Slamfire
Contributor
Oooh :shocked2:. That sounds like a personal attack without having all the information about me, what goes through my head or having the particulars about the dive in question. Tell you what. I'll post the profile in question so that it can become a more educated attack and have less baseless speculation (see attachment).If you are going to use 2 gases but use neither 2 gas decompression tables nor a computer that can handle 2 gases, then you have relinquished your dive profile to guesswork.
As you can see from the attachment at 31 mins into the dive I have a deco obligation of 8 mins (@ 10ft). I know this is not true because at that point I have been on 50% for 10 mins already. But that's fine, I just chuck into added conservatism and not take that into account. I'm not very concerned with %CNS because this is the last dive of the week for me. I know off the top of my head that the EAD for 50% at 35' is 10'. So I spend 12 extra mins (not 8) at an EAD of 10' or above. I know it is not the same as doing deco on air at the physical 10', but that, added to the extra 10 mins I was on 50% before arriving at the 35ft mark, makes me feel all warm and fuzzy about going to the surface before my computer tells me I'm cleared. So, yes, it is a guess, but I'm stacking a lot of odds in my favor in this guess. I believe I am making a thinking, reasonably logical decision here. After all, computers and their algorithms are statistical models that try to help you make an educated guess that will hopefully not get you bent -- but as we all know there's never a guarantee on that.
This is one of the points I'm trying to make. There's not need to be so fearful of the NDL line. If you cross it only by a little bit, you'll consequently have a little bit deco obligation that could very likely be satisfied with an appropriately slow ascent. No need to panic about it or flee in a rush from it in what could be dangerous ascent speeds in the attempt to get farther away from that ominous NDL line.There was a recent thread in which a diver described his panic when he went into deco by one minute and did not have any idea that his computer could guide him through the ascent. He had also forgotten that he had been taught what to do on tables in that case in his OW class.
Don't get me wrong, deco is not to be treated lightly and you should get training and knowledge to handle it well. But thinking that because you're too fast at running away from that ever decreasing NDL line you're being more conservative than crossing one or two mins into that line is a fallacy that could easily get you bent.