Optimize Air Consumption

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SCUBASailor

Contributor
Messages
319
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6
Location
Louisiana, USA
# of dives
50 - 99
I was just mentioning to my wife this morning that I want to experiment in the water to find out exactly what the perfect breathing rate and lung volume are for me to optimize air consumption under water. (I do understand that all this is completely dependent on the amount of exertion I am experiencing.) I can control my breathing rate now, but figuring out the best volume to minimize air consumption should be interesting.

I am finding that if I slow my breathing too much, I must take a large breath every now and then to "catch up". That large breath seems wasteful to me, so I figure that I am probably better off making each breath a little deeper.

I realize that in the long run, that type of control will probably not make a huge difference in air consumption, but it still seems like a good thing to master.

BTW, I have not had the chance to take the nitrox class yet, so this relates to air, for now. Would my experiments apply directly to nitrox diving?

Has anyone else made an explicit effort to measure this? Does it just come naturally after a lot of dives? Is all this just an academic waste of time?
 
I think you're focusing too much of your attention on breathing. You're still new to diving. How about just trying to spend most of your next dive hovering...while taking normal-sized breaths? Find an area with some aquatic life, stay in one spot, and just check out what the fish/octopus/starfish/nudibranchs/eels do. You'll be surprised how much you'll see. The more successful you are at this, the better your air consumption will be...and you would minimize the problems of consciously altering your breathing rate/volume, i.e., CO2 retention.

Dive more. Relax. Optimize weighting and trim. Streamline your gear. Have fun.
 
"...perfect breathing rate and lung volume to optimize air consumption under water."

Is all this just an academic waste of time?

Yes.

Breathing patterns really have nothing to do with air consumption, which as you point out is a function of your activity and exertion underwater.

With 0-24 dives I suggest you work on bouyancy control, trim, propulsion technique and just being comfortable in the water. Slow down. Slow down some more, then realize you're still going too fast. That will do wonders for your air consumption.

Have fun!
 
How fast/slow you breath will affect your overall air consumption. There are things that have a much greater effect:

The bottom line to air consumption is the amount of CO2 your body creates. The more tense you are, the more stress you feel, the more exertion you do, the more CO2 your body generates. Spend time learning to relax, remain horizontal in the water, and neutrally buoyant. These skills will reduce your air consumption much more dramatically. BTW, water temp also affects air consumption.


In the end, just breath a relaxed, slow inhale and exhale. Work on the above items and your air consumption will improve along with your dive experience.
 
You've made a great observation. If you slow your breathing too much, CO2 accumulates, and the body demands more air get moved to bring the CO2 level back to normal. One gains little or nothing by skip breathing (the common term for slowing the breathing rate excessively) unless one is a diver who tolerates elevated CO2 levels -- and then you buy a little longer bottom time at the expense of headache and nausea, and increased susceptibility to oxygen toxicity, as well as markedly increased narcosis.

Here is an essay I wrote about optimizing your gas consumption:

How fast you use your gas is determined by two things: How much CO2 you are generating per minute, and how efficiently you use the gas you breathe to accomplish gas exchange in the lungs.

To address the second idea first, I'm going to describe a little anatomy. Your respiratory system includes your mouth, larynx, trachea, large bronchi, small bronchioles and then the air sacs where gas exchange actually takes place. Until gas gets into the air sacs, it's just passing through -- it's not delivering any oxygen, or taking away any CO2. If the volume of air you breathe with each breathe is only the volume of your larynx, trachea and bronchi, you're moving a lot of air, but not exchanging any gas. That's why shallow, rapid breathing runs through your tank quickly (and also leaves you feeling short of breath). It's also why slow, deep breaths are routinely recommended by instructors.

Tension and anxiety tend to make people take quick, shallow breaths, which are inefficient. Relaxation tends to allow people to slow their breathing . . . but the funny thing is that slowing your breathing also tends to bring relaxation with it. That's the essence of yoga breathing, or meditation.

Assuming your breathing PATTERN is an efficient one, then you have to look at your CO2 production, which is a result of metabolic activity in cells. You have a certain basal metabolic rate, below which you really can't go. It's actually HIGHER in fitter people than it is in the unfit, so you'd think that getting fit would make your gas consumption worse. But at the same time that your basal metabolic rate increases, the amount of muscle effort you need to accomplish a given amount of work goes DOWN, and that's a much bigger influence. So fitness does pay off.

