They offer nitrox as a extra charge which gives me the impression they might be chasing more money off guests. I only think this due to past experiences where I have been recommended to use nitrox and it was not needed. The mix they offer is between 30-32% but can be changed if requested. I have heard the hammerheads can be quite deep, this is the main reason I dont want to be restricted, but would like as much time as possible with the manta rays haha.
Interesting. I haven't encountered an operation that will offer a custom mix. If they will offer 30%, then why not just use that all week? It should be suitable for the few (if any) deep dives and will give you the bottom time benefit of nitrox for all of the dives to some extent. They're not going to suggest a dive plan with a bottom beyond 120 feet, are they? That wouldn't seem very responsible to do on a recreational liveaboard trip. Just for reference, the dive ops on the N. Carolina coast that visit the WWII wrecks generally offer 30% as their standard mix because the MOD is where the bottom is, and they want their customers to be safe.
Whether it's "needed" is, of course, different from whether it's safe, which I got the impression was your original question because you mentioned a concern that some of the dives are deep. In other words, I got the impression you were concerned the dive op was offering a certain nitrox mix, e.g., 32%, for dives the dive op knows would exceed the MOD. Anyway, as for "needed," there is a whole school of thought that (MOD consideration aside) nitrox is always better than air, whether "better" means more bottom time or safer. "Air is for tires," the wags say. You will be doing lots of dives over the course of a week or more, so why not do all you can to minimize the nitrogen loading in your body?
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