First, this is not a troll. I'm truly interested in knowing the answer.
I've been following TSandM's thread Two HOURS??????? and it got me wondering about the purpose of this course. I did some research, visited GUE's website, downloaded the standards, etc. According to GUE, the depth limitation for Rec Triox is 120 feet. My question is why bother with helium at such a shallow depth? I used to dive in the 95-100' range on 32% but have recently gone to doing those dives on air. The deco obligation has only increased by 7 minutes for my dive profiles and I'm no more impaired.
Before the comments on that one start - I've done the same dive on 32% in September and 21% last month and during the 32% dive I couldn't turn my camera on. Later at home I realized I was pressing every button but the power button. During the 21% dive, I turned the camera on and got about 13 minutes of pretty decent video footage.
Is it worth the added disadvantages of helium to dive it at such shallow depths?
I've been following TSandM's thread Two HOURS??????? and it got me wondering about the purpose of this course. I did some research, visited GUE's website, downloaded the standards, etc. According to GUE, the depth limitation for Rec Triox is 120 feet. My question is why bother with helium at such a shallow depth? I used to dive in the 95-100' range on 32% but have recently gone to doing those dives on air. The deco obligation has only increased by 7 minutes for my dive profiles and I'm no more impaired.
Before the comments on that one start - I've done the same dive on 32% in September and 21% last month and during the 32% dive I couldn't turn my camera on. Later at home I realized I was pressing every button but the power button. During the 21% dive, I turned the camera on and got about 13 minutes of pretty decent video footage.
Is it worth the added disadvantages of helium to dive it at such shallow depths?