Juardis
Contributor
Thanks for the clarification Devon. My manual did not delineate between mandatory stops and deco stops, at least when it came to terminology. So if I understand you, there are 3 separate stops.Safety stop isn't a decompression stop, and vice versa. It's important to get the terminology right, so that mistakes like the OP made are not replicated.
A safety stop is an optional stop, conducted for 3 (or more) minutes to add an element of conservatism to a dive by allowing additional off-gassing and extending the overall ascent time. The dive computer (when not in deep stop mode) provides information on the safety stop at the end of a normal ascent (within NDL) or following the end of decompression. It is simple 'bolt-on' conservatism. It is not mandatory to complete this, but the scuba industry does recognise the benefits of completing safety stops.
In contrast, a deco stop is a mandatory stop, conducted at a varying depth for a varying amount of time - as dictated by the theoretical nitrogen loading of the diver; which is calculated by the computers' algorithm based on dive depth and time. It occurs when the diver over-stays their no-decompression limit and has too much saturated nitrogen in their system to allow a direct ascent to the surface.
Recommended Safety Stop - no penalty for violating
Mandatory Stop - penalizes subsequent dives if violate and violations can occur for ascending to fast
Deco stop (your terminology) - computer goes into ER mode unless and until you complete the deco stop time. After the deco stop time it transitions to a mandatory stop
So when does the stop indicator appear if my manual is wrong? Going back to the OP and his jpegs, my manual appears to be wrong and MrsBBC is correct.