Some people think you stay alive at 30.0m END and die at 30.2m END. Happely the boundery is not that hard. Getting narced is not only a process of N2, but also of CO2. This means that an END let's say 30 at 30m depth is different from an END of 30m at 134m depth. Ok, the END maybe not, but factors as CO2 are differentThe latest research indicates that oxygen is less narcotic than nitrogen.
But I'm not interested in going to 134m to test that theory.Is Oxygen Narcosis A Thing?
There’s been a long running debate as to whether oxygen is a narcotic diving gas. Training agencies CMAS, GUE, PADI and PSAI include O2 in their equivalent narcotic depth (END) calculations. Others like BSAC, IANTD, NAUI and TDI do not. The problem has been reliably measuring gas narcosis. Enter...gue.com
I mentioned O2 narcotic and O2 not narcotic as this is still not completely understood. O2 is a strange gas in your body, it is used for you metabolism also. So some believe it is as narcotic or a little bit more narcotic as N2 (due to the atomic mass is an idea for example). But because of you use it also, a lot is still not completely understood. The last idea is that it is maybe less narcotic than N2, but more research must be done. So to talk about END, I normally give O2 not narcotic and narcotic.
If getting narced is due to all inert gases that need to leave your body over the lungfilter, and CO2 is also a narcotic gas, this means that you probably produce more CO2 due to a higher breathing resistance. And that is the gasdensity, EADD.
But also if you go down fast on let's say air to 50m, there is a chance you get more narced than that you go slower. This has to do with the PN2 between gas and body. And people state that if they go down and get narced and they wait a little bit time, the extreme narced feeling will go away.
I have felt narced at 44m and felt nothing at 65m on air. So it is a strange process. It already changes between the hour of the day.
But if breathing resistance also gives a (little bit) higher CO2 production, the WOB is higher when diving a rebreather. This is something to think about when using a ccr.
HPNS is something that is also still not completely understood. It has to do with too less or no inert gases in your breathing mix. Inert gases don't do anything, right? But there is something why a body 'needs' them. If you are a professional diver, normally they go down slow. Hydrogen (we cannot use as normal divers) and N2 are added a little bit to prevent hpns. This means a 3/97 gas gives you a higher change of hpns then a 3/95 for example. The compressing rate, how fast you go down, has to do with the way how fast or severe hpns will come. But if we dive, we cannot go that slow as commercial divers can do. You drain tanks really fast when diving oc over 200m depth. For sure if you go to 300m. Also staying longer at depths over 100, even if you go down further, your decompression will increase. The diver that does extreme dives dives alone at the highest depth. Safety divers will come between 100 and 150m (I don't know the exact plan of that record dive as I am not interested in doing records). This means any mistake down there alone can only be corrected by yourself.
So think on every deep dive you want to make, is it safe enough for me to accept the risks? And take the steps down to new 'personal depth' records slowly. I write personal records as there is still a 'deepest personal' dive. I don't mean that every diver needs to set records. For some divers going below 30m for the first time is a big step. And also that step has some risks. If you don't trust yourself, even if the dive is 'shallow', don't make it.
And if you sign up for a trimixcourse, think about this: Normally an instructor who teaches you a trimixcourse can teach you how to conduct deep decompression dives as safe as possible. But no instructor can say you will never get bent. Even if you followed a good plan, there is some risk left.
Another point if you ever want to do really deep dives or are asked to help:
Recorddives like this can only be done with the help of a big amount of help. Not only at surface but also in the water. The safetydivers in the water must be really good solodivers. I call it solodivers because they normally don't act in a team in the water, they handle alone. But you must not only be self sufficient enough to take care of yourself, you must be able to handle a lot of extra cylinders easely and must be able to follow a really strickt plan. Even if the recorddiver himself is good enough to perform a dive to 300+m, if the safetydivers are not good enough, a lot can go wrong. Just done some 100+m dives will not make you a good safety diver. And don't forget, the deep safetydivers also need shallow support from other safety divers. It is not only the recorddiver that needs safety divers. So if you ever get asked to act as a safety diver, ask yourself the question: am I good enough to perform this really important task?
And if you do dives at 100-130m, it is not bad to think already about safetydivers. Can you hold enough reserves for bailout or buddy if you do a 20 minute bottomtime at 100m?
Remember going deep is not difficult, but to get up to the surface safe again is the problem. For me, I don't feel any need to do a worldrecord dive.