Grysinski:
I use a computer, and always seem to ascend to quickly, causing it to blink and what not.
I'm not suprised your having trouble, most computers have so much 'Lag' in the ascent reading, be it a bar graph or a number, as to be usless. By the time it says you're moveing to fast you're Really moving to fast. The reason for this is so you can move the computer around to read it with out it telling you to slow down.
As long as your nuetral as you start up then every thing works easier, Don't add air to Start up, just swim up a few feet and let nature take it's course. A very old rule of thumb was "Ascend no faster than your slowest bubble" , it's still a very good rule today.
At least it gives you a good visual reference as to whether you are speeding up or slowing down. Just don't fixate on 1 bubble, large bubbles rise faster than small ones, and remember - bubbles get bigger as they go up!
Now for the computer, use the depth reading, it has almost no 'Lag'.
Ascend at 2 seconds per ft. Absolutly no faster than 1 sec per ft.
Be sure to start slowing Before you need to stop.
a quick pop ( > 1 sec ) of the deflater is all you need as long as you go slow.
Practice!!