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I swore to myself that I was keeping out of this, but in honor of the guts it took to post your screw-up, you get my best shot at answering what you actually asked.
Tons and bunches. But only because I have a really nice computer that doesn't mind if I verify everything it tells me.
Plan your dive and dive your plan, but know that all plans can turn to crap. No matter how good you are, your best plan can turn to crap. When they do, you will find yourself with more than one issue that demands all of your mental capacity. So before I dive, I have a plan to free up my mind for what is immediately life threatening. For the dive in question, you were distracted from dragging your wife out of her dive while madly trying to guesstimate if you had the gas to pull it off. Let me guess, your mind was madly flipping between how to interrupt her and doing gas calculations. If so, you were just wasting precious time hoping that an answer would appear.
It helps me focus if I can determine the real, no BS, bitter end of my dive. So I pick: most aggressive algorithm, just made my stops on backgas, backgas is air, a realistic RMV, hit the surface with 0 psi. I use the US Navy Diving Manual Rev. 6 April, 2008. Chapter nine for the air deco tables. Compare them to anything, they are aggressive.
What to do:
Using all of your backgas load, calculate an OMG dive for each 10' increment around your typical dive depths and use one of those plastic label printers to make about 8 strips for your wrist slate. So now you have 8 dive plans, any one of which exactly uses up all of your gas by the time you clear your last deco stop.
Your dive slate should show you at a glance: Max Depth, Max bottom-time, all stops and their depths, and total run time. Since each dive strip is calculated to use all of your backgas, you are screwed if you violate Max bottom-time for any given depth. A quick glance frees up your mind for other pressing issues...
So now what if you surface in deco?
If I am asymptomatic and can get gas within a minute or two, I'll suck it dry at 15' if it is pure O2, or do the ten minute IWR omitted stop routine if it is air. Here is where I can be stopped, no donation, I'm getting out. Captain's choice.
And now, back to the hockey game.
.................If you are still with me, then here is the reason for the post, how much faith do you put in your computer?............
Tons and bunches. But only because I have a really nice computer that doesn't mind if I verify everything it tells me.
Plan your dive and dive your plan, but know that all plans can turn to crap. No matter how good you are, your best plan can turn to crap. When they do, you will find yourself with more than one issue that demands all of your mental capacity. So before I dive, I have a plan to free up my mind for what is immediately life threatening. For the dive in question, you were distracted from dragging your wife out of her dive while madly trying to guesstimate if you had the gas to pull it off. Let me guess, your mind was madly flipping between how to interrupt her and doing gas calculations. If so, you were just wasting precious time hoping that an answer would appear.
It helps me focus if I can determine the real, no BS, bitter end of my dive. So I pick: most aggressive algorithm, just made my stops on backgas, backgas is air, a realistic RMV, hit the surface with 0 psi. I use the US Navy Diving Manual Rev. 6 April, 2008. Chapter nine for the air deco tables. Compare them to anything, they are aggressive.
What to do:
Using all of your backgas load, calculate an OMG dive for each 10' increment around your typical dive depths and use one of those plastic label printers to make about 8 strips for your wrist slate. So now you have 8 dive plans, any one of which exactly uses up all of your gas by the time you clear your last deco stop.
Your dive slate should show you at a glance: Max Depth, Max bottom-time, all stops and their depths, and total run time. Since each dive strip is calculated to use all of your backgas, you are screwed if you violate Max bottom-time for any given depth. A quick glance frees up your mind for other pressing issues...
So now what if you surface in deco?
If I am asymptomatic and can get gas within a minute or two, I'll suck it dry at 15' if it is pure O2, or do the ten minute IWR omitted stop routine if it is air. Here is where I can be stopped, no donation, I'm getting out. Captain's choice.
And now, back to the hockey game.
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