Belzelbub
Contributor
Good point. I hadn't considered that some may be told to revert to table if violating computer NDLs. I was only officially trained on tables. I moved to computers several years later, and while I still have some tables and know how to use them, I don't use them for anything other than a quick reference.Consequently, you have something mentioned in the origin of this thread--people being told that if they violate NDLs with a computer, they should follow the rules for violating NDLs with a table. Students taught that way can be logically excused for not searching through the manual to find out how the computer deals with decompression stops.
This is the type of thing that should really be discussed in a dive computer based course. The differences between one algorithm to another. I'd done a bit of research prior to buying my first DC, so I knew I wasn't getting the most conservative, but I'm sure the average 1st time buyer doesn't have a clue.View attachment 752845
I dive two computers, one running DSAT and one running Buhlmann with a GF high of 95. Assuming we both have enough gas, if you are diving PZ+ or Buhlmann at a GF high of 85 or 75, you are going to exceed your NDL and go into decompression well before I would. So, we dive for an hour, is this a deco dive? For me, no, for you, yes. You should follow the recommendation by the computer you chose to dive with and satisfy the decompression obligation you are given.