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Again, if one believes there is nothing to deep stop theory, all that remains is m-values.
That's why when I meet divers who say things on the line of deep stop theory being bogus, I might well point out that they're probably not using GF100/100 because they don't truly believe gas mechanics theory is bogus at all.
For clarity (which it seems you might be requesting), I think that "deep stops have been debunked", or "deep stops don't work" is a colloquialism of statements like "bubble-model-style deep stops are not efficient", or "current research would lead us to conclude that bubble-model-style deep stops like those generated by popular bubble models (e.g. VPM, RGBM,RD) require more time, not less, to obtain the same level of DCS risk."my point as it relates to discussions on this matter is, if one thinks that "deep stops have been debunked", it begs two obvious questions:
Your argument is just slight of hand. You're yelling "look at deep stops, look at deep stops!" and whispering "you haven't defined deep stops."1) What is a deep stop?
This illustrates well that what we're talking about here, is where the line in the sand is. No-one is saying that "there is scientific proof that deep stops don't work". Just that they've been overemphasised by some margin.
This is a huge leap. And illogical. A diver says to you, "I don't think I'll dive VPM-B, or RD, due to the deep stops it imposes." and you throw up your hands and say, "Well, then, you have to dive GF100/100!" Really!!??2) Why not use GF100/100, then?
If "deep stops have been debunked" holds true, then surely, all that remains presently on the table in terms of decompression, is tissue gas supersaturation á la Haldane. If that is the case, logical deduction demands that one should perceive m-values pure as the optimal decompression line. Hence GF100/100. But nobody's doing that.
Ah. My bad. Since you were bringing up that point here on SB, in this thread, I stupidly assumed that you were talking about discussions in here, which in my mind would be appropriate. Bringing in - and misquoting by embellishment - a more than three year post, on another forum, which BTW is well known for quite saltier language than what we see here on Scubaboard, looks pretty much like a strawman argument to me.
Actually, that has been the ONLY argument made. Deep stops are "suboptimal", "inefficient", "counterproductive to safety".@UWSojourner if we look at Doolette's explanation of why the NEDU study pushed to higher risk, it makes sense - but doesn't show that deep stops are unsafe;
On the above basis, one might argue that they're suboptimal, which is a fair argument;
Let me put it this way. If I heard someone say, "Deep stops are unsafe" and another person say, "Deep stops are not unsafe and you have to use GF100/100 if you say that" I would conclude that it was person 2 who didn't understnad the "ins and outs of the debate."As for GF100/100, you're drawing a parallel across RD and VPM and deep stops, which prerequisites your logic that anyone participating in the conversation and uses the term "deep stop", knows all the ins and outs of the debate.
In my experience, that's not the case - particularly in the offline domain.
The sure knowledge that one of the theoretical, but untested, and near religious mass followings in the technical diving world is overBut that's precisely the point, if deep stop theory, bubble mechanics, is out the window, what have you left?
Actually, that has been the ONLY argument made. Deep stops are "suboptimal", "inefficient", "counterproductive to safety".
If someone summarizes that as "unsafe", then perhaps its not precise. But they might really mean "not as safe as another option I have using the same decompression time". Then it's fine.
Let me put it this way. If I heard someone say, "Deep stops are unsafe" and another person say, "Deep stops are not unsafe and you have to use GF100/100 if you say that" I would conclude that it was person 2 who didn't understnad the "ins and outs of the debate."
Actually, though, bubble mechanics is not out the window.
let me just say I've had quite a few conversations with people who were under the impression that deep stops were "debunked" and "unsafe", because "science" or "NEDU", based on forum exchanges
Why would you say the difference is "huge"??? Both statements would lead me away from using, for example, VPM or RGBM and toward using something like GF40/X. Both statements would imply that the current state of research says the deep stops generated by common bubble models are likely causing additional risk to a profile (aka "unsafe"???). I see a difference in common usage vs. a scientific statement, but I'm not sure why you label it "huge".Allright, first let me just say I've had quite a few conversations with people who were under the impression that deep stops were "debunked" and "unsafe", because "science" or "NEDU", based on forum exchanges;
Not "trials indicate that deep stops are probably overemphasised by bubble models such as VPM but we don't know exactly by how much".
There's a huge difference, and that's what I'm on about.
Obviously we disagree. ALL the research we have is indicating that the deep stops commonly generated by models like VPM-B, RGBM are counterproductive to safety. That's not vague. That's pretty clear. It's clear enough that researchers are making statements like this:Conversely, the indications we have - while certainly strong enough to form a reasonable working hypothesis - personally, I think they're still vague ...
If you're stopping because you MUST stop due to "logistics", then you're no longer discussing best decompression practices which has been the topic in these deep stops threads.Please understand that when I stop deeper, it's not religion versus science - it's pretty much just logistics.
What logistics cause you to do this?Please understand that when I stop deeper, it's not religion versus science - it's pretty much just logistics.
Why would you say the difference is "huge"??? Both statements would lead me away from using, for example, VPM or RGBM and toward using something like GF40/X. Both statements would imply that the current state of research says the deep stops generated by common bubble models are likely causing additional risk to a profile (aka "unsafe"???). I see a difference in common usage vs. a scientific statement, but I'm not sure why you label it "huge".
Obviously we disagree. ALL the research we have is indicating that the deep stops commonly generated by models like VPM-B, RGBM are counterproductive to safety. That's not vague. That's pretty clear. It's clear enough that researchers are making statements like this:
"The impact of deep stops is not that they target some different physical reality. It is actually quite simple; the extra time spent deep allows more inert gas uptake in the relatively undersaturated intermediate and slow tissues. This is simply a loading problem that subsequently produces a higher degree of decompression stress. If there is less uptake at depth, ascent to a relatively shallow stop has much less risk. The idea that deep stops controlled bubble growth is one of the armchair arguments that has not lived up to human testing ... As with all the protocols we developed and subsequently saw fail, it is time to respect the data over the hand-waving." Dr. Pollock
The research is pretty clear, the statement above is pretty clear.
If you're stopping because you MUST stop due to "logistics", then you're no longer discussing best decompression practices which has been the topic in these deep stops threads.
What logistics cause you to do this?