It really worries me that someone would ask how you would know what your max depth was if your computer died. If your computer dies, you have been taught to abort the dive at that point; no matter how you go about doing that, you should not have gone any deeper than the max depth you had reached when that computer died. And you should know what that is, because you have been monitoring the gauge at frequent intervals. Honestly, this is one of the reasons I really prefer wrist units attached to the right wrist -- because you can be watching that computer almost constantly, almost unconsciously, as opposed to a console unit that you might have to pull up to look at.
I empathize with the OP a little bit (but not completely). I don't use the deco calculations on a computer, and haven't for about nine years. When I was first learning the method I do use, I kept my computer running as a computer, because I didn't trust myself yet. Like many people I know who do what I do, I eventually forgot to set a Suunto back to 32%, when it had defaulted to air, and halfway through a dive, the gauge was insisting I was in deco, when I darned well knew better. Of course, it locked me out (and I had a spare which had not been diving). I put the offended gauge away and used the other one, and kept using the method I had learned for the rest of the day.
But I HAD a method. The OP didn't, which was the whole problem. He uses his computer to manage his dives, but when he failed to reset it properly, he ignored it and fell back on . . . nothing more than gut feeling. He didn't have personal tools to substitute for his gauge, and he didn't have ANY tools for the second dive at all.
DCS is rare in recreational divers, but a lot of that is due to the fact that the tables are wildly conservative for most "tourist" dives, and dive computers work pretty reliably, and most people make at least some effort to pay attention to them. And the procedure taught to divers, to abort the dive if the computer fails, is a conservative one.
If you are going to ignore your gauge, you need a valid and reliable method to assess your decompression status. Your buddy's gauge is not that method. Reverting to tables and assuming you were in pressure group X at the end of the first dive, will probably work -- IF you weren't in deco at the end of the first dive. The OP was by his gauge and by tables (and by a number of other assessment tools offered by posters in this thread). Therefore, the recreational tables, even assuming an aggressive first dive, wouldn't be a valid strategy, either.
Blaming the OP's instructor for his behavior 1000 dives later seems to me to be stretching it pretty thin. If I get bent using my current decompression strategy, can you blame it on my OW instructors, who diligently taught me tables, and would never have condoned what I am currently doing?
I empathize with the OP a little bit (but not completely). I don't use the deco calculations on a computer, and haven't for about nine years. When I was first learning the method I do use, I kept my computer running as a computer, because I didn't trust myself yet. Like many people I know who do what I do, I eventually forgot to set a Suunto back to 32%, when it had defaulted to air, and halfway through a dive, the gauge was insisting I was in deco, when I darned well knew better. Of course, it locked me out (and I had a spare which had not been diving). I put the offended gauge away and used the other one, and kept using the method I had learned for the rest of the day.
But I HAD a method. The OP didn't, which was the whole problem. He uses his computer to manage his dives, but when he failed to reset it properly, he ignored it and fell back on . . . nothing more than gut feeling. He didn't have personal tools to substitute for his gauge, and he didn't have ANY tools for the second dive at all.
DCS is rare in recreational divers, but a lot of that is due to the fact that the tables are wildly conservative for most "tourist" dives, and dive computers work pretty reliably, and most people make at least some effort to pay attention to them. And the procedure taught to divers, to abort the dive if the computer fails, is a conservative one.
If you are going to ignore your gauge, you need a valid and reliable method to assess your decompression status. Your buddy's gauge is not that method. Reverting to tables and assuming you were in pressure group X at the end of the first dive, will probably work -- IF you weren't in deco at the end of the first dive. The OP was by his gauge and by tables (and by a number of other assessment tools offered by posters in this thread). Therefore, the recreational tables, even assuming an aggressive first dive, wouldn't be a valid strategy, either.
Blaming the OP's instructor for his behavior 1000 dives later seems to me to be stretching it pretty thin. If I get bent using my current decompression strategy, can you blame it on my OW instructors, who diligently taught me tables, and would never have condoned what I am currently doing?