The Iceni
Medical Moderator
Liquid said,
"So the problem with the temprature isn't a direct one, since like you pointed out, cold liquids can contain MORE gas. Rather it's indirect- you get more stressed, and therefore more susceptible to DCS".
Quite so, Liquid. Which is why I said
"Work rate and stress I can understand. Water temperature, No."
There are many stressors on a dive. The point I made was that the degree of thermal stress depends on the quality of insulation eg. dry suit vs. wet suit. Not just the water temperature.
If these copmuters do incorporate water temperature in their algorithms they are omitting to control for a very important and unpredictable variable, the diver's thermal comport levels which may be quite independent of the water temperature. This is precisely why I cannot believe that they do.
Happy to be proven wrong, as ever!

"So the problem with the temprature isn't a direct one, since like you pointed out, cold liquids can contain MORE gas. Rather it's indirect- you get more stressed, and therefore more susceptible to DCS".
Quite so, Liquid. Which is why I said
"Work rate and stress I can understand. Water temperature, No."
There are many stressors on a dive. The point I made was that the degree of thermal stress depends on the quality of insulation eg. dry suit vs. wet suit. Not just the water temperature.
If these copmuters do incorporate water temperature in their algorithms they are omitting to control for a very important and unpredictable variable, the diver's thermal comport levels which may be quite independent of the water temperature. This is precisely why I cannot believe that they do.
Happy to be proven wrong, as ever!
