This always makes me wonder. Accelerated deco dives (even with 50% O2) quite often end with GFs quite lower than the typical multiday NDL dives.
If you’re doing maybe one or two deco stop dives and several NDL dives, I’d assume you’d end up on gassing more nitrogen cumulatively from NDLs. But I haven’t calculated to find out
Doesn't that matter in time before flight considerations?
One can get out of water following multiday NDL dives with GF ~70-80% or more.
Doing (conservative accelerated) deco dive(s) one can easily finish with GFs lower that 70% - even much lower than that. Isn't that "safer" ??
Or to put it in another way. Is there a reason to believe that some deco dives with a GF at the end of the last dive of say 70% are more dangerous than some NDL dives with the same end GF?
I understand that agencies can't base their guidelines in GFs. After all it is something new and hence not fully researched yet.
I am asking what you guys think.
Cheers
Ooh, interesting question. Here’s my theory:
So in NDL diving, only the GF-high value really matters because it defines basically how long your NDL is, since it controls how close you surface to the max inert gas pressure/M-value line that the “controlling tissue compartment” can have without bubbling too much. (my thoughts, not sure if it’s 100% accurate)
In decompression stop dives, the GF-low value also counts, to define your first deco stop, or the percentage of that max pressure you want to stop at. So it seems like the surfacing gradient factors from an NDL and a deco stop dive can’t fully be compared.
To answer your general question, you will always on gas more nitrogen and surface with more excess nitrogen on a deco stop dive. Sometimes you go deeper and stay longer, or just stay longer- either way, you’re taking in more N2.
An NDL dive will not saturate your tissues nearly as much because you’re not at depth long enough to match the saturation level of a deco dive.
Safer? No, I wouldn’t say that. The higher pressure of N2 still in your body makes you at higher risk for DCS at altitude change, and in general.
I’m sure someone here will correct me if I’m way off the mark.