Dan
Contributor
My understanding from the people I spoke with is that the 1.16 PO2 mark is not an absolute. It's not like a cliff if you take one step over you fall. It's more like a sliding scale. The higher your PO2 the more chances you have of experiencing oxygen toxicity. I recall reading about one diver in a book (Shadow Divers?) who regularly ignored his PO2 levels until the day he was hit with a massive event and died. I'm sure on this forum there are many many people who have much more knowledge than I do about this phenomenon. I invite them to weigh in on this.
I listened to the freaking 12-hour CDs of Shadow Divers on my 1,500-mile roundtrip driving & backpacking to Big Bend NP, Hiking Big Bend. I don’t remember about such a low PPO2 had been fatal to a diver. Even the Wiki on Oxygen Toxicity mentions about a much higher number of 1.4 when it begins to have an affect to diver. Oxygen toxicity - Wikipedia
Check your number again and post the reference link here.