Short version: I noticed that, if you calculate the difference in NDL between air and 32% Nitrox using PADI tables as a percentage and plot those numbers on a graph, you get something of a U shape, with the least increase in bottom time at 90 feet. Why is that?
Long version for those avoiding work:
I was thinking again about the problem raised in this thread, of realizing during a dive that you've set your computer to Nitrox but you're actually diving air: In dive, manage having EAN programed into computer while diving air? I thought I had a solution at the time, but I realized after I posted it why it wouldn't work. (Basically, you can't go backwards and calculate a percentage of remaining NDL; you have to base it on your total NDL for the dive.)
I also began to question my back-of-the-envelope calculation that 32% offers roughly 50% more bottom time than air. I decided to go back and check for all depths listed on the PADI tables I have, starting with 50 feet. What I found was that the additional bottom time Nitrox gives decreased with depth, not only in number of minutes, but in percentage of additional time. At 50 feet, you get 75 extra minutes, or 94% more. That drops to 64% at 60 feet, and 50% at 70 and 80 feet. At 90 feet, you only get an extra 10 minutes, or 40% more.
But then I noticed something more surprising--past 90 feet, the trend reverses. At 100 feet, you also get 10 more minutes, which is 50% more. At 110, you get 9 minutes, which is 56% more. The Nitrox tables include 120 and 130 feet for contingency planning purposes only, since you'd be beyond the MOD for a max PPO2 of 1.4 (but still under 1.6) . At 120 you get only 7 minutes, or 54% more, but then at 130, you'd get an extra 8 minutes, which is 80% more!
Why is this? I'm guessing the little blip where it drops down a couple percent at 120 feet is due to rounding, but the overall U shape of the graph is pretty stark. Is this based on mathematical models of how bubbles behave, or is there some human factor being considered?
I did the same calculations using the dive planner on my Teric and did not get the same results. The percentage of additional bottom time decreased from 95% at 50 feet to 38% at 110 feet. (It would not let me calculate Nitrox bottom times beyond that--even though I switched off 21% as an available gas, it would only calculate 120 and 130 with that. In fact, it gave me slightly *less* time than when 21% was the gas I selected!)
I'd love to hear from anyone with a different set of tables or algorithm whether this trend can be observed elsewhere, or if it's unique to PADI tables.
Long version for those avoiding work:
I was thinking again about the problem raised in this thread, of realizing during a dive that you've set your computer to Nitrox but you're actually diving air: In dive, manage having EAN programed into computer while diving air? I thought I had a solution at the time, but I realized after I posted it why it wouldn't work. (Basically, you can't go backwards and calculate a percentage of remaining NDL; you have to base it on your total NDL for the dive.)
I also began to question my back-of-the-envelope calculation that 32% offers roughly 50% more bottom time than air. I decided to go back and check for all depths listed on the PADI tables I have, starting with 50 feet. What I found was that the additional bottom time Nitrox gives decreased with depth, not only in number of minutes, but in percentage of additional time. At 50 feet, you get 75 extra minutes, or 94% more. That drops to 64% at 60 feet, and 50% at 70 and 80 feet. At 90 feet, you only get an extra 10 minutes, or 40% more.
But then I noticed something more surprising--past 90 feet, the trend reverses. At 100 feet, you also get 10 more minutes, which is 50% more. At 110, you get 9 minutes, which is 56% more. The Nitrox tables include 120 and 130 feet for contingency planning purposes only, since you'd be beyond the MOD for a max PPO2 of 1.4 (but still under 1.6) . At 120 you get only 7 minutes, or 54% more, but then at 130, you'd get an extra 8 minutes, which is 80% more!
Why is this? I'm guessing the little blip where it drops down a couple percent at 120 feet is due to rounding, but the overall U shape of the graph is pretty stark. Is this based on mathematical models of how bubbles behave, or is there some human factor being considered?
I did the same calculations using the dive planner on my Teric and did not get the same results. The percentage of additional bottom time decreased from 95% at 50 feet to 38% at 110 feet. (It would not let me calculate Nitrox bottom times beyond that--even though I switched off 21% as an available gas, it would only calculate 120 and 130 with that. In fact, it gave me slightly *less* time than when 21% was the gas I selected!)
I'd love to hear from anyone with a different set of tables or algorithm whether this trend can be observed elsewhere, or if it's unique to PADI tables.