But efficiency pays off even better. Every motion you make underwater, you pay for with some gas used. Therefore, the less motion, the longer your gas lasts. You can reduce motion by becoming horizontal, so that all your kicking effort succeeds in propelling you forward. If you are tilted at a 45 degree angle to the bottom, each time you kick, you drive yourself upward. To compensate, you have to keep your buoyancy negative, so you will have an equal tendency to sink. At that point, you are expending energy for a net displacement of zero! Very inefficient, and a very common new diver error.

Use your fins, not your hands. Hands are great for swimming on the surface, without fins, because your feet aren't very efficient propellers. But fins are, and that's what you should be using underwater. Flailing wildly with the hands uses a lot of muscle effort and produces very little net propulsion, so people who swim with their hands tend to suck gas.

Master your buoyancy. Although the volume of gas going into your BC or drysuit is relatively small, if you are putting it in and letting it out and putting it back in and letting it back out . . . after a half hour, your BC has breathed a lot of your gas. To master buoyancy, you have to start with proper weighting, because being significantly overweighted will make you unstable in the water column, and result in a lot of yo-yoing that wastes BC gas and ALSO makes you breathe harder. So reducing your weight to the proper amount will, in the long run, make your gas last longer.

And finally, move slower! One of the major strategies of sea life is camouflage, so if you move quickly, you miss many animals you might otherwise find. Unless you have a specific purpose for rapid movement, like spearfishing (and spearfishermen are NEVER going to win any awards for low SAC rates!) slow swimming will result in a much more productive and interesting dive.

Finally, recognize that body size and muscle mass will have a detectable effect on gas consumption. My favorite dive buddy is 6' tall and very strong. He's an absolutely beautiful diver -- quiet, relaxed, balanced and efficient in the water -- but he will never equal my SAC rate, because I'm a little old lady. If you habitually dive with people who are much smaller than you are, then buying bigger tanks may be your best answer.

Hope that's useful.
 
I was just mentioning to my wife this morning that I want to experiment in the water to find out exactly what the perfect breathing rate and lung volume are for me to optimize air consumption under water. (I do understand that all this is completely dependent on the amount of exertion I am experiencing.) I can control my breathing rate now, but figuring out the best volume to minimize air consumption should be interesting.
BTW, I have not had the chance to take the nitrox class yet, so this relates to air, for now. Would my experiments apply directly to nitrox diving?

Has anyone else made an explicit effort to measure this? Does it just come naturally after a lot of dives? Is all this just an academic waste of time?

As a new diver you should not put the value of a dive on the time you spend underwater, but on the excitement of the dive. Think of your air gauge as a gas gauge on a car. A smart car can go a long way on a tank of gas. . . but a Ferrari will give you more excitement for your money. In the beginning most divers are excited to just be underwater and blowing bubbles. As that becomes ordinary, your air consumption will become longer and longer. If nothing comes along to keep the excitement going you will join the many divers that quit too soon before you really learn what you can do.

Your breathing should be smooth and steady, just like above water. A nearly full breath taken in slowly and let out slowly. . . Holding your breath, or trying to "control" the time and depth of breathing isn't healthy. Slow steady breathing will become easier as you become comfortable, that in turn will make you better able to interact with sea life. A breathing pattern of huffing and puffing, and breath holding will scare everything in the surrounding area.

Nitrox is a tool and a little voodoo. It will not make a tank last longer, it will reduce nitrogen problems in repetitive dives. If you have a good instructor for the Nitrox class, and he will dive with you, the class may be of some value. When you travel and make two, three or more dives a day, the benefits of mixed gases become important.

Keep reading the various posts in dive training, travel stories. . . learning everything underwater doesn't come quickly, but it does come, and it will make you more comfortable on every dive.
 
You've made a great observation. If you slow your breathing too much, CO2 accumulates, and the body demands more air get moved to bring the CO2 level back to normal. One gains little or nothing by skip breathing (the common term for slowing the breathing rate excessively) unless one is a diver who tolerates elevated CO2 levels -- and then you buy a little longer bottom time at the expense of headache and nausea, and increased susceptibility to oxygen toxicity, as well as markedly increased narcosis.

Here is an essay I wrote about optimizing your gas consumption:



Hope that's useful.

I think you are my analytical hero! (Yes, I am serious.)
 

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