mikeny9
Contributor
We're in agreement there. What exactly are we disagreeing about?VGE is considered an indicator of deco stress. Deco stress is what you're trying to minimize.
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
We're in agreement there. What exactly are we disagreeing about?VGE is considered an indicator of deco stress. Deco stress is what you're trying to minimize.
Right, there’s always bubbles present after any dive. It’s the size of the bubble that counts. The deep stops added in RD 2.0 is meant to control the size of those bubbles, not accelerate deco time. O2-based decompression would certainly accelerate the ascent when compared to air.
Hmm, I've been listening all this time. I've asked you questions, and you're not answering them. What more can I do to listen @Diver0001? Just because I don't agree with you doesn't mean I'm not listening. Could you start with answering my questions?
AJ, nope. Like I wrote above, RD doesn’t aim to reduce any of the shallow stop time specifically by adding deep stops. I don’t think it ever did. The idea with the deep stops in RD 2.0 is simply to control the size of the bubble growth, not the presence of them. It in no way reduces your shallow stop time, as that time is necessary to treat the slow tissues.
RD 2.0 calls for adding 1 min deep stops when exceeding NDL by 15-29 minutes. Based off the NEDU deep stop study, then additional time should be added to the shallow stops to treat slow tissue super-saturation. I would certainly agree with that, but the study also doesn’t factor in oxygen-based decompression. UTD RD 2.0 doesn’t call for 66% stops until you’re 15-29 minutes over NDL, in which case the diver would certainly be using either 50/00 or 100% O2.
I didn't claim that and never dismissed the study, but you jumped to that conclusion. I'm talking about micro-bubbles and subclinical DCS. UTD RD 2.0 doesn't follow VPM. The deep stop portion of the ascent, if anything is even added, is meant to control the size of the bubble, not reduce total ascent time.Your claim dismissing the study (you most likely did not read) that reported high grades of VGE after a normally executed VPM dive.
Aka this "Right, there’s always bubbles present after any dive. It’s the size of the bubble that counts."
Can you give an example?It certainly claims to affect the shallow stops. Some of the proposed oxygen times are downright nutty.
UTD VBlog: Complex Ratio Deco Questions · UTD Scuba DivingI didn't claim that and never dismissed the study, but you jumped to that conclusion. I'm talking about micro-bubbles and subclinical DCS. UTD RD 2.0 doesn't follow VPM. The deep stop portion of the ascent, if anything is even added, is meant to control the size of the bubble, not reduce total ascent time.
Can you give an example?
If you read the threads on the deep stop study and understood anything about the scientific process, then you would understand why that is not an issue. For those who did not understand, the issue was explained ad nauseum in the thread.You’re taking the deep stop study out of context. It involves using only air for decompression. I will agree with you that if we are using air only then adding deep stops adds more time, not less time, to the overall ascent.
Actually, you said at some points that UTD does have something to say about it somewhere. You said your instructor said that if you dive at altitude, you can't use RD without adjusting it. Another poster said a UTD instructor told him the same thing. So something is being taught. We do know that UTD divers dive at altitude. Heck, one of my friends from those UTD days died doing it, and his buddy couldn't walk for 3 months. So they are diving at altitude--we just don't know what they are doing for planning when they do.So let’s go with the 9th time? UTD doesn’t officially teach anything about altitude diving.
I used to use Ratio Deco, and I stopped doing it based on my reading of research that debunked several items. I then went to VPM with V-Planner, and I used that for a while. I stopped doing that once again because my reading of the research indicated problems there as well. My decision to use Buhlmann with GFs of 50/80 is thus based on reading many studies over many years.You claim there are are elements within RD that have been “debunked.” I’ve asked you three times now which elements, to which I’ve gotten no reply. Honestly, I don’t think you really understand much about RD and are relying upon incomplete or false information to draw conclusions about it.
When I started tech diving, I read extensively through a lot of material because I did not feel comfortable with what I was being taught. It was TDI, but the instructor was dedicated to GUE. He had taken GUE courses from AG, and his TDI instructor trainer was and still is an employee of the owner of GUE.Hi John
When you say that these five things have been debunked can you show the documented evidence that you are referring to that shows them to be based on protocols that have been proven to be problematic? I think I know what you are referring to but the problem is that you are listing things that you don't like about RD without showing why you don't believe them to be safe or based on current studies.
For instance #1 The first stops are too deep.
I agree based on the NEDU studies from 2014 but if you just make the claim that this approach has been debunked without showing the evidence to back up your claim then you can hardly blame someone for demanding a reason for your claim.
I am in agreement with you but I'd like your position to be backed up by documented evidence instead of just repeating the claim. It seems both sides of this argument are doing the same thing. Making claims as if that is enough to convince the other side and then getting exasperated when it isn't and then just repeating the same claim without supporting evidence and accusing the other side of not listening to reason.
I repeat, I agree with you. I have followed the threads here and elsewhere very carefully and unfortunately that gives us a basis for our beliefs that is not transferable to others that lack the same exposure to the same material. Even reading the same material doesn't necesarrily mean that everyone comes away with the same understanding as is obvious from the various reactions in those threads. It may be obvious to us but even the research scientists warn against taking away too much from their findings. There are a number of people that think that those studies prove things that they only elude to. Proof has a much higher burden than evidence that simply leads us to adjust our best guesses. I'll still go with the best guess of the experts that I trust but I will not convince myself that something has been proven when my favorite experts say that it has not.