Deep Adventure Scuba Colorado Technical Diving - For Those Looking to Take Diving to a New Level
The article on my resource page should answer a lot of the questions, but I will answer some of them quickly here:
1. The 2 pressure groups per 1,000 feet of altitude only works with PADI tables.
2. It starts when you reach that altitude. If you arrive at 6,000 feet from sea level, you are an L diver, and a 2:10 surface interval later you are an A diver.
3. Since you spent some time ascending while getting there, you were off-gassing on the way, but there is no way to calculate that.
4. Putting 2 and 3 together, the odds are you won't have to worry about it.
5. If you got there from a higher altitude, you are already off the table, much to the surprise of the local dive shop here that tells the students coming from our mile-high altitude that they will be J divers when they descend to 4,600 feet to dive in New Mexico.
6. I don't know of any computer that calculates your change in altitude before you have done your first dive. Some software programs do that (like multi-deco).
7. The first Shearwater computers did not calculate altitude at all. A friend of mine bought one and contacted the company because the depths seemed wrong. As they talked to him, they realized he was diving at altitude and made that adjustment in their computers. Years later, during a weekend of diving at altitude, our group noticed that different divers were getting different depth readings on our Shearwaters. I contacted them, and they figured out that the difference was in how the computers turned on. If we turned the computer on before diving, it knew we were at altitude. If the computer turned on by itself after the dive started, it thought we were at sea level. They then corrected that so that now Shearwater computers that turn on after being submerged will go back to their last altitude reading.
8. Suunto RGBM computers used to (maybe still do) require manual settings for altitude. They gave you the choice of 3 ranges.
9. When you start getting over 10,000 feet, things get serious, and you should do some real investigation before doing anything but shallow dives.