JeffG
Contributor
He should ask on the Gavin Scooter Yahoo Group.cornfed:Why don't you post your question on Quest? That way you'll get the answer straight from the horse's mouth.
Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.
Benefits of registering include
He should ask on the Gavin Scooter Yahoo Group.cornfed:Why don't you post your question on Quest? That way you'll get the answer straight from the horse's mouth.
cornfed:The minimum deco rules aren't magic. I think it's a little silly to assume that following them is safe when you admit that that everything else you've looked at says this is a bad idea. Maybe I got screwed in my fundies class but we didn't learn anything about doing back to back dives with (essentially) no surface interval.
Why don't you post your question on Quest? That way you'll get the answer straight from the horse's mouth.
Thats where the big dogs hunt. Plus I got punted from Quest because I wouldn't donate to the mothership, so I wouldn't be able to see the answers.cornfed:Good idea, that will truely be from the horse's mouth.
It isn't worth it. GI3 hangs out on the Gavin Scooter list...ergo...thats why the recommendation to go there.*Floater*:I haven't joined the Quest list. A few people told me they didn't think it was worth it, except for the archives. But perhaps I should email GI3 about this at some point. Right now I'm still trying understand his ideas on deco a little better by reading the material out there and posting here.
My problem with this is that everyone is focusing on the free gas (bubbles) and ignoring the disolved gas phase. I think what GI is saying may make sense for the dives he's doing. I'm afraid that when you take it out of that context and I apply it to recreational dives it doesn't apply anymore.*Floater*:I'm not assuming anything. Just brought it up as it relates to the OP. i.e. GI3's suggestion to throw away the first dive when planning the second seems consistent with what I was taught during DIRF.
cornfed:My problem with this is that everyone is focusing on the free gas (bubbles) and ignoring the disolved gas phase. I think what GI is saying may make sense for the dives he's doing. I'm afraid that when you take it out of that context and I apply it to recreational dives it doesn't apply anymore.
Here is an article (375k pdf) from the Smithsonian reverse profiles workshop. It's a good read if you haven't seen it before.lamont:Its seems like you're in two different regimes on the different kinds of dives, where in rec diving, each successive dive tends to be additive, while in tech diving you deco from the previous dive and basically reset and can do it again...
lamont:Yeah, that's exactly what I'm thinking.
Doing 30 min dives to 100 fsw it seems like you're dominated in your approach to decompression by the dissolved gas phase. Doing them back-to-back, the slightly longer compartments (compared to your deco time and short surface interval) are going to be way oversaturated and you'll probably take a type 1 hit after the second dive.
Its seems like you're in two different regimes on the different kinds of dives, where in rec diving, each successive dive tends to be additive, while in tech diving you deco from the previous dive and basically reset and can do it again...