Bob DBF
Contributor
drops to a relative IP of 120 at 33 feet. The 14.7psi of the extra atmosphere of depth is transmitted back via the second stage circuitry, and opposes the absolute IP coming from the first. With a balanced second stage, you may or may not notice anything. By the time you reach 99 feet, the ambient pressure has increased 44 psi. That means a relative IP of 91 psi, and your regs will be breathing a bit (or a LOT) stiffer.
Since my diving was in an area, at that time, you would need a shovel to get to 60' , when the dry bleed quit, it didn't affect my breathing on the second, not to mention the fact that when l started diving, regulator performance was gauged by whether it performed at all, instead of how well it performed.