Except for how they approach the long hose, I agree with you ;-)What a common-sense approach BSAC has!
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Except for how they approach the long hose, I agree with you ;-)What a common-sense approach BSAC has!
I'll point out that USN divers are normally diving supported by a chamber and medical team on site and their profiles allow for a several percent probability of bending a young, incredibly fit diver. Which is OK, because they will be in their chamber in a few minutes.Yes, I can compare them for a single tank dive.
You cannot compare the PADI and Navy tables by simply looking at the first dive NDLs.
Yes, it's really too bad more dive computer testing does not use a standard, multi-dive protocolAbsolutely. And those that want to crank up Multideco etc all... comparing only solitary dive parameters... need to get a better grip on how tables/algorithms work.
I totally get all that. And all that you posted only reinforces that I don't want to dive their NDL's. I use those NDL's for my final limit of bottom-time when planning an ascent using a very conservative algorithm. Anything past that is done by the books. I don't do much real deco anymore, having most of my fun in shallower settings now.I'll point out that USN divers are normally diving supported by a chamber and medical team on site and their profiles allow for a several percent probability of bending a young, incredibly fit diver. Which is OK, because they will be in their chamber in a few minutes. ...//...
I use those NDL's for my final limit of bottom-time when planning an ascent using a very conservative algorithm.
I'll point out that USN divers are normally diving supported by a chamber and medical team on site and their profiles allow for a several percent probability of bending a young, incredibly fit diver. Which is OK, because they will be in their chamber in a few minutes.
The Navy tables I believe use the time from descent from the surface to ascent when you are leaving the bottom - so in essence you are using a fraction of those bottom times. You may want to subtract the descent time (60fpm) from the bottom time at depth - (120 feet would take 2 mins...) and so on...
Reminder only but you may have taken that into consideration.![]()
The Navy tables I believe use the time from descent from the surface to ascent when you are leaving the bottom - so in essence you are using a fraction of those bottom times. You may want to subtract the descent time (60fpm) from the bottom time at depth - (120 feet would take 2 mins...) and so on...
Reminder only but you may have taken that into consideration.![]()
"Several percent"? Is that true? So you mean more than one out of a hundred typical USN dives is probably going to involve DCS? I vaguely recall once reading something to that effect about the pure Buhlmann algorithm, i.e., with 100/100 GF.