CAPTAIN SINBAD
Contributor
What about the UTD Table are you planning to test? NDL/NoStop or light deco on backgas or Oxygen?
The minimum-decompression table I posted above. Nitrox 32.
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What about the UTD Table are you planning to test? NDL/NoStop or light deco on backgas or Oxygen?
Was the planned profile on the MDL Table or a RD schedule (or Cascading RD)?When I was with UTD, I used a Uwatec bottom time and used its average depth feature for those calculations. Near the end of my UTD experience, though, Andrew said that was not the right thing to do, because he said the time descending should not be included in that average. You were supposed to start averaging once you had reached your bottom depth. This was to be done by checking your depth every 5 minutes and maintaining a running average of those 5 minute checks in your head. That was considered to be a far better system than using a computer for calculations, because unlike the human mind, computers are capable of making mathematical errors. I don't know if they are still advocating that system for averaging.
It is a good idea to carry a computer in gauge mode, whether it shows you the average depth or not, so you can later compare what the computer thinks you did on your dive with what you think you did on the dive. You should have seen the case of two friends of mine. The graph of the dive shows them hitting their planned bottom depth and then drifting slowly downward until they did their first 5 minute check and returning to their planned depth. Then they would drift down, check their depth, and go back up. They did that throughout the dive. They later decided that the computer thought they were on average about 8 feet deeper than their calculations. Who knows which was right? (They were, of course, looking at the log to try to figure out why they got bent.)
It is a part of a dozen or so experimental / test dives I plan on doing this winter. Testing a few profiles generated by conventional US navy tables against depth averaging tables against Buhlmann with gradient factors.
What about the UTD Table are you planning to test? NDL/NoStop or light deco on backgas or Oxygen?
How will you test it? What will you learn, and how will you learn it?The minimum-decompression table I posted above. Nitrox 32.
It was an RD schedule. They thought their average depth was 150; the computer had it different. The computer also made a couple other mistakes (i.e., showed a different dive profile than the one they thought they did.)Was the planned profile on the MDL Table or a RD schedule (or Cascading RD)?
The computer also made a couple other mistakes (i.e., showed a different dive profile than the one they thought they did.)
It was an RD schedule. They thought their average depth was 150; the computer had it different. The computer also made a couple other mistakes (i.e., showed a different dive profile than the one they thought they did.)
Test the repetitive dive paradigm in comparison to the other models: Minimum SIT 60min, recommended 90min; Min Deco 10'/3m per minute ascent starting at 50% max or ave depth and double stop time at 30'/9m, 20'/6m and 10'/3m depths for repetitive dives.The minimum-decompression table I posted above. Nitrox 32.
You are not required to accept this approach to diving, but there are a lot of people using it and diving actively around the world with an excellent safety record."
Those who are saying why not trust a computer and wear another computer for back-up? Depth averaging appeals to those who reject the idea of No Decompression Limits. In other words, they believe that every dive is essentially a decompression dive and must end with staged decompression stops. The concept became popular after Doppler research confirmed the existence of bubbles in people who would be "safe" by computer standards.