Originally it was taught to ascend no faster than 60 fpm. Some may still teach that but generally it isnt.
To answer your question, yes your ascent rate matters. Decompression tho is still a theory tested on every dive and nothing can guarantee that you will not develop enough "bubbles" to...
Yes I'm aware. But my comment was in regards to just using EAD to get deco stops on a navy deco table. It does not track the CNS or OTU's. Those have to be calculated (by hand or using a planing software)like I mentioned earlier.
Your comment reiterates the one thing I have been saying this...
There is a lot too it. Biggest take away for me was proper gas planning (which I learned in Intro to tech). All the training in the world is useless without proper gas planing. I haven't read all the comments but I'm assuming you don't have any training beyond AOW?
As for deco dives I...
There is a lot too it. Biggest take away for me was proper gas planning (which I learned in Intro to tech). All the training in the world is useless without proper gas planing. I haven't read all the comments but I'm assuming you don't have any training beyond AOW?
As for deco dives I...
Take a Intro to Tech course :)....its money and time well spent with a great a instructor.
As for tips...verify the manifold is open BEFORE your dive. This will prevent a false Out Of Air situation.
Sounds like more pre-dive discussion is needed. If dive plan, hand signals and lost buddy protocols haven't not been talked about with detail and agreed upon you should NOT proceed with the dive.
Nope, neither of those are it. They show video of a senior male wearing a black wetsuit with a wide blue strip down the side being pulled out of the water by onto a boat by emergency responders. That was all I caught of the news before they switched stories today while I was on lunch.
Said...
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