dive. Of course the unknowns are many in this instance including the length of the diver's exposure on the bottom, but a 15-foot rapid ascent in the portion of the water column mentioned here, followed by his action, should be OK.... that said, if you find yourself in a similar situation ever, your suggestion is a very good one as long as you have sufficient gas!
...It seems to me that there is a delay in bubbles forming during a fast ascent,....
Why would there be a delay in bubble formation? How much of a delay does a shaken bottle of coke give in forming the bubbles when you releive the pressure of the cap (ascend)?
Nitrogen is held in solution by the pressure, if you ascend slowly the nitrogen comes out of your blood and tissues where it was stored (remembering there are fast, medium and slow storage areas aka tissues at play here) and into the blood possibly as micro bubbles (silent bubbles) and moves to your lungs (a journey that takes approximatly 3 minutes for all your blood to complete, hence the 3 minute safety stop) where it is off gassed. In water re-compression is not recommended for a varity of reasons by any of the BOW certification agencies I am aware of. Returning to depth would be at this point in water recompression as the bubbles (if any) have already formed.