- Messages
- 97,575
- Reaction score
- 98,721
- Location
- On the Fun Side of Trump's Wall
- # of dives
- 2500 - 4999
I like it.The instant the decision is to go into search mode, my gas requirement calculations change, based on "what does it normally take me to get out from here?"
I then set my abort gas at somewhere between four and eight times that amount, depending on conditions.
For example, if I need 200 psi to make my normal exit, then I'm going to double that so that if I find my buddy as he's running out of gas I have enough for both of us - then I'm doubling that again for the excitement factor - that's four times. If the visibility is blown then I'm doubling it again, eight times.
Note that this is not an exit gas supply point, but rather an abort point for a position - that is, the point at which I begin my retreat towards the exit... I can retreat at one fourth to one eighth my normal speed and still retain my abort gas for my position as that position gets closer to the exit.
Rick
The way I understand the rule of thirds, it's more like a turn pressure ... i.e. the point at which you begin making your way back toward the point where you have another source of gas to breathe (deco bottle or surface air). And it's dependent upon the conditions in which you're diving (in other words, doesn't apply in certain types of caves).
I see calculating exit pressure during an emergency more as being like calculating rock bottom, where as you get closer to the surface (or entrance, in this case) in that that the usable number depends on having sufficient gas for two divers (whereas you've only been breathing it for one up to that point). So you can recalculate as you get closer to the entrance.
I also agree that conditions is something you need to take into consideration.
Your rules of thumb is as good as any I've seen so far.
... Bob (Grateful Diver)