This is really what I was after. Instead of "dont do this for any reason" I prefer the "you shouldnt do this, heres why, and heres what to do in case plans fall apart"
There are reasons why experienced divers err from giving a 'get out of jail' type response. The prime reason being that the accumulation of deco is dependent upon the individual's prior diving profile/s.
To say "
it will only be a few minutes... XXXpsi is enough to cover it" is erroneous, mis-leading and can cultivate a very false sense of security. Having a false sense of security can lead people to complacency... and get them hurt... badly.
On most occasions, a slight deviation beyond your computers NDL limit
will provide a minimal deco obligation... and that might even clear during a slow ascent to the stop depth. On other occasions, the deco obligation can accrue near exponentially...and continue accruing throughout the ascent, until you virtually reach the stop depth.
The variance in deco accumulation is dictated by the controlling tissue compartment. Most of the time, for recreational divers, that compartment will be 'quick' - thus deco clears quickly/on ascent. However, after multi-day and/or repetitive deep dives, slower tissue compartments become the primary controllers. They won't clear quickly...and can continue to calculate on-gassing even on ascent.
As an example, the other year I conducted a multi-day series of repetitive (2-3 dives per day) deep (100-140ft) dives. On the last dive of the series, I dove to only 50ft depth and noticed a 30 minute NDL. I made the decision to exceed my NDL, on the basis that I was a technically trained diver and had ample gas supplies for any deco that arose (I was on double AL80s). I was aware when I exceeded the NDL on my computer (a Suunto Vyper) and had predicted (wrongly) that a further 5 minutes bottom time wouldn't cause a major deco obligation. Only a minute later, I glanced at my computer and was shocked to see that the deco obligation was already at ~8 minutes. This wasn't as I expected, so I began my ascent there and then. As I ascended from 50ft to 15ft, the mandatory deco continued to rise...quickly. By the time I reached my stop at 15ft, I was owing around ~25 minutes of deco time.
That was my 'wake up call' from complacency. I believed I could second-guess my computer, based on 000's of dives, many of them deco dives... but I failed to consider the implications of the diving pattern I had been following prior to that specific dive. Luckily, I had the experience, equipment and... most vitally... ample gas supplies, so when I did get bitten in the ass, it didn't cost me anything other than pride and a delay in enjoying my post-dive banana.
If I'd been on a single tank... I would have blown that deco... no doubt about it. Even with good air consumption and short bottom time on the dive...
Also, that particular dive was on an anchored boat, with mild current and warm water... so I didn't get lost-at-sea, hypothermic etc. Again.. a whole spectrum of additional factors that need to be considered in the 'unplanned deco' scenarios...
That's why I hazard against giving 'simple answers' to what is, in effect, a very complicated topic. I'll discuss deco theory all day... but I won't give statutory advice about conducting deco to a stranger... or under the premise that one solution is applicable for every scenario.
My opinion is, and will remain, that adhering to No-Decompression Limits are a critical safeguard against the risk of serious injury or death. In that respect, unless conducting precise planning to conduct specific technical decompression dives (including fine gas management) - the most prudent and responsible advice to give is simply 'avoidance'. The emphasis being on the application of safe diving practices, a conservative approach to diving and situational awareness in the water.
I dont like the mentality that I see in the majority of people ive dove with, just a complete and total fear of deco...
What's not to fear about spending the rest of your life in a wheelchair... or never managing an erection again?
i dont like being afraid of things so if i understand it and know what to do in that situation, im not any more likely to push it, just more likely to deal with it correctly.
In this respect, the 'correct way to deal with it' is by avoidance. Either that or you train for, equip, plan and implement dives according to formal technical diving training.
There is no universal 'catch-all' solution to the question you asked.
...get to 1000 dives and say "ok, now i think i should learn about why ive been avoiding deco all this time"
You avoid deco because you are not trained to complete it. You avoid it because if you mess it up, you can get badly hurt. Training to safely cope with a decompression obligation is extensive and intense, only that preparation, in conjunction with a comprehensive equipment approach, should allow you to feel 'relaxed' about being in that situation.
You can, by the way, begin technical dive training at a relatively low experience prerequisite. Various agencies offer 'intro' and 'basic' courses to divers below the 100 dive experience level. That's a good 'heads up' to the issues involved... and also helps shape and enable future development when full technical training becomes accessible.
And I did see the real answer to the title topic a few posts ago. Basically the answer being enough air left to hang at 15' for 15 minutes.
If I'd done my 'bad' dive on that presumption, I could be wearing a colostomy bag right now. Just saying......
I guess it really boils down to me not knowing how fast the duration piles up...like an extra minute at depth is 5 at the stop, but is 10 mins at depth 50 mins at the stop?
It'd be worth doing some reading/research on how decompression is calculated. As a starting point, I recommend '
Deco for Divers' by Mark Powell. There's also a library's worth of materials available on the web.
Also Steve Lewis' '
The Six Skills and Other Discussions'.
The Wikipedia article on 'Decompression Diving' is actually very comprehensive too..
Decompression (diving) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia