BIGSAGE136
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I apologize for any hurt feelings. I just cant imagine how people dived before the computer. I guess they are all dead.
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mattboy:Wow, this thread has gotten a little heated! Anyhow, two things stand out to me about some of the arguments:
1. Many people post about "when your computer fails..." okay, how about a real life experience of a dive in which the computer failed and the dive was finished on table, including your exact procedure for doing so. No "what ifs", let's hear from experience. I have an idea how I would handle a dive if my computer failed, depending on how it all happened, but I'd like to know how many of the people that are so concerned with the possibility of computer failure have experienced it.
2. Those who are arguing against the value of ascent rate indicators in buoyancy training, saying "that should happen in initial training" are not seeing this from the student's point of view. Regardless of initial training, when students venture into the ocean for the first time and are in blue water with no reference for depth, it will be MUCH easier for them to control their buoyancy if they have a sensitive ascent rate indicator. This could just as well be on a bottom timer as on a computer, but the point is, when you can look at an instrument that tells you precisely when you're going up and how fast, you're going to learn quicker and better how to control your depth.
What could possibly be wrong with that? This is especially true because I would be willing to bet that the vast majority of DCS cases in single tank rec diving, particularly among new divers, are due to factors like rapid ascents, poor buoyancy control, maybe some dehydration and ancillary factors like obesity, exercise, etc... and NOT by blowing NDL. The simple fact that among most new divers air consumption is pretty high and the capacity of an AL80 (by far the most common size tank) makes it less likely that new divers will exceed NDls by a large margin.
Swan1172:tables... gives you a better perspective on how a dive computer actually works.
mattboy:Mike, those are the sort of experiences I'm looking for, thanks. In each case you described, using tables to finish a dive started with a computer did not happen; the one deco dive you described was planned and executed with planning software, not the computer. The others were shallow enough so that you had no decompression concerns. Right?
Blackwood:That's what it seems like.
Using tables to continue after a computer failure is do-able so long as you know what's going on.
mattboy:1. Many people post about "when your computer fails..." okay, how about a real life experience of a dive in which the computer failed and the dive was finished on table, including your exact procedure for doing so. No "what ifs", let's hear from experience.