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the cenotes are too shallow for the computers to show any significance.
what was said above is correct, your computers and algorithms really don't care what unit is displayed because they measure pressure and the pressure is what determines your deco schedules. Now, if you are doing dive planning and you know if the software is programmed for feet fresh water, then you can convert, but again, this is only 1ft difference per atmosphere, about 3% difference in depth, which is negligible for dive planning considering your computer is not always sitting at the centerline of your body. Even at 10ata/100m/330fsw/340ffw, you can see the difference is only 10ft. That is significant at shallower depths, but the difference is still only 3% and really only matters if you are doing survey work if you need to be spot on with depth *which in the ocean you would also have to factor in the tides which will change your depth more significantly than having the wrong salinity setting. If you are diving tables to 100m, then yeah you may want to know the exact salinity, so if your planner is in FSW but you're diving in FFW you'll have some more deco, and if you're planning is in FFW but you're diving in the salty stuff you'll have a bit more but even then it's just not that significant to really change anything in your deco obligations.
what was said above is correct, your computers and algorithms really don't care what unit is displayed because they measure pressure and the pressure is what determines your deco schedules. Now, if you are doing dive planning and you know if the software is programmed for feet fresh water, then you can convert, but again, this is only 1ft difference per atmosphere, about 3% difference in depth, which is negligible for dive planning considering your computer is not always sitting at the centerline of your body. Even at 10ata/100m/330fsw/340ffw, you can see the difference is only 10ft. That is significant at shallower depths, but the difference is still only 3% and really only matters if you are doing survey work if you need to be spot on with depth *which in the ocean you would also have to factor in the tides which will change your depth more significantly than having the wrong salinity setting. If you are diving tables to 100m, then yeah you may want to know the exact salinity, so if your planner is in FSW but you're diving in FFW you'll have some more deco, and if you're planning is in FFW but you're diving in the salty stuff you'll have a bit more but even then it's just not that significant to really change anything in your deco obligations.