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Please permit me to clean up a few items:
See Bob's excellent answer.At 100 fsw we are nitrogen loading. At 15 fsw we are off gassing nitrogen. My question - what is the depth of equilibium where we are neither absorbing or off gassing, and are there variable factors that have relevance. Can this depth be incorporated for planning in extended diving i.e. liveaboards where doing 5 tanks in a day isn't unheard of.-Thanks
The authorities will say 24 feet is the deepest that you can saturate and return directly to the surface.Some could say that it's 33 fsw. Because that is where the pressure gradient is at a 2:1 ratio, and there is no - NDL for less than 33 feet. However. Offgassing will occur at deeper depths, depending on how much nitrogen you've accumulated, and the depths at which you've accumulated them.
However... I think what you're asking is - is it safe to do 5 dives a day on air? In short. Yeah. You can do that no problem. Do you have a dive computer?
This is not classic DCS, this is bubble pumping, it is quite possible, but it has more in common with AGE.Here's a discussion point for you all (not sure I agree with the story, but here's what I heard):
The dive captain / instructer on the Molokini trip I did in Hawaii said that when he was a DM in the Virgin Islands, he knew of an instructor that got bent in 20 feet of water, due to the fact he conducted five OW check out classes in one day with several students each class. I asked him why, and he said it was because of the numerous ascents made with each student when the did the CESA at the end of each class with each student.
I found it hard to believe, but I suppose that it will put a strain on your body to some degree.
I don't know the details, but I assume that he was underwater pretty much all day long (four to five hours bottom time with minimal SI?), which is not unheard of with resort instructors. Proves that you definitely ongas at very shallow depths. Maybe the depth was minimized for the story - maybe he was in closer to 25 to 30 feet, but still, that is an interesting story.
While I do know of two diagnosed cases of DCS that resulted from saturation between 20 and 24 feet, that is most unusual. You are right to respect long shallow exposures (especially before flying), but the PADI tables were never designed to have any bearing on saturation exposures, they were designed ONLY to model typical recreational dives.Is it possible to get bent in 20 ft of water? Yes - in fact if you look at the RDP, the most "dangerous" pressure groups for a single dive are shallow dives for long periods of time - hence the WXYZ rules for mimimum surface intervals. This is because the so called "slow" compartments take on gas very slowly, but also release it very slowly also - hence repetetive shallow dives for extended periods of time can be misleadingly believed to be "safe". In theory, you are still on-gassing even whilst making a safety stop at 5 metres after a sixty minute dive.
Again, that's bubble pumping, not DCS and one CESA followed by a descent and reascent ... that's enough to do it.An article I read from Suunto suggested 6 CESAs from 9 metres (45 ft) is enough to significantly increase a person's pre-dispostion to DCS. A number of rapid ascents caused during training dives could easily have led the instructor in this case to get bent.
Given that most instructors in resort areas can be spending 3 or more hours a day in the water - and longer in some cases - their risk of DCS becomes more significant.
Again, PFOs do not result in DCS, they result in AGE.I also know of one case where a girl got bent during a Discover Scuba Diving experience (max depth of 6 metres) due to a Patent Foramen Ovale (hole in the heart) - a medical condition with potential problems for divers (I won't go into it here).
Saturation diving on air at 24 feet is relatively risk-free and can be done by recreational divers at Jules Undersea Lodge in Key Largo.Full sat diving is not for the faint of heart and, as a number of wheelchair-bound full-sat oil rig divers from the 70s are finding out, not especially good for your health.
Happy decompressing,
C.
Exactly.I am not sure I get the point of the OP question but as fisheater pointed out equilibrium or saturation is based on time at a particular depth whatever that depth may be and usually is considered to be 24 hours. If you stay at 100 feet for 24 hours you are at equilibrium for 100 feet. Descend to 150 feet you are ongassing until you reach equilibrium at 150 feet after another 24 hours. The same happens in reverse when moving to a shallower depth.