igor p
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Hi all,
here is a comment regarding the discussion here Bruce Wienke asked me to post. I can add I agree with him.
" Long time ago, I stopped worrying too much about the
ins and outs of deep stops vs shallow stops as ranted and raved
on blogs. The proof is in the pudding -- thousands of divers
employ deep stops and have used them safely without anything
but nominal DCS in the process for many years now. No probs.
No matter what model (USN, ZHL, VPM, RGBM) somebody
will always get hit, but the concern is how many and how often.
To date that number is very small by DCS incidences. As C&C
Dive Team Ldr, that is the bottom line for our operations. And
me personally.
You can argue deep stops vs shallow stops til you are
blue in the face. They both work, but for different reasons
is the simple fact. Here at LANL, we have dived both without
mishaps. Deep stops are faster and get us out of the water quicker
so we use.them. Period.
Just a couple of thoughts to pass on:
1 -- deep stop meters, tables and software have now been
around for 10s of years without reported problems with
DCS; and judging from the licenses we issue will enjoy
even more usage;
2 -- data is data no matter what generates it and for whatever
reason and LANL computer downloaded data is headed to
DAN as I have time to write translation software for 3000+
profiles;
3-- both VPM and RGBM work well and have no reported
DCS spikes (unless misused) across meters, tables and
software renderings;
4-- Balestra of DAN did a study of DCS rates in ZHL and RGBM
computers and found DCS incidence rates almost exactly
equal and small;
5 -- shallow stops vs deep stops are now for us mostly "religion"
questions;
6 -- the NEDU experiment suggested to us as operational divers
that if you don't do shallow stops and/or deep stops carefully
you can get hurt. Hats off though to all involved in that experiment
because it showed us what not to do. That is important information
but doesn't discredit deep nor shallow stops when looking at the
track record in the field -- where it counts. Both can be done safely
and that's good. End of story for us, training agencies, 1000s of
tec and rec divers, and growing numbers of same.
When I get to my office, will send you published versions of papers on the above.
Thanks,
BW"
here is a comment regarding the discussion here Bruce Wienke asked me to post. I can add I agree with him.
" Long time ago, I stopped worrying too much about the
ins and outs of deep stops vs shallow stops as ranted and raved
on blogs. The proof is in the pudding -- thousands of divers
employ deep stops and have used them safely without anything
but nominal DCS in the process for many years now. No probs.
No matter what model (USN, ZHL, VPM, RGBM) somebody
will always get hit, but the concern is how many and how often.
To date that number is very small by DCS incidences. As C&C
Dive Team Ldr, that is the bottom line for our operations. And
me personally.
You can argue deep stops vs shallow stops til you are
blue in the face. They both work, but for different reasons
is the simple fact. Here at LANL, we have dived both without
mishaps. Deep stops are faster and get us out of the water quicker
so we use.them. Period.
Just a couple of thoughts to pass on:
1 -- deep stop meters, tables and software have now been
around for 10s of years without reported problems with
DCS; and judging from the licenses we issue will enjoy
even more usage;
2 -- data is data no matter what generates it and for whatever
reason and LANL computer downloaded data is headed to
DAN as I have time to write translation software for 3000+
profiles;
3-- both VPM and RGBM work well and have no reported
DCS spikes (unless misused) across meters, tables and
software renderings;
4-- Balestra of DAN did a study of DCS rates in ZHL and RGBM
computers and found DCS incidence rates almost exactly
equal and small;
5 -- shallow stops vs deep stops are now for us mostly "religion"
questions;
6 -- the NEDU experiment suggested to us as operational divers
that if you don't do shallow stops and/or deep stops carefully
you can get hurt. Hats off though to all involved in that experiment
because it showed us what not to do. That is important information
but doesn't discredit deep nor shallow stops when looking at the
track record in the field -- where it counts. Both can be done safely
and that's good. End of story for us, training agencies, 1000s of
tec and rec divers, and growing numbers of same.
When I get to my office, will send you published versions of papers on the above.
Thanks,
BW"