See this is what I'm not getting. Different people have told me they have better outcomes when diving with nitrox ie. no headaches, less tired, more alert etc... So regardless of how it 'feels' at the time is it not beneficial to try it to see what effects (if any) it has on you as an individual rather than just studying it in the classroom?
There's no medical reason why that would happen.
Consider also that as people become nitrox trained and use it more they're also becoming more experienced divers, and are probably more relaxed. And we know that hypercapnia from skip breathing or over exertion under water will give you nasty headaches. So does the lowered ppN2 and higher O2 have something to do with that? Or does it just go with becoming a better diver and becoming more calm in the water?
And I'm *positive* that the latter approach is going to be more effective if you turn the question on its head and ask "how do I get rid of these headaches I'm having after dives?" The best answer to that is going to be to fix your breathing and get calm and comfortable in the water.
I tend to *believe* that 32% is a better gas for 100 foot recreational dives and it lessens fatigue after a dive compared to air, but concretely I have no medical evidence and I'll also admit that doing an extended shore-profile safety stop of 15 mins or so from 30 to the surface is going to be an order of magnitude more important than the precise mix that you're breathing.
The reason to dive 32% is really because you're nudging up against NDLs on deeper dives around 100 feet and you're getting more aggressive in your diving. You should already be safe, and comfortable, and be calm, and not be getting hypercapnic headaches, etc. The answers to all of those questions are elsewhere, not primarily with diving nitrox.
While at the same time, as long as you're not going deeper than 110 feet (which you really shouldn't be doing as a recreational diver for several reasons), 32% makes a better mix than air and I fill my tanks with it nearly exclusively. But that isn't because its magic gas, its just because its the mix that makes the most sense for recreational diving.
---------- Post Merged at 06:02 PM ---------- Previous Post was at 05:56 PM ----------
While it may provide a buffer in the sense that if you dive nitrox while using air tables and blow past your NDL inadvertently, you would still be within non-deco range, I am not aware of research that shows a lower rate of undeserved hits in this situation. Of course, the problem is that undeserved hits are rare, so to really draw a scientific conclusion about that, you would need to accumulate profiles on huge numbers of dives in order to get enough of these events to see if they were less common with EAN than with air. Making such a study even harder to do is the fact that you would need to match cases with controls - you would have to find divers with similar profiles but different mixes who had a UDH.
You are right that the incidence of those hits is so low that doing miniscule fine tuning to the incidence isn't going to result in much of a different outcome.
I suspect that the effect on DCS is going to be washed out by the incidence of divers losing buoyancy control on walls and toxing at depth after exceeding their MOD (or just of divers being cavalier about MOD and it biting them in the ass some day).
Nitrox is almost certainly more dangerous overall.
---------- Post Merged at 06:12 PM ---------- Previous Post was at 05:56 PM ----------
Having recently completed an EAN course, I have the book, I have the DVD, I spent time with an instructor going over the fundamentals and the use of a computer and tables for planning a dive, testing tanks with 3 different analyzers and at least 2 hours of discussion. It was about 2 weeks from completion of the course until I got a chance to dive breathing Nitrox (EAN32). My experience is that using nitrox is not a 1 dive thing, Nitrox to me appears to help with fatigue but isn't noticed after 1 dive but a series of dives. Does that mean the certification should require multiple dives? I see where others say it doesn't change anything for them. I am of the opinion that having to complete a dive after having taken the course has no practical value and would only add to the cost of the course.
Everyone does that kind of tea-leaf-reading of their "symptomology" after they've been nitrox certified. I fondly recall writing stuff exactly like you just wrote. If I had a penny for every minute I've spend arguing over nitrox's effects on narcosis or fatigue or whatever in the past decade I'd be rich. There's just no way to eliminate placebo effect or simply random chance. To take an example, I've done back-to-back dives at the same site over two days, under the same conditions (light, silt, current, cold, etc) and one dive got completely hammered by narcosis and one dive had no issues at all -- both dives on 32%. And to top it off my dive buddy had the reverse experience, she was narc'd out of her mind on the dive I was clear on, and vice versa. You throw random variables like that at this problem and whatever pattern you think you found in the first few dives you've done on nitrox is likely very wrong.
You could do a controlled study with a 100 dives per diver under identical circumstances using 32% and 21% and measure narcosis and symptomology using more objective measures and then get yourself some bell curves and see if the mean of the distributions shift in any kind of statistically significant way. I doubt they would. And it wouldn't be much of an effect.
Wanna feel better after dives? Do more *deco* and treat those dives like lightweight decompression dives.
Wanna eliminate headaches after dives? Work on breathing (mostly exhaling consistently and not holding your breath) and comfort and stillness and buoyancy.
Wanna eliminate narcosis? Dive helium.