Interesting topic. Subscribed.
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Looks like this is the original paper: http://dornsife.usc.edu/assets/sites/222/docs/computer-tests.pdf
Looks like this is the original paper: http://dornsife.usc.edu/assets/sites/222/docs/computer-tests.pdf
Really?
We have algorithms developed from a little science and empirical data.
They make computers that calculate to the 10th significant digit.
Then we tweak the results by deciding to set the computer more or less conservative.
Then apply it to bodies with huge swings in body mass, body mass index, hydration, alcohol intake or off ... gas? and various levels of eating varying amounts of carbs, proteins, and starches, and wild swings of fitness levels.
That's like measuring with a micrometer and cutting with an ax.
And so your options are . . . ?
Dive conservatively with a computer set to your comfort level.
Get slightly more aggressive (if it's in your comfort level) until you feel the subclinical DCS symptom of "fatigue" after diving.
Back it off a notch, and pay attention to your general health, rest, hydration, and eating habits before diving.
---------- Post added February 7th, 2014 at 06:41 PM ----------
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I'm trying to say, learn yourself, learn your body. What was perfectly good yesterday won't work since you stayed out later last night and got less sleep.
Or that you drank more than normal. Or that you had a gut bomb. Applying science to the huge variety of people, states, and being only gives a ballpark. There is no silver bullet.
Agreed, but the study was comparing different computers against a repeatable set dive scenarios. Understanding how the testing was performed helps understand what the computer is telling us.
If you don't use a computer (and rely upon tables) that is fine, but unless you never do multi-profile dives, you're only kidding yourself
Don't get me wrong, I LOVE dive computers and understand them a lot more than most people, since I am a computer engineer.
It's simply that people seem to be looking for "buy that computer and set it to y conservatism, and you'll be safe. No such thing. Diving is all about risk management and while understanding the algorithm and the computer is one part, understanding oneself is more important.