I had a small problem in my equation (I integrated equation 3 over time instead of equation 2 over time). I corrected the original post. The numbers now make much more sence for large depths
As far as the constants used, use whatever numbers you want to determine if it makes sence for you (for me, 1 cu ft / min is an incredibly fast breathing rate). Oh, 30ftsw is 1 atm.
As far as the constants used, use whatever numbers you want to determine if it makes sence for you (for me, 1 cu ft / min is an incredibly fast breathing rate). Oh, 30ftsw is 1 atm.
Charlie99 once bubbled...
First, 1atm is 33', not 30.
For a constant rate ascent you will use the same amount of gas as if you spent all of the ascent time at the average depth.
If you have an emergency at 100' and are bailing out on a 3 cu ft tank you will NOT be poking along at 30fpm.
1 cfm SAC is NOT a conservative number for a panicked diver. 2 or 3 is not unreasonable.
Even your equations wouldn't have the diver running out after 10 seconds (ascent time from 100' to 95').
After noting the above, I decided it wasn't worth my time figuring out if your equation was right.
How about this calculation:
100' to surface at 60fpm is 1.67 minutes.
50' avg = (50+33)/33 = 2.52 ata.
1.67 min * 2.52 ata = 4.2 equivalent surface minutes.
This means 4.2 cu ft if you assume 1 cu ft / min breathing rate,
8.4 if you assume 2cfm.
Here's another interesting calculation:
99'=4ata.
A calm diver will breath something around 0.6 cfm on surface, or 2.4cubic feet per minute.
3 cubic feet of spare gas gives you about a minute to hunt down your buddy (he IS close by isn't he?) and get hold of an adequate air supply (your agreed upon turn point DID allow for 2 agitated divers ascending on one tank, didn't it?)