You are taking the science of diving to be fact.
There is nothing (or very little) about dive science that is 100% fact. There is very little when it comes to DCS, factors of DCS and when and where people get bent that is science fact. You can do everything right, make no mistakes, have no accidents, stay well within table and computer limits on a dive and STILL get bent - that is a fact.
I agree tho with the presumption that in most cases, if you don't exceed time, depth and ascent rates the likelihood of getting bent is nil, but it does happen, people do get bent and you can bet it will happen again.
Two divers, first dive of the day - both "clean divers" - no violations of any kind, table or computer. One gets bent, the other doesn't on identical profiles. True story and I spent the day in the waiting room at the UPENN chamber.
Less arrogance, more knowledge and understand it's Dive THEORY not Dive Fact.
There is nothing (or very little) about dive science that is 100% fact. There is very little when it comes to DCS, factors of DCS and when and where people get bent that is science fact. You can do everything right, make no mistakes, have no accidents, stay well within table and computer limits on a dive and STILL get bent - that is a fact.
I agree tho with the presumption that in most cases, if you don't exceed time, depth and ascent rates the likelihood of getting bent is nil, but it does happen, people do get bent and you can bet it will happen again.
Two divers, first dive of the day - both "clean divers" - no violations of any kind, table or computer. One gets bent, the other doesn't on identical profiles. True story and I spent the day in the waiting room at the UPENN chamber.
Less arrogance, more knowledge and understand it's Dive THEORY not Dive Fact.