Nostalgia is just not what it used to be.In the early 90s many divers regularly went down to 50-60m+ on air and a single tank. Most other divers would not even bat an eyelid. Times sure have changed.
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Nostalgia is just not what it used to be.In the early 90s many divers regularly went down to 50-60m+ on air and a single tank. Most other divers would not even bat an eyelid. Times sure have changed.
According to their own record, they used 12L tanks. That may not mean much, but IME the standard 12L in southern Europe is a 12x200, which carries about 9% more gas than an Al80 (which, IIRC, is 11L 209 bar). A 15x200, a 12x232 or a 10x300 is about 100 cu.ft, a 15x232 or a 12x300 is in the 120 cu.ft range
I've dived in southern France, southern Italy and the Canary Islands. At least two of those are in the Med. Still haven't encountered an Al80 (with the exception of stages I've seen carried by tech divers back home). Only metric steels, typically 12x200s with the occasional 15x200 available on requestI suspect the AL80 to be the default tank in the Mediterranean.
I've only ever seen AL80s in Greece, Italy and Turkey; steel tanks will likely be actual metric sizes. Now that I think about it; I have seen a 12L short (which is steel) in a magazine article about diving in Sardinia.I've dived in southern France, southern Italy and the Canary Islands. At least two of those are in the Med. Still haven't encountered an Al80 (with the exception of stages I've seen carried by tech divers back home). Only metric steels, typically 12x200s with the occasional 15x200 available on request
In the early 90s many divers regularly went down to 50-60m+ on air and a single tank. Most other divers would not even bat an eyelid. Times sure have changed.
Narcosis................can also mean a diver or divers lose track time, forgets to check SPG, get so overly focused on something simple that it becomes THE most important thing you've ever tried to do to the exclusion of everything else.
You can plan your dive and dive your plan, if you can remember what it was..
Could not agree more @Kay Dee. Having done deep diving on air back in the 1970's I've experienced and/or seen all of what you posted.
How did the instructor know that you took longer? Nitrox? Trimix?When I did the deep dive as part of AOW we did a timed puzzle first. Then on the dive, at only about 70 ft., I did the puzzle again. I remember thinking wow I did it a lot quicker then on land. All the way to shore I was thinking I was special. Until during the debriefing the instructor pointed out that I had taken considerably longer at depth.
A slow computer processes things slower. It take the same number of cycles to do a problem but each cycle takes longer. The computer cannot tell because its clock has slowed down.
Most of my dives at the coast are 70-100 ft. At 70-80 I am a little narced. At 100 I have to make a conscious effort to keep checking the spg and the NDL.
How did the instructor know that you took longer? Nitrox? Trimix?