there's nothing specific about O2 other than it's cheap and convenient. Perhaps a bit over-simplified but Nitrox 101.
Not really. Oxygen is a
metabolized gas. Other gases, frequently used for diving, such as helium, are inert gases (not
metabolized). That makes a big difference in saturation/decompression.
If helium were convenient and cheap, it still wouldn't make a great supplement for extending NDLs on dives not subject to narcotic partial pressures of nitrogen.
I also remember reading Shadow Divers and how Trimix was a voodoo gas in the 90's. The descriptive difference those early divers felt between diving air and Trimix. The tunnel vision, the sounds of banging drums inside their heads, the distortion of thoughts while breathing air, to the clarity they experienced while breathing Trimix. This was all made possible by replacing Nitrogen content in the breathing mix with another inert gas. To me, this same principle would seem to apply, albeit a much lesser degree, with Nitrox.
I don't see a 'principle' there, just a pet theory. Helium is less narcotic than nitrogen - that is all.
Again, Oxygen is
not an inert gas.
I want to understand why people are not getting "O2 narced" in hyperbaric chambers?
Someone already mentioned - oxygen toxicity comes into play before you can study narcosis at high PPO2.
When diving, why is it that O2 seems to be arbitrary assigned the same narcotic potential as N2; especially, when there's controversy if it has any narcotic affect at all. Where did the idea come from and when did tech divers start calculating "O2 narcosis" into their profiles?
Tech divers don't calculate "O2 narcosis"
or "nitrogen narcosis". They calculate "
air narcosis". That is why, when considering the formulation/choice of %He in their mix, you will hear reference to "Equivalent Air Depth", to describe narcosis potential.
Air narcosis is considered equal to nitrogen narcosis, as you have mentioned, because it ignores variation in %O2 and %N. That's arbitrary because the exact mechanism of narcosis is not fully understood - and what little evidence exists, points towards no significant deviation in observed narcosis when the nitrogen/oxygen balance is altered.
If oxygen did have less narcotic potential than nitrogen, then it would still constitute little, or no value to the diver - as increasing %O2 to prevent narcosis at deeper depths would lead to toxicity issues long before any significant narcosis issues were solved.