SPG3K
Contributor
Well, it did click one bar up. By showing NDL remaining, what I meant, was the Nitek displays the time you have at your current depth to avoid decompression, and that number was decreasing. Honestly, the only time I've seen that number go away is when I'm at a 2min stop.
I guess the most confusing point is that at the end of the day after dive 4, I was 1 bar into the red on the residual nitrogen graph. Now, I don't see how this is possible, just estimating by my bodies' feedback.
Let's say I do a rainbow river drift dive for 2 hours, I NEVER feel tired. Let's say i go to V. Blue and do 2 15 minute dives to 110ft, I ALWAYS feel tired. Everything I've read implies that the tired feeling has a lot to do with nitrogen in the body, since obviously my physical workload would be greater overall on the 2hr in water time than 30 minute dive times. Now, if I do the safety stops, my computer's nitrogen graph is at the same spot or one higher, yet lots of the fatigue goes away. So that would mean that your body gives you a good "warning sign" if you have residual nitrogen, would it not? (If I'm wrong here, please correct me).
The only problem with that theory, scientifically is the ability to acquire any reliable sort of quantitative measurements of your "tiredness."
With any sort of measurement or "level" of anything measured by a feeling, your head can often push your "measurements" towards what you think is the answer.
Not saying your wrong, just hard to prove something like that.