Guys,
It appears I do understand Ratio Deco, at least enough for me to know if it is for me or not. Thanks for taking the time to explain it. If it works for you, go with it. It simply won't work for me.
When it comes to decompression diving "cheaper" (or even expensive), are not my determining factors. I need utility. If I can't afford the right tool for the job, I don't do the dive.
Most of the time, I am trying to accomplish something while I am in the water, so I am already engaged in my dive and I don't need any added incentive. My dive computer can flood, fail, or otherwise crap out, this is true, but you are depending on a timer and depth gauge with "depth averaging", so we are both unfortunately somewhat dependent on technology that can fail us. As for the quality of tables in a dive computer, that depends on the computer, and the diver.
The fact that you educate yourself so thoroughly in decompression theory is admirable, and you undoubtedly know more about theory than the average Deco Joe. However, I don't understand why a table kept in your memory is superior to either a calculated written table (or set of tables) carried by the diver, or a dive computer? To me, it seems gimmicky? Sorry.
Ratio Deco does not do your dive for you. Neither does any table, or dive computer. We need to interpret the information these tools give us, and we are the ones who make the decisions on how, and when we ascend. I want as much info as possible, especially in an emergency.
For instance, let us say I am involved in the rescue of another diver from depth. I am going to have my hands full. The last thing I personally would want is the added responsiblity of an ascent profile that is kept in my head, which I expect would already be full. I also know I can't afford to screw up and get bent, as then the surface support has two divers in trouble, not just one, and then resources are unecessarily strained. I have already had this experience and know how it goes. If this sort of thing only happened to me every thousand dives or so, it would already have happened more than once.
As I have said before, we do not all dive for the same reasons. If you guys are happy doing what you are doing, I congratulate you for finding something that works for you. Not everyone does. As for me, my experiences underwater have shown me that I really need to have something more than Ratio Deco for myself considering the way I dive and to tell the truth, for those same reasons I would also want the same for my family and friends (which got us into this discussion in the first place).
Cheers
JC
Sorry if I misunderstood your earlier warnings against using RD. I had assumed you had some understanding of it before making these claims. As for your questions:
(1) Advantages: It's much cheaper (free), forces a diver to keep constantly engaged during the dive, won't lock me out, won't leave me high and dry in an emergency, is running what I consider a better algo than most computers, affords (along with standard gases) feedback about personal conservatism, has all similarly trained teammates running the same algorithm, and won't fail due to low battery or flood.
(2) My brain.
Again, I'd be happy to discuss any possible misunderstandings you have. You might not have any, I don't know. Why don't you go ahead and tell me what you understand RD to be?
Cheers.
Edit: Let me also just add, like orange_diver, I don't give one hoot how others choose to dive (as long as it doesn't affect me). If that means rocking five dive computers, go for it. That said, I *am* curious why people suggest others avoid certain strategies as you did earlier, John.