Are you really that ignorant? Or just pretending?
Do you have a cite to back any of your dearly held beliefs? Or do you just believe in linear monotonical increases because Shearwater has straight lines in their infographic?
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Are you really that ignorant? Or just pretending?
These are all deco dives. risk would be dictated by how you handle the deco and the surfacing GF you choose. I pad the 10 ft stop and surface with a GF of <80. Of course, the dives with a lowest GF highs would already be below this value.For a 30 minute dive to 100ft on Nx32
What is the probability of DCS at a GF high of 100, 85,75 and 50?
What follows is my take on GFs, which of course can be wrong.For a 30 minute dive to 100ft on Nx32
What is the probability of DCS at a GF high of 100, 85,75 and 50?
All dives are deco dives, this is the very limit of what most people would consider a recreational profile, and is the max no-stop time on the NOAA 32% table.These are all deco dives. risk would be dictated by how you handle the deco and the surfacing GF you choose. I pad the 10 ft stop and surface with a GF of <80. Of course, the dives with a lowest GF highs would already be below this value.
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Is it though? There are other objective hazards associated with being in the water.So assuming a linear relationship is just reasonable and prudent.
???Is it though? There are other objective hazards associated with being in the water.
- Decreased off-gassing efficiency from hypothermia
- Drowning
- Marine life
- Medical Events
- Boats hitting you
- Weather changing
- etc.
If the underlying theory of Buhlmann is even close to correct:
- Gradient Factor is the equivalent of "Normalized Tissue Supersaturation".
- Higher tissue supersaturation is more dangerous than lower tissue supersaturation.
- More time spent at high tissue supersaturation is more dangerous that less time.
Everything else in this theory operates on log curves, so it's just as likely that this one's a log curve too. That would mean first halving of the M-value results in, what, 4% reduction of risk? I'm sure it's worth it, better safer than safe, right?
Do you have a cite to back any of your dearly held beliefs?
What is the probability of DCS at a GF high of 100, 85,75 and 50?
I think diving at the limits on the Navy Tables is a bit higher risk than that, (iirc there is a section in the manual that requires a chamber being available). In Gerth, Wayne A. and D J Doolette. “VVal-18 and VVal-18M Thalmann Algorithm Air Decompression Tables and Procedures.” (2007). The section "Comparative Analyses of Estimated DCS Risks and Total Stop Times of Tabulated Schedules," seems to indicate the schedules are not iso-risk but order low-single digit %.In the case of US Navy limits, this means that you incur a residual risk of DCS in the order of 1 case every 1000 dives.
I see you found the non-linearity, but of course the expoential expands linearly to first order as do most functions....I provided one reasonable answer: a GF = 50 halves the risk.
Do you have a better GF=>risk relationship?