LiteHedded
Contributor
Ratio Deco is a curve-fitting exercise. In mathematics, if you have a very complex function that generates a curve or set of curves, it is sometimes possible to approximate the same curve -- through very defined regions -- with a much simpler function. The function that generates the ascent profile in Gap or DecoPlanner or V-planner is not one you can do in your head, at least if you're normal. The math of RD is much simpler, can be done in one's head, and closely approximates the output of V-planner +2, as Bob has mentioned, WITHIN CERTAIN PARAMETERS. It is dependent on some assumptions, those being the use of standard breathing gases and bottom times within what is typical for the depth. For the commonly dived 30 minutes at 150 feet (or 200) it works very well. It diverges more when you are looking at very, very long, relatively shallow dives.
Minimum deco is a way of using a set of mental tables, combined with a standard ascent profile, to manage recreational dives. As it was explained to me, it was derived from playing around with DecoPlanner, and seeing what combinations of depth and time generated a profile that required 1 minute stops from half maximal depth. Again, it is dependent on the use of 32%, and also requires divers who can control an ascent profile fairly precisely. As the majority of the diving world doesn't meet either criterion, Min Deco would not be a very workable approach to decompression for most recreational divers. (And I'm not being condescending -- I know how much work it took before I could reliably execute a precise min deco ascent, especially if I got at all task-loaded.)
IMO it diverges much sooner than you give it credit for.
it works well in the confines of a tech 1 or tech 2 class dive. IE at or under about 30 minutes.
UTD seems to have a unique answer for this divergence, which is to say ratio deco is just right and the algorithm (that this method was devired from) is wrong