BigJetDriver69:...The only other thing to watch is your oxygen exposure. You use a CNS chart to run your oxygen clock, and for extended exposure to high oxygen concentrations, such as in repetitive technical diving, you run an OTU table to check long term (i.e. whole body, or pulmonary) exposure.
In the normal run of the mill recreational diving, neither one is much of a problem...
Not to split hairs, but OTUs aren't even that great a concern in technical diving. Bill Hamilton noted in his REPEX paper that tracking OTUs was designed for saturation divers with no opportunity to return to the surface (normal O2 pressures). However, all scuba divers will eventually return to the surface and that time is enough to allow enough blow off time to set the pulmonary clock back to zero each day. It's pretty much impossible to accumulate 300 OTUs a day in normal recreational and technical diving. You'll hit your other limiits before you hit your OTU limit. Just stay within your 45 minute single dive exposure for O2 at 1.6ATA and you'll never come close to 300 OTUs.
I know this is out of the scope of the original thread, but I felt like stirring the pot a little tonight.
