Of course the needle drops more rapidly, all other things being equal, in a smaller tank. That's a given, glaringly obvious, not requiring any thought other than the obvious understanding that a 80 cf tank will move the needle at approximately half the rate of a 40cf tank, and the diminishing time element will be more precipitous with the smaller tank.That's rate of change aka derivative aka slope, gradient being a synonym for slope.
Do you use different SPGs for different size tanks? The needle will move very differently when breathing down an 80-gallon tank vs a .5 cf pony. You can program the computer to compensate for that.
I am curious as to how they progammed the IP drop (?) NetDoc says his computer detects and warns about.
A different SPG? Are you really serious?The reasoning involved in this concept completely eludes me. An SPG measures pressure, which translates to available gas only in the context of a known volume capacity. Requiring a computer to do this kind of rate of change calculation means the diver is not using his brain.
There is a lot of that going around, I suppose.
I did quite well in trigonometry, and I understand the use of gradient in math as well as in topography.