Jamesdclxxv
Registered
calculating sac is part of the padi aow materialanyone know of a recreational course taught by one of the large agencies where calculating your sac rate is actually required?
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
calculating sac is part of the padi aow materialanyone know of a recreational course taught by one of the large agencies where calculating your sac rate is actually required?
calculating sac is part of the padi aow material
See below.Actually, the person that you quoted and posed the question to, above, as well as the other person who responded, both stated "to half your maximum depth" or "to 50% of max depth", not a "straight 10 FPM ascent". See quotes below:
I believe you are referring to the Marroni study in 2004. (A deep stop during decompression from 82 fsw (25 m) significantly reduces bubbles and fast tissue gas tensions. - PubMed - NCBI)I don't know where the GUE min deco ascent profile came from, but there's a study quoted in Deco for Divers that tracked bubble scores from divers that did various ascent profiles from direct ascent, 3(?) minute safety stop, 5(?) minute safety stop, and staged ascent. I don't remember the exact name of the study or the specific times/scores listed since my copy is in a box somewhere, but I distinctly remembering that the group that did the staged ascent had lower bubble scores.
I will be happy to be shown the research that indicates that this strategy for recreational divers is better than the one that has been used by everyone else.
A thinking, conservative diver is able to construct a gas plan that has a "rock bottom" pressure, that is, the minimum SPG reading at which it is still possible to respond to another diver's out-of-gas emergency and reach safety.
Typical rock bottom calculations assume an elevated SAC for both divers due to stress, allow some amount of problem-solving time at depth, and allow an orderly ascent (usually 30 fpm). In some cases a 3-minute safety stop and a surface reserve is included, and in some cases there is an allowance for unusable gas (where the cylinder pressure is too low to allow the regulator to deliver enough gas volume for two divers).
@NWGratefulDiver has a web page with an example calculation here. His example includes a 3 minute safety stop and a combined reserve for surface use and unusable gas of 200 PSI. The example concludes that rock-bottom pressure for a 65' dive using AL80s is 1603 PSI. Using the "rock bottom" gas planning strategy, a diver would start the ascent at this pressure (or sooner). While this is just an example, it is fairly typical of the conservatism encouraged when using this gas planning strategy.
But it is my experience that very few recreational divers actually run their dives this conservatively. Even DAN recommends that divers exit the water with 500 PSI remaining on the SPG. For a 65' dive matching NWGratefulDiver's example, this would mean the ascent would start no later than about 750 PSI for a diver with a SAC of 0.6.
My ongoing, well, fixation on pony/stage cylinders, twinsets, and larger cylinders is motivated in large measure by the fact that I've always performed rock bottom calculations and never, ever want to get caught trying to help an OOG diver when I don't have enough reserve to do it.
Let's frame the discussion around deeper dives. On shallow dives, less than about 30' or so, the calculated rock bottom pressure will typically be the same or less than the "exit the water with 500 PSI" ascent pressure.
I think there are two things going on here. One is that those who advocate thorough gas planning calculate "rock bottom" using unrealistically conservative assumptions for the amount of SAC elevation and the amount of time spent on problem solving at depth. The second is that the "500 PSI back on board" divers are, without realizing it, diving a gas plan that does not allow for reasonably foreseeable failures.
A fact to consider is that there are, nonetheless, very, very few accidents that occur because a buddy did not have sufficient air to share.
So, how do you conduct your gas planning for deeper recreational dives? Why? Do you think you'd be able to bring an OOG diver to the surface at the very end of your dive?
If it isn't better, why do it?Did someone claim it’s better from a decompression standpoint?
If it isn't better, why do it?
Did someone claim it’s better from a decompression standpoint?
I enjoy doing it that way because it’s good practice for hitting and keeping stops.
It wasn't made clear to me in my GUE training whether they really believe it's better from a decompression standpoint or whether it's more along the lines of: for recreational dives to less than a maximum depth of 100 feet, regardless of whether it's better, it's probably not worse to any significant degree, and besides, it's a good skill to develop.