Taipeidiver:
I'm glad to hear that your going to make a full recovery. As I'm sure others will ask you, would you mind sharing with us the profile of your 4 dives (depth and bottom time). Also what safety stops did you do (time and depth) ?
All dives were on air, using a single 15L steel tank.
Dive 1 - 0733hrs, 28.0 metres, 61 minutes (multi-level dive), following a surface interval of 12 hours, 13 minutes. 3 minute safety stop at 5 metres.
Dive 2 - 1031hrs, 27.4 metres, 54 minutes (multi-level dive), following a surface interval of 1 hour, 56 minutes. 3 minute safety stop at 5 metres.
Dive 3 - 1331hrs, 24.3 metres, 41 minutes (multi-level dive), following a surface interval of 2 hours, 5 minutes. 3 minute safety stop at 5 metres.
Dive 4 - 1704hrs, 28.0 metres, 49 minutes (multi-level dive), following a surface interval of 2 hours, 52 minutes. 3 minute safety stop at 5 metres.
Okay, I've looked at this with my old tables, and have come to the conclusion that, had you been using tables instead of your computer, you would have seen a problem developing. I could not calculate the second dive as a planned dive using the NAUI 1990 tables, or the NOAA tables. The NAUI 1981 tables would allow the second dive, but you would have been way into decompression diving even on the first dive. Let me explain.
When using tables, you make certain assumptions about the dive. Your time starts from when you leave the surface, to when you begin your ascent to end the dive. Your depth is the maximum depth of the dive, in this case that was 28 meters (90 feet on the NOAA No-Decompression Air Tables, 100 feet on the NAUI 1991 tables; we'll use the NOAA tables here for the depth conversion; technically 28 meters is 91.86 feet, which should count as a 100 foot dive, but we'll let that slide). You started out without any Residual Nitrogen Time (RDT), and had an Actual Dive Time (ADT) of 60 minutes (and that's giving you a bit because if it's over 60 minutes at 61 minutes, it should be counted as 70 minutes, but the NAUI Dive Tables tables won't compute that dive). You stopped at 5 meters for 3 minutes, but the old NAUI tables say you should have stopped at 10 feet for 25 minutes for this dive profile. Your Group Letter is "M" for this dive.
You spent 1:56 on the surface, which reduces your Group Letter to "H". You plan a dive for 27.4 meters (89.9 feet), which is 90 feet on the NAUI tables (both 1981 & 1990). If you look at your second dive to 90 feet, on the NAUI 1981 tables, you have 33 minutes of RNT. If you then plan a dive for 54 minutes, you must add that 33 minutes of RNT to the 54 minutes of ADT, which equals 87 minutes Total Nitrogen Time (TNT). Ninty feet for 87 minutes is not even on the chart for the NAUI 1990, NAUI 1981 or NOAA dive tables as this is a decompression dive. According to the US Navy Standard Air Decompression Tables available in the 1980s, you would have been required to take a stop at 20 feet of 18 minutes, and a stop at 10 feet of 48 minutes. Your Repetitive Group Letter (RGL) would be "O".
With a surface interval of 2:05, your RGL would be "H". If you then decide to plan a dive to 24.3 meters (79.7 feet, 80 feet on the US Navy Dive Tables), you would have a RNT of 33 minutes. The ADT was 41 minutes which is added to the 33 minutes to give a TNT of 74 minutes. A dive to 80 feet for 80 minutes requires a decompression of 7 minutes at 20 feet, and 37 minutes at 10 feet. Your RGL is now "N".
The last dive is then planned. You have a surface interval of 2:52, which reduces your RGL to "F". The last dive is planned to 28 meters, or 91.9 feet. This is a 100 foot dive on the tables. Your RNT is now 22 minutes. You plan your last dive for a dive time of 49 minutes, which when you add the 22 minutes of RNT, you have 71 minutes TNT. A 100 foot dive for 80 minutes requires a stop of 23 minutes at 20 feet and 48 minutes at 10 feet. When you end the day, your RGL is "O".
I realize that, with computers doing real-time analysis of the profile, this is very conservative, but this is how we computed dives up until dive computers came into existence (we would not have allowed these dive profiles, however, as we did not do, and I do not do, decompression diving). But also realize that this number quoted in a later post, the "average depths for the four dives" is meaningless for decompression computation. I dived with the USAF, and under the US Navy guidelines, and even when on scuba using varying depths, we still took the deepest depth of the dive, and used the tables as shown above. According to this ol' Coot, you were into decompression diving on your first dive. If you add up the decompression time for all of these dives, you would have been in the water much longer than you wanted to be, but you would not have gone to the recompression chamber that day. Maybe both you and I can now appreciate why the DIR folks use tables exclusively for planning their dives, as this is a much more conservative way to dive. Yes, it cuts down on what you can do, but also, yes it will help keep you from a recompression chamber.
I was using my old tables, from my library. But you can check them for today's tables at this site:
http://www.ndc.noaa.gov/dp_forms.html
I still am wondering why these charters do not have a recompression chamber on-board if they are serving divers who dive in this manner? A five hour trip to the hospital (or longer) could be a fatal wait, depending upon where the diver is "hit."
SeaRat
NAUI Instructor #2710 (retired)
Honor Student, U.S. Naval School for Underwater Swimmers, 1967