Jason B:Here's the part that rubs me wrong right here.
How do you know that what GUE taught you gets you out cleaner? Do you do doppler tests or something, or do you just believe their software more for some reason? What is that reason.
Yes there is doppler evidence that shows that the GUE/WKPP method of deco does indeed get you out of the water cleaner.
Jason B:I was under the impression that all this deco stuff was all based on theory (else there wouldn't be so many different models out there).
You are quite correct. It is all just theory. You can probably take any of the present theorys and run with it just as a computer/PC spits it out and be ok.. but being ok doesn't mean that you optimize your deco. That is one of the problems with the dive computer. I can go down to 130' and spend 50 minutes. As long as I started from a specific baseline (i.e.. no dives in....let's say 7 day's) the computer will give me the same deco time after time. But over the course of several dives like the above mentioned, I may run into a variety of variables that are not the same dive to dive. (current on one dive,,, fatigue on another,, improper hydration,, colder temps on another,, elevated breathing rate or stress level... get the implication?) A computer cannot take any of these things into account. If buy using my head I can do just as good a job as my computer in the basic sense and then I can (on top of that) exceed a computers performance by being able to extrapolate an ascent schedule that does take into account any or all of these variables AND that will actually (if the dopplers can be believed) get me out of the water cleaner... well...
Jason B:I could very well be wrong and maybe they have got it all down to a science, but it would seem that if that were the case, all computers would be the same.
Any insight to this would be great.
Thanks!
It's not down to a science. Anyone that does deco must remember that you are being a human guinie pig of sorts.. However the WKPP method has been extensively tested albiet on a relatively small group of very fit divers.. but getting larger as it is more and more adopted by the larger technical community.. However the ascent stratagies probably have great application potential for the recreational divers as well.
I hope not to sound as if I have all the answers, I have presented to you what I know on the subject, of course I cannot help but bring to the table my own personal bias. TIFWIW