Originally posted by Walter
funky__monks,
Try to be fair. There's no reason to get upset over a rumor. If it later turns out to be true then would be the time to get upset. Get upset over real issues - there are certainly enough of them around.
"I've already spent much of my time since taking my OW course trying to learn the why's to what was taught, learning what I wasn't taught, and learning the "other side" to things that I was taught to be fact when in actuality it was propoganda based."
Good for you. I'm interested in hearing what was left out of your class that you believe should have been included. I'm also interested in what was presented as fact that turned out to be propaganda.
"or any knowledge of what the algorithms in the computer your using is based on, is the most asinine thing I've ever heard."
It is my guess that most divers regardless of what course they went through fall in that category. What per centage of divers do you think understand half-times, compartments, M values or the difference between Haldanian, modified Haldanian and non Haldanian models? I teach a pretty complete class, but I don't cover those topics. Most divers blindly believe it when their instructor told them the RDP is more conservative than other tables when the opposite is actually true. I agree divers need to understand how to use tables, but I don't think they need to understand how they are designed.
48 minutes at 80 ft (there is no 77 ft on the tables) gives you a 23 minute decompression stop at 10 ft on the YMCA tables. On the DCIEM tables you need 5 minutes at 20 ft and 10 minutes at 10 ft. NASDS gives you 19 minutes at 15 ft The RDP and the MDEA tables won't even give you info for blowing the tables by that much, PDIC gives you 10 at 10, NAUI gives you 10 at 15, BSAC only requires 3 at 6 meters (20 ft).
I went through that to ask how understanding the tables helped you on that dive? Seems to me you ignored the tables and blindly followed your computer.
I could be wrong, but I don't expect PADI to remove tables from its standards. If they did, how would not understanding table use make a diver less safe than the example you used of yourself diving a computer when you do know how to use tables?
padiscubapro,
"PADI's DSAT spent alot of money developing tables"
I have no numbers, but don't you think they've turned a profit on that deal yet? They started selling the RDP back in 1988. They've sold lots of tables in 14 years. They were getting hit by bent divers with product liability law suits for selling US Navy Tables. Lots of folks were pushing the tables and getting bent - especially on repetitive dives. I never did understand their response - they came out with tables that were more conservative on the first dive and much more liberal on repetitive dives. Other agencies saved the research money and merely backed off the US Navy Tables which resulted in more conservative tables than either the US Navy or the RDP. Kinda makes you wonder........
Padi did back off the limits on compared to the Navy tables, but the being more liberal on repetive dives is due to the fact that they eliminted one of the very long tissue groups from their calculations (whick really only comes into play on very long shallow dives) and allows the diver in longer for shorter intervals.. The absolute M values are still however less than the navy tables allow..
Shorter surface intervals don't always decrease safety, using proper gases and decompression planning short surface intervals dont necessarily decrease bottom time on deep dives... I routinely due multiple 200+ ft dives with as little a 1.5 hour surface intervals, according to just about any dive planning software a surface interval of 1 hour will easily allow 200 ft dives 1 hr apart and the second dive the deco stops on 2 identical dives is usually SLIGHTLY shorter..
The recreational dive planner also gives padi's program a safety standard they can defend.. If every student is using a different computer they POSSIBLY could have to defend an instructor if a student gets bent folowing someone's computer model along iwth the computer designer. Law suits in the US are just to easy to file.