Maybe he meant set to air diluent...?
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So that means 20/20 dil, right? So leaving aside the hot loop issues, that's still an END of 218 FSW.
What does "setpoint controller and computer set to air" mean? Not sure I understand that in the context of CCR. Her decompression stress was calculated with her computer set to air OC bailout? What was the setpoint?
To eliminate the helium penalty and reduce deco. Same thing Rob and Sotis supposedly did.
The orifice will never raise the SP. The only thing raising a setpoint on mCCR is descending or manually adding. The only thing lowering SP is time, typically more than 5+mins at a constant depth. Also lowering SP is working hard, ascending, and a clogged orifice.Right, I understand, I was just saying that would involve a lack of PO2 monitoring.
But not diving an mCCR, I probably don't realize just how fast it can drop if you don't pay attention, if you start from a lower setpoint, and if the orifice is set for a lower workload and/or metabolic rate.
Thanks!
Yup. What the computer was set at and what was in the dil tank are not necessarily the same.to eliminate the helium penalty on the deco algorithm maybe?
Yup. What the computer was set at and what was in the dil tank are not necessarily the same.
The orifice will never raise the SP. The only thing raising a setpoint on mCCR is descending or manually adding. The only thing lowering SP is time, typically more than 5+mins at a constant depth. Also lowering SP is working hard, ascending, and a clogged orifice.
I think a lot of us would say, if you want a shorter deco schedule then you should change your GF. Any idea why it is so prevalent?
I have been guilty of doing a shallow shore dive on 32% and just kept my computer set to air from time to time, but never have I done a dive that would generate any kind of deco obligation and deliberately lied to the computer. I think a lot of people (myself included) are really thrown by this, but these two recent fatalities show that it is clearly prevalent in the CCR community.
I think a lot of us would say, if you want a shorter deco schedule then you should change your GF. Any idea why it is so prevalent?
I know some of the extremely deep dives are done with higher GFs. I haven't played with the numbers, but is it something along the lines that they are unwilling to openly admit to themselves that they want to dive what is essentially a 95 or 100 GF with actual gas mix?
For people that have done this practice or know of people doing this practice, what is the rationale? How did it develop in your diving style?
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I think a lot of us would say, if you want a shorter deco schedule then you should change your GF. Any idea why it is so prevalent?
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For people that have done this practice or know of people doing this practice, what is the rationale? How did it develop in your diving style?