... I find it interesting that a major reason for EAN is actually to displace nitrogen in the breathing mix. That in turn reduces the risk for DCS and, under the right conditions, 'could' even make the safety stop unnecessary.
So, my question is, could it shorten, or even eliminate the no-fly restriction?
Casey
the original post in the thread....
So to answer that back portion. The only reason for EANx is to displace nitrogen in the breathing mix because that is all it does, but it simply displacing the N2 with O2 does nothing to reduce the risk for dcs, doesn't make the safety stop unnecessary, and doesn't shorten or eliminate the no-fly restriction. Reason for that is unless you are diving the exact same profile as you would with air *i.e. my comment about telling your computer you are diving air and then you dive nitrox*, if you dive up to the NDL on your computer, you come out with the same theoretical tissue saturation on any nitrox mix as you would on air because the NDL time is ONLY calculated by your N2.
Simply put *and no the ratio isn't linear like this, it is a very simple explanation*. Your tissues are like a 5 gallon bucket. Air *21% O2* fills the bucket at a rate of 1 gallon/minute so you get to dive for 5 minutes until your bucket is full. EANx 42 *42% O2* fills the bucket at 0.5 gallons/minute. You get to dive for 10 minutes until the bucket is full. Your safety stop, NDL, DCS risk, No-Fly time is determined by how full the bucket is and at the end of both dives, the bucket is full. Full bucket means 0 change in any of the safety of that dive, you just got to enjoy a dive that was 2x as long.
Conversely if you dove EANx 42 and told your computer that you were diving EANx21, then it would think you were filling the bucket at 1gpm but really you were filling it at 0.5gpm, so at the end of the dive you are only half full. Only way to do that is to plan your dive to half the NDL, but you don't really know that until you are on the dive, or you plan the dive using air tables. Using air tables to plan the dive but diving EANx is no different than telling your computer you are diving air or some reduced mix of nitrox and with the exception of CNS tracking *which isn't a problem in recreational NDL diving*, then you are going to be conducting a "Safer" profile, but you don't get to enjoy the extended NDL's associated with EANx. Personal choices, but the original statement was by diving nitrox, you are conducting safer profiles, which is not true.
@boulderjohn we're going to have to disagree on that logic. I don't know the RDP tables, don't care to, but I'm going to assume what you said is true. Here's why I have to disagree with you. Your examples I'm sure are accurate, but what you are suggesting is simply that the diver didn't dive up to his NDL's. This has nothing to do with diving nitrox or not, only making a conscious decision to end your dive before you hit NDL. The bigger problem with this, is who in PADI is actually still teaching tables? Even if you learn tables, the important part here is that the diver is choosing to make his dive more conservative, and the nitrox mix does not make the dive inherently more conservative. Yes, my point is correct. You get to use nitrox to do one of two things, extend your NDL's, or increase your safety margins by treating it as air. You proved that in your example because the diver dove past the NDL's of air diving, not up to the NDL of the nitrox mix, but he used nitrox to extend the dive beyond the NDL's of air.