I AGREE!How come a professional pilot who has been scuba diving for over ten years didn't know this???




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I AGREE!How come a professional pilot who has been scuba diving for over ten years didn't know this???
I am an Airline Pilot that would like to do some diving on my 24 hour layovers. What is the time limit for water to wings? The Cabin Altitude is 8500 feet and the duration of the flight is 6 hours. One (maybe two) dive to, probably, no greater than 60 feet.
I googled it and thought I could find the info very easily. All I found was one link at scuba-doc .
thanks,
Scusea
Generally, the computer "no fly" time is just a timer. Read the instructions of your computer. It will generally state that the "no fly" symbol will be present on the display for 12 or 18 hours after a dive, or some variation on that theme. It's not doing any fancy calculations, it's just a timer.
I'm no expert but I have been doing a fair bit of reading recently about decompression modeling and playing around with a model that nearly replicates the NDLs in PADI's RDP. NOAA's tables are reformatted versions of the U.S. Navy's tables. Pressure groups are based on the nitrogen loading of a particular compartment that controlled the dive or, in most cases (in the interest of conservatism), a compartment slower than the compartment that controlled the dive. The U.S. Navy tables use the 120-minute compartment. (An innovation of PADI's RDP is the use of the 60-minute compartment, which is more appropriate for recreational diving.) What tstalcup observed (shorter time to fly for deeper dives [to the NDL limit]) is because the nitrogen loading on the 120-minute compartment (used for the lettered pressure groups) decreases with deeper dives to the NDL limit. This relationship is not true of (most of) the other compartments and is, I think, the reason that the 120-minute compartment was chosen for the basis of the pressure groups.If you run through the numbers, it is a bit surprising that the required SI actually ends up being less the deeper you go if you stay to the NDL.
For example:
Two different dives to the NDL, one at 50' and one at 110'.
For the 50' dive, you get 100 minutes of bottom time and come up as an L diver. You need slightly over 20 hours before ascending to 8000'.
For the 110' dive, you only get 20 minutes of bottom time and come up as a G diver. You need only 12 hours before ascending to 8000'.
The Suunto D9 takes the greater of 12 hours and desaturation time, so it will look like just a timer unless you've accumulated a significant amount of nitrogen. If desaturation time is less than 70 minutes no "do not fly time" will be displayed and in gauge mode or permanent error mode 48 hours will be counted down.Generally, the computer "no fly" time is just a timer. Read the instructions of your computer. It will generally state that the "no fly" symbol will be present on the display for 12 or 18 hours after a dive, or some variation on that theme. It's not doing any fancy calculations, it's just a timer.
So sticking with your existing 24 hour rule seems appropriate.9.8.3. Aircrew members will not fly:
9.8.3.1. Within 24 hours of compressed gas diving