I wasn't talking about volume, I was talking about physical size of a flexible object, diameter not volume displacement. And btw, scuba tanks don't compress.NJMike:What I THOUGHT was....say you have an 80 cu. ft. tank on the surface. At 33' you would have half of that, since the pressure doubled...so you'd have 40 cu. ft. of air.
At 66' you'd have 1/3, or approx. 26 cu. ft. of air. At 99', 1/4 or 20 cu. ft.
So from 99' to 66', a change of 33', the volume of air would change by only 6 cu. ft.
The same change, from 33' to 0', would change by 40 cu. ft., meaning that the volume of air expands much more nearer the surface.
Am I wrong?