victorzamora
Contributor
Edited: On second thought, this wasn't a positive contribution so I'm deleting it.
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
It's the same length as the vpm schedule except....dun dun duuuuun.... Shallower.These dives have deco that starts 2.5 to 3 times deeper, and is 1/3 rd the deco time, vs the Nedu ones? Different ends of the dive scale.
Are you trying to show me that your stretched out chewing gum GF plan, is not consistent because you have used GF to override ZHL and make it all "fitted' to your idea of what ever you want today?
.
It's the same length as the vpm schedule except....dun dun duuuuun.... Shallower.
There is an interesting back story to that. In 2004 it was going to be as Bruce said, and it was going to be good - a real model comparison. At least that's how he explained it.
And then..... look what the nedu did instead. Two obscure shallow test models... that have no connection to tech diving (or any model for that matter) .
Different profiles.Yeah, so why does Ross keep posting that chart that shows A2 running something like 210 minutes?
Is that his own home-cooked chart? He never references where it is sourced.
So go look at 220 for 25, 15/55 bottom gas and 50% and oxygen for deco.
Compare vpm+3 and 40/70 gradient factors.
Lemme guess - those are both shallow stop schedules right?
Not only that it controlled for temperature! Same exertion of the bottom to the watt. No thermocline, same exposure protection on ascent. If the reason the test divers got bent was temperature the hit rate should have been the same, not 5% and 1.6% and statistically different.Different profiles.
The nedu ascent schedules were the same length but with different stop distributions. One shallower and one deeper.
My example is two ascent schedules with the same length, one shallower and one deeper.
The point is to show that the nedu test is absolutely relevant and does test "deep stops".
But take a look at this. Why did they quit the shallow stop test half way?? Answer: Because it was about to fail its rejection criteria test, and invalidate the whole effort:
Where is A1 headed ? Out the bottom, suggesting that the test model settings (derived from the massive navy database) were not properly calibrated to the test sequence...
.
Ross, I have pointed out your misinterpretation of this figure (which is an earlier version and drawn differently to the one in NEDU TR 11-06) every time you post it in one of these threads. The A1 yellow line had to cross (not touch) the stop-low boundary - the trial was ended at a planned interim analysis with 3 DCS/192 dives on A1, the stop-low criteria would not have been met until 3/257.