Foxfish
Contributor
Foxfish it is not about the pressure to get you home but rather the cubic footage....
Calculating min gas is very simple and really doesn't take that much time at all. I'd rather take the minute it takes to do and dive with a solid gas plan.
You'd know however that for a given tank volume, more pressure means more volume.
8 minutes to ascend from 30 m seems reasonable. Remember though that the average depth is not simply the total depth divided by two, it is the time weighted average. I calculate a pressure of 80 b or 1150 psi with a 12 L tank. If I do a normal ascent from 30 m starting with 80 b I reach the surface with 50 b. I'd suggest that is more than a coincidence. Someone posted a link to the DIR website previously showing the calculation with similar results. I noticed that Natalie Gibbs also runs through a calculation and came up with 70 b or 1000 psi though she notes this is on the low side. You and a few others are saying you need 110 b or 1600 psi.
---------- Post added December 5th, 2013 at 06:53 PM ----------
and... take a look at this:
The problem here was stupidity or gross incompetence not the rules. Show me cases where a person died as a result of running out of air when the began their ascent with adequate pressure to hit the surface with 50 b. Not that I'm any real judge on the matter given my limited experience.
---------- Post added December 5th, 2013 at 07:08 PM ----------
Here's a perfectly good example of why it's so wrong: A seemingly reasonable diver with a decent quantity of experience is absolutely convinced that basic math should NOT be used to plan for safety because the major agencies say "surface with 50b." You simply can't be convinced, nor can you even admit to seeing that there might be some benefit due to the dogma ingrained so deeply by such a simple phrase. As has been proven by anecdote, video, and math, it's insufficient and you can't see it. THAT is why it's wrong. I'm not saying you should HAVE to abide by the rules I like, but you should at least be able to admit there is merit to it.
In post #134 I did say the approach had merit. I think it is helpful to gain at least some insight into how you do a gas plan for an emergency ascent. I see the benefit of a simple rule like surface with 50 b in the OW and AOW context and it seems to tally with the air required to ascend from 30 m in an emergency.
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