jetfixer:Maybe this thread could be split?
Seems like an appropriate move to me. Mods?
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jetfixer:Maybe this thread could be split?
cool_hardware52:I agree. I think there will be a time where diving air will seem an unnecessary risk. Some think so today.....
Tobin
scjoe:You are correct that agendas creep into the forumlation of laws. Don't they also creep into the agendas of the dive industry or is that industry fundamentally different from the oil industry, automotive industry, tobacco industry etc.?
scjoe:I don't see how it was presumptiuos of me to correctly state that, as you admit after harranging me, your training did not delve into how the different standards were arrived at. In that respect, it was limited just like everyone else's was.
scjoe:The lack of accidents at 40% is one data point, but it is not test data and it is not a data point that tells you what can happen at various mixes under certain circumstances. That is what lab tests are for. If you found that in a lab at 25% you had a serious risk of fire would ignore it just because there was a lack of accidents at 40%?
scjoe:When you state that you don't think anyone is lying about Nitrox in order to set lower limits, I assume you meant higher limits. The groups you assume are acting with hidden agendas are the ones with lower limits.
scjoe:Your statement that I may hope or presume, but that you have much less faith in regulatory bodies is out of context with the quote from my prior post.
scjoe:I was referring to the hope or presumption that the agencies you have chosen to place 100% trust in did not base their recommendation solely on anecdotal evidence.
scjoe:Finally, my point about retro fitting was not that every building should be retro fitted but that buildings that do not fall down in an earthquake are not necessarily safe. Lack of collapse does not equal safety.
scjoe:Lack of history of fire at 40% does not equal lack of increased risk of fire.
scjoe:You are correct that a cost benefit analysis does take place, but it is a whole lot different to decide not to require a building owner to retrofit a small building when the cost may end his livelihood than to tell someone engaged in a sport that they have to spend more money to engage in one aspect of that sport.
scjoe:That is where there may be a dive industry agenda coming into play. The compressed gas people are concerned about workers' comp claims or injuries to third parties. Their standards do not effect sales because the demand for their products is largely not optional. Their customers need the gas for their operations. They are not buying it for fun. The safety standards raise the price across the board from all suppliers and lower the risk of potential accidents and claims.
scjoe:The dive industry is concerned about getting more people in the water, selling more classes, etc. They may feel that the more expensive it is (e.g., dedicated Nitrox tank), the more likely they will lose some customers.
scjoe:This issue is really not between you and me. Neither one of us should have to provide evidence that either standard is correct.
scjoe:It is a problem caused by the dive industry.
scjoe:What really bothers me is why the Navy went down to 25%. What caused that change?
scjoe:Anyhow, its the weekend now and I'm going diving.
limeyx:Sadly in Southern California, its pretty hard to find a boat that fills Nitrox.
IceDiverInCA:Add Psalty V, Second Stage, Pacific Star and Lois Ann to the list.
I guess nitrox is far more interesting to talk about than the service in Avalon.