lairdb
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I've been staring at the RAID Nitrox course material for a while now, and I'm still stuck. Tell me if I've got it wrong, but:
On p.22 of the 4-Jan-18 edition, it calculates a 40 minute ABT dive. In the analysis, it shows that the ppO2 0.9 exposure limit is 360 minutes, and then subtracts 90 minutes.
Where does the 90 come from? Is it just... wrong? That's... potentially concerning for an engineering/life-safety text.
On the "wrong" theory, I pulled an updated copy of the manual. In the current (17-Oct-19) edition, the calculation has been ...changed:
Now, 90 has been changed to 40, but 360-40 is not 270. That's also... concerning.
Further,
-This is labeled CNS, but it's not the CNS % (which they don't calculate, for no reason I can see), and
-40 is still not the right number; NOAA is clear, and RAID reproduces their text: CNS and OTU are calculated surface-to-surface, not surface-to-ascent, so it should be 40+ascent+safetystop, i.e. at least 45.
Very confused. I think:
-It should be 360-45=315 remaining daily exposure minutes.
-That's actually the exposure limit minutes, which is more relevant to pulmonary tox, not CNS tox.
-They should have shown a CNS% calculation, which is the more likely material calculation for typical recreational diving.
-The CNS% should be 0.28*45=12.6%.
-Should they have calculated actual OTUs, at least for the learning exercise? (0.85*45=37.35 OTU.)
Thanks.
(And edited to add Shearwater's take, which I would summarize as "OTUs are Not Useful".)
On p.22 of the 4-Jan-18 edition, it calculates a 40 minute ABT dive. In the analysis, it shows that the ppO2 0.9 exposure limit is 360 minutes, and then subtracts 90 minutes.
Where does the 90 come from? Is it just... wrong? That's... potentially concerning for an engineering/life-safety text.
On the "wrong" theory, I pulled an updated copy of the manual. In the current (17-Oct-19) edition, the calculation has been ...changed:
Now, 90 has been changed to 40, but 360-40 is not 270. That's also... concerning.
Further,
-This is labeled CNS, but it's not the CNS % (which they don't calculate, for no reason I can see), and
-40 is still not the right number; NOAA is clear, and RAID reproduces their text: CNS and OTU are calculated surface-to-surface, not surface-to-ascent, so it should be 40+ascent+safetystop, i.e. at least 45.
Very confused. I think:
-It should be 360-45=315 remaining daily exposure minutes.
-That's actually the exposure limit minutes, which is more relevant to pulmonary tox, not CNS tox.
-They should have shown a CNS% calculation, which is the more likely material calculation for typical recreational diving.
-The CNS% should be 0.28*45=12.6%.
-Should they have calculated actual OTUs, at least for the learning exercise? (0.85*45=37.35 OTU.)
Thanks.
(And edited to add Shearwater's take, which I would summarize as "OTUs are Not Useful".)