question
Is there any particular reason or big difference you guys choose 21/35 over 25/25 if you are diving 45m, I use 28/22 for 40m and 25/25 for 45m and 25/30, TDI Helitrox limits anyway the maximum too 20% He @ 45m, but I guess not to much people follows that, because we prefer to keep the END lower.
A few reasons. One is flexibility for me.. 25/25 would be a fairly useless mix for me unless I am absolutely sure that I'm only going to be diving 150' or shallower (~45m). Sometimes mooring break, wrecks get blown out. I've been on plenty of charters where 150' wreck has broken mooring or is blown, our next option is a wreck at 165' (50m). Suddenly my 25/25 mix is not the best option.
Ignoring helium content and ENDs, the difference in runtimes diving 25% of O2 verus 21% of O2 is negligible. Sure 25% is "best" mix for 150' (45m) but you don't really save much deco by using 25 over 21.
A lot of people are taught to keep the working portion of their dive at or below 1.4ppO2. I like to keep my working portion of the dive at ~1.2-1.3ppO2 on open circuit (To be clear, I have no problem running at 1.4 and above, I just choose to keep this much lower depending on the dive). Becomes even more important to keep this lower on a rebreather but I won't get into that.
Example: 21/25 vs. 25/25 using 50% as deco gas.
35 minutes at 150ft (21/25) with 50% GF 45/80
Runtime: 81 minutes
35 minutes at 150 (25/25) with 50% GF45/80
Runtime: 77 minutes
So I save 4 minutes of deco by using 25/25? Obviously these profiles can manipulated many ways (adding/changing deco gas, changing deco model or gradient factors, etc) but I just wanted to illustrate one example of why I try to use standard mixes over best mixes.
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