JonG1
Contributor
Also typically what dil do you use for what depths please?
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Thanks rjack thought i'd read about it somewhere but couldn't recall where.
Out of interest on CCR do you elevate ppo2 on deco above your core setpoint or stay at 6m instead of 3m for last stop or stay on loop with high o2 on surfacing?
Thanks rjack, coming back into diving after a long lay off, I have no benchmark to reference some decisions against, such as GF's because they simply didn't exist previously and having bubbled before with neuros (albeit with a PFO), I am cautious of straying too close to the line so it's interesting to reference other people's experiences.
Chambers are not the ocean, blood distribution among many other factors are vastly different when actually submerged.
Buhlmann's experimental dives in lakes and ocean were done to 350m (1150ft). He worked also with Hannes Keller, for his record dives to 230m (750ft) in 1957 in the Lago Maggiore, and to 305m (1000ft) in 1962 near Santa Catalina island.
Buhlmann's work was funded by Shell Oil. They were not interested in recreational diving but only in very deep mixed gas saturation diving.
He was surprised when he learned that recreational divers use his model. Nowadays the model is used in many recreational dive computers and ironically people start to believe that this is a recreational diving model and doubt whether it's suitable for deep diving ...
See also Milestones of the deep diving resarch laboratory Zurich.
When I finished reading the David Doolette’s article, I asked myself; does this make sense? And after reading the post by @atdotde – the theoretical diver, I really wanted to gain a better insight.
In summary, David Doolette calculates the average of all the “b” parameters which is the inverse the M-line slope which works out to be roughly 83% and then applies it to the GFhi to determine what the GFlo would be. For him, his preferred GFhi is 85%, therefore 85*0.83 = 70% is his GFlo.
His rational to apply the average “b” of 0.83 to GFhi is that it roughly counteracts the slope of the Buhlmann “b” parameters and brings it more in line with the US Navy decompression algorithm whose compartment M-line slopes are equal to or close to 1.