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| Decompression Diving: Discuss Accelerated Deco (ERD) is it worth it? in the Technical and Specialist Diving Forums forums: best option find a good instructor and do the course find out about deep stops and best gas to use ... |
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| Here you go, this should give you some sort of idea what accelerated deco can do for you. I'd suggest that you cut & paste into a spreadsheet to align the data. The numbers are the total deco time required (not dive time). So on a 30M dive for 20 min bottom time on 21% would require a total deco of 4 mins, 21% + 100% a total deco time of 4 mins, 21% + 50% + 100% a total deco time of 2 mins. On a 48M dive for 50 mins bottom time, 21% would require a total deco time of 149 mins, 21% + 100% a total deco time of 74 mins, 21% + 50% + 100% a total deco time of 53 mins. Btw, (and this isn't aimed at just the OP, but anybody else reading this), I haven't given you the rest of the parameters used to generate this info, so if you are dumb enough to use this info to try and do a dive & get bent, you deserve it. Personally I think accelerated deco is great and well worthwhile for the type of diving I do, but its not suited for everybody. Given the info in your first post, I'd question if you need it. cheers, Paul Bottom Time 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 30M 21% 4 6 10 14 23 <30> <37> 21%/100% 4 5 6 8 11 <14> <17> 21%/50%/100% 2 3 4 6 7 11 <14> 33M 21% 5 11 15 24 <32> <42> <53> 21%/100% 4 7 9 12 17 <21> <26> 21%/50%/100% 2 4 6 8 12 <15> <18> 36M 21% 9 14 23 <33> <44> <56> <67> 21%/100% 6 9 13 18 <22> <27> <34> 21%/50%/100% 3 6 9 13 <17> <20> <25> 39M 21% 12 19 31 <43> <57> <69> <87> 21%/100% 8 11 17 <23> <28> <35> <42> 21%/50%/100% 5 8 12 17 <22> <27> <32> 42M 21% 15 27 <39> <55> <69> <89> <107> 21%/100% 10 15 22 <28> <37> <45> <56> 21%/50%/100% 7 10 17 <22> <27> <32> <38> 45M 21% 21 35 <50> <66> <85> <105> <126> 21%/100% 13 19 <27> <35> <43> <54> <65> 21%/50%/100% 11 15 <20> <26> <32> <38> <46> 48M 21% 26 <42> <61> <80> <103> <121> <149> 21%/100% 15 24 <32> <42> <53> <63> <74> 21%/50%/100% 12 19 <25> <31> <38> <44> <53> |
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An excellent response, good effort Matt ! |
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Always analyse your own gas on the dive site. I have the suspicion that the tales some sort of gas stratification in cylinders that disappears over time leading to different readings in the shop than a day later on the dive site are just fairytales, but I don’t know enough about Reynolds numbers, the flow of air into a cylinder and Fick’s law, to dismiss them out right and take the risk. Breathing air allows higher hydrocarbon contamination than nitrox, and since most of my fills are from the club air compressor. The residues left in the cylinder may not be significant but I don’t know so wont risk it. But what would be interesting is how effective the personal filters are. From the info so far I may well end up curtailing my ambitions, or end up buying an UW MP3 player if I can find some suitably engaging but not to distracting MP3 files, or take up some sort of mediation. Ardhill Thanks for the Information; I should have put it in the question section that I was looking for 30 min bottom time as a sort of minimum. Matt thanks for your extensive post. I was not aware of how much fudge factor there is in deco models. I wrongly assumed the to be some sort of quantifiable risk along the lines of : this profile will result in 1/1000 average diver doing it who do it in a skin bend/ 1/10000 with X 1/100000 with a severe neurological bend…. Even it was clear to me that there would be few data points and values in between extrapolated. Quote:
Even if you don’t know me I think I deserve to be given the credit of having enough common sense to realize that a couple of lines on an internet discussion board (and I would go as far as extending it to having read extensively in reputable books about the subject) can be no substitute for a 3 day intensive course. The default assumption that having read your post I will now go, by some sneaky way acquire a bottle of 80%, then go to somewhere next weekend, pick a dive that would give me 30min air deco, do the dive and cut deco to 15 min because I took a bottle of 80% is in IMVHO absurd! Quote:
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I live on less than what some people on here spend on diving. Hence I want to know before I sign up whether the course will be more than a rather expensive (if very interesting) but largely academic exercise for me. Quote:
I shall compare to highest possible mix back gas (BSAC nitrox = less conservative than the majority on here seems to like) and back gas deco times. Highest mix back gas and High mix for deco for 40 min 35m and 45m anyone? Pretty Please. The whole point of this thread is that I’m asking myself whether or not it is worth while for the diving I can (at the moment) envisage myself doing. Quote:
Esp. since it is apparently so easy to download the software and have it generate the numbers for oneself? If you must add something as your worried about litigation or something. Would a polite note at the end pointing out that the numbers by them selves are no substitute for proper training/experience do the trick Regardless A big THANK YOU to anyone who took the time to reply!!! |
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| I have had a look back through my Suunto dive manager and found a 35 metre dive for 40mins breathing 32% when I gas switched to 65% the time to surface went from 25mins to 14mins hope this gives you some idea. I would reccomend that you do the ERD course, it is not just about reducing your decco time but more about teaching you more advanced diving tecneques. |
