The document describing the development and validation of the DSAT RDP is available on SB, courtesy of
@tursiops It makes for good reading and is highly recommended
Document Name: Development and validation of no-stop decompression procedures for recreational diving: The DSAT Recreational Dive Planner
Authors: R.W. Hamilton, Raymond E. Rogers, Michael R. Powell, Richard D. Vann, with Richard Dunford, Merrill P. Spencer, Drew Richardson
Attached is the 1994 report from DSAT on the Development of the Recreational Dive Planner (RDP).
It used to be available on the Rubicon site, which is now defunct.
Filename: DSAT_1994_The_Recreational_Dive_Planner_OCR_opt
File Format: Adobe PDF
Size: 14,323 kB
Pages: 126
I have been diving an Oceanic computer running DSAT since 2002, over 2,400 dives. I have been diving a computer running Buhlmann ZH-L16C with GF since 2016, over 1,300 dives, first a Dive Rite Nitek Q and then a Shearwater Teric since 2019. Most of my diving has been no stop, much of it reasonably close to NDLs. A little less than 5% of my dives have been light back gas deco, generally less than 10 min, always less than 15 min.
My Oceanic computers have always run DSAT without conservatism. I did some experimentation with Buhlmann GF settings in the beginning but have run a GF high of 95 the vast majority of the time. DSAT and a Buhlmann GF high of 95 run similarly but are different on both first dive and repetitive dives. DSAT tends to be more liberal on first dive, particularly when deeper. Buhlmann tends to be more liberal on repetitive dives, particularly when shallower. I have posted some of this experience on SB, including these more extreme examples
I have written previously about my experience diving DSAT and Buhlmann ZH-L16C with a GF high of 95. I have an example of what I have previously reported. This dive is a first dive of the day on the Castor in Boynton Beach. It was relatively deep with a max depth of 107 feet and an avg depth of 73 feet. DSAT gave me a minimum NDL of 6 minutes. A GF high of 95 on my Teric gave me 1 min of deco at 10 feet. My surfacing GF was 79.
This is a dive later in the week. It is the 4th dive of the day, following 3 moderately deep and long dives. This was a...
I have been fortunate to have never had signs or symptoms of decompression sickness. Many years ago, I began padding my safety stop when I was close to the NDL and adding additional time to my deco stop. Since having my Teric, I have used SurfGF to adjust my safety stop or deco stop to surface with the GF I desire.
Until a couple years ago, the SAUL decompression model, a probabilistic algorithm, was available. Unfortunately, it is no longer online. The recreational dive planner allowed for the calculation of the probability of DCS based on gas, depth, and time. Below is a screen shot of the RDP and a spreadsheet listing the probability of DCS for diving air at the DSAT NDLs. The highest probability, 0.41%, would be a risk of about 1/244 dives all the way to this limit. Obviously, this is far less than the 3%, 1/33, discussed above.