Without reopening old, old discussions before the data arrives, isn't the same run time the point? There have been too many arguments about the most "efficient" or the most "conservative" profile. But with two dives of the same run time, "Which one is at greater risk?" is a fair question.
I think no - diver safety should be the point.
I think that's where some of the arguments have been centered on, getting the same run time close has lead to some saying the test was skewed....
There are a bunch of dives made using GF's - I think a lot of 50-100m dives are made using 40-50 GFlo and 70-80 GF hi. We dive our GF's to give us a margin of error, a safety factor if you will.
I assume there is some factor that can be applied to a deep stop model that will allow a similar margin or error/safety factor - I understand bubble models fairly well but have zero experience in diving or planning them. There has to be guys out there diving XYZ to these depths.
I'd like to see the run time ignored, let's not worry about efficiency or conservativism - let's not hurt people but let's test what people dive, not some theoretical thing that no one does. You deep stop guys, bring something that you feel is 75-80% conservative, the GF guys decide on a GFLo that is being used and set the high at the 75-80 number. Plan the dives with the same gases (i understand with deeper stops, the initial deco gas ideal choice may differ but you have to work this somehow), do the dives in a chamber and measure with doppler however you can during the dive - all done in a chamber of course. Let the run times be what they are, it's what we dive - I have to believe they'd end up +/- 15% anyways.
Point being - test plans that are actually dived, compare the induced stress that each plan develops during and after the dive. Tech dives are spread thru such a broad range and there's so many factors that are really understood that effect the induced stress, it would be nice to have a side by side comparison of two different methods showing bottom to boat to beach so that we could make better decisions for diver safety across a broad range of conditions.
I confess, I haven't watch the video up top yet, I read thru the other chat group and a few of the studies - I hope to have watched that by this evening.
I wonder if we would see that one method is better than the other when applied in different conditions. In Mark's book, he refers to a deep type stop study that showed better results, depth was 25m and these were NDL dives - Simon also refers to two other studies that refute that also, I have to read those too... Information, we need more information but the information has to be valid for the way we dive......