Ken, I'm curious as to which computer you have that doesn't allow you to turn off the deep stop function?
Suunto HelO2. It is an OC Trimix computer, same size as a Zoop.
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Ken, I'm curious as to which computer you have that doesn't allow you to turn off the deep stop function?
That dive would be right at my NDL for a clean 1st dive with DSAT. Out of interest, why would you choose your ascent profile over my 5 min at 15 feet?Help
What is "around 15ft"?
On a 100ft square profile for 30mins on 32% I would:
ascend at 30ft/min for 2 mins,
start slowing down around 40ft,
then do 1 min at 30, 2@ 20ft, 2@ 10ft
Total time to surface = 8-9mins.
I answered "no, I do not conduct deep stops" did I answer wrong?
I think Deco for Divers quotes a study that found most recreational divers ascend from their safety stop to the surface at 200 fpm. Perhaps we should be amazed that we don't see more obvious signs of decompression stress when this is the case?
...running a version of RGBM, which is inherently deep stop in its design.Suunto HelO2. It is an OC Trimix computer, same size as a Zoop.
"around 15ft" has nothing to do with a deep stop, half the max depth or half the max pressure.
Deepstops in recreational dives....it sounds like a fashion statement, while most recreational divers have only a little bit of decompression knowledge. Technical divers learned about decompression theory during their courses and are aware of decompression questions that nobody has answered yet.
If you put tissue pressure and ambient pressure in a diagram, this is what a NDL dive looks like:
View attachment 516945
While descending, ambient pressure increases much faster than the gas pressure in your tissues. While you stay at depth (same ambient pressure), the tissues are ongassing. Once you reach the last point in time, where you swim up to the surface without stopping, and your tissue pressure is below the M-value (green line), your computer displays a NDL time of zero.
And the computer does this for 16 different compartments, each with their own halftimes for off-gassing. The NDL displayed on the screen is the shortest time for each of these calculations.
To off-gas, you need to get above the blue line (Pamb = Ptiss). On a dive shallower than 40m/130ft within the NDL, adding a deepstop will on-gas the mid and slower tissues even more. Doing a safety stop at 5m/15ft for three minutes is way more effective than a deepstop.
View attachment 516953
On a 70ft dive my "first stop" at 30ft isn't far off 1/2 the max depth (35ft) and its actually deeper than 1/2 the max pressure (70ft = 3.1ata / 2 = 1.56 ata = about 19ft)
Because in my case I reduce pressures more gradually and 15ft sucks when its surgy or wavey or most times on CCR. Vis at 20-30ft is usually way better than 15ft, so you can see and communicate better too.That dive would be right at my NDL for a clean 1st dive with DSAT. Out of interest, why would you choose your ascent profile over my 5 min at 15 feet?
I think Deco for Divers quotes a study that found most recreational divers ascend from their safety stop to the surface at 200 fpm. Perhaps we should be amazed that we don't see more obvious signs of decompression stress when this is the case?