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45m - Highest Mix @ 1.4 PPO2 = 25% 40min @ 35m on 31% Back Gas Deco gas - Time on Deco (plus you need to add ascent time) 50% - 22 mins 80% - 15 mins 100% - 15 mins 40min @45m on 25% Back Gas Deco gas - Time on Deco (plus you need to add ascent time) 50% - 53mins 80% - 48mins 100% - 51mins
__________________ Paul "Keep away from people who try to belittle your ambitions. Small people always do that, but the really great make you feel that, you too can become great." - Mark Twain |
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There is a lot information to be had about deco and the vagueries of it. Have a look at the Team Foxturd website under theory, Mark Powell's website and a whole host of other sites. The bottom line I have to say though is it appears that you should continue to dive to the limits you currently have until you have some more time and money to invest in training and equipment for decompression diving. No-one is going to stop you but please dive safe. Finally, you haven't mentioned any other buddys. What do they do? Because whatever you do, they will need to do the same, or they the same as you. Deco diving and solo diving, increases the risks much much more, especially if you haven't had an deco training. Dive safe Step.
__________________ Gareth Images of Life Photography DIR Team Foxturd Blog: Travels Underwater and Further Afar Son, you're going to have to make up your mind about growing up and becoming aircrew. You can't do both. The aircraft limits are only there in case there is another flight by that particular aircraft. If subsequent flights do not appear likely, there are no limits. |
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| go do the course . you will learn alot more than just accelerated deco . if your thinking of going twins do it on a course that will be strutered ariund twins . when the course is finished this is the start of your learning curve . the course gives you the tools and the insight to move on and learn safely , start by putting nos and depths and mixs into vplanner . it can be dl free .
__________________ live to dive dive to live |
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| Excellent posts by Gloc & Matt Step As has been stated here, I would strongly recommend you get the proper training. Diving is not a cheap sport, if additional cost is an issue, then settle where you are, reinforce your current skill base until you can afford to progress. You will find that we worry more about those that throw money at the sport & go from nothing to hero in a year or two. As has been stated by others, YD is a community (as is 'diving' as a whole), we don't want to see anyone hurt or killed. On a purely selfish note the publicity doesn't help any of us & just results in insurance premiums going up & mortgage companys & life insurance companys putting us down as high risk. If you look at the profiles of a lot of those giving advice, they have been diving for a considerable time, they have built up knowledge & experience over this period, this is what keeps them safe. They will all have done something stupid at some point, & survived due to the training & experience they have invested in. You can bet they have all seen 'the accident waiting to happen', sometimes having to intervene to ensure that they got out of the water in one piece. Diving is very easy - when all is going well, any idiot can do it. The majority of what we teach & learn especially on the more advanced courses, is seldom related to purely a diving skill (descent, swim on the bottom, & ascent), but to the emergency & rescue skills. The majority of the planning that we do relates to the what if's, & how to survive a major equipment / buddy failure. Which is why we tend to look for instructors doing the type of diving we are aiming at rather than the agency the instructor teaches for. We want real world experience, rather than accademic informations from books. A good instructor will tell us of their past mistakes (and the solutions), in the hope that we won't repeat them! The information given here is in good faith, as are the recommendations. We can but hope you get the right training & apply it! Dive safe Gareth
__________________ Gareth "A life without adventure and no risk is not a life at all. Adventure and risk are the very source of advancement in science, sport, the arts, learning and society." "The real explorer is the one who reaches the summit and comes back. The one who reaches the summit & doesn't come back is a FAILURE" - Lord Hunt 1953 British Everest Expedition |
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| good post gar . correct and right that alot of people go from zero to hero in as little time as it takes to read all the books / as quick as the shop can spend your money for you . steps you are asking all the right questions . there are alot of experienced guys here and they can give great advice . where did they get there knowledge . they done the course and then built on that knowledge . do the course as it is a different type of divin . for instance the surface is not an option in case of emergancy , and you only do your best for your buddy then he is his own . if theres a problem and your buddy must surface he surfaces alone and you finish your deco . loads of different thing like this . the extended range course is inexpensive in comparision to other courses . shop around as it may be cheaper futher a field . this course delves deeper into decompression and its benifits as well as kit configuer , emergancy procedures and a nitrox overview . it is meant as an entry level course whereas to be built upon by experience as are most course's in the divin comunity . link up with some1 in your area after the courses and dive with them and let their knowledge rub off . never know there may be a new dive buddy in here. ![]()
__________________ live to dive dive to live |
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