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If you can form a one-to-one correspondence between all the cardinal numbers in Imperial Units (i.e. depth in feet) to their equivalents in ATA, then good for you Gombessa.
(For comparison, do the same for the metric equivalents and explain to us what you notice. . .)
If you can form a one-to-one correspondence between all the cardinal numbers in Imperial Units (i.e. depth in feet) to their equivalents in ATA, then good for you Gombessa.
(For comparison, do the same for the metric equivalents and explain to us what you notice. . .)
Here's a hint my friend:It's pretty much the same from what I can see. 33, 66, 99, 132, 165, 198ft = 2, 3, 4, 5, 6ATA, respectively. And those I just know. With metric, you get per 10m, sure. But is depth to ATA really the main benefit we're talking about? First, roughly 3ATA per 100ft is pretty easy to keep in your head. Second, of all the "scuba math" involved in gas planning, fills and mixing, converting depth to ATA is by far the easiest thing you'll ever do, and the most memorizable; in fact I assume anyone who has been through Essentials or Fundies has drilled rock bottom/min-gas enough to know the depth-to-ATA numbers by heart for the ranges in which they dive. It's just, if I'm going to switch to metric, it has to confer greater benefit than just that, right?
It's really amusing to see the level of resistance in the DIR community to a clearly superior system.
A discussion between a few posters on Scubaboard is hardly representative of the DIR community......particularly considering that for GUE alone, membership is made up from 70 countries....
Just taking a look at some of the gas planning threads at TDS (the "1/2 + 200" stuff) etc is a good example of a page after page of stuff that would be pretty much crystal clear in metric.
don't go to TDS to get gas planning advice.
It's really amusing to see the level of resistance in the DIR community to a clearly superior system.
Sounds like all the Debian zealots I have to deal with at work who can't accept that RedHat is the defacto US corporate enterprise Linux distribution, like it or not...
I don't think there is much hope of US diving (DIR or otherwise) moving to metric, not because of any merits of the imperial system rather than simple resistance to change.