Hi John (I'm guessing),
See...
DOOLETTE DJ, MITCHELL SJ. A biophysical basis for inner ear decompression sickness. J Applied Physiol 94, 2145-2150, 2003
We made some estimates in relation to the sort of dive being discussed here.
You are absolutely on the money with your first sentence, and it is part of the issue that this discussion has ignored. It is He to N2 switches when a vulnerable tissue (specifically the vascular labyrinthe) is already supersaturated that maximises the risk, rather than the gas switches per se. That's why the term "isobaric" is not really correct in this setting. There is nothing isobaric about the circumstances underwhich these switches are made. We are in the process of ascending (which is not isobaric) and because of that there may be pre-existing supersaturation. A small transient increase in tissue supersaturation arising from a gas switch can be the "straw that breaks the camels back" under these circumstances.
In theory no, not really. Except if I really was on O/C I would bump the oxygen fractions to produce a PO2 as high as you would be happy to accept as a set point on a CCR. A CCR would take care of that. This is all fairly theoretical though. The plan seems somewhat impractical as an OC dive, and difficult to "regulate" on a CCR dive.
If i don't respond to any replies it is because I am on my way to Bikini!!! and may not have internet access for the next 12 days.
Simon M
From the article I got some thoughts for better profile & mixes for a dive like:
Time spent around 100…120m 28min.
Bottom mix He 65% could be cut slowly to 55% During ascend from 120m to 100m. Extra 5min stop at 78m.
This would cut deco oblication and inner ear gas tension might be less supersaturated.
The article is just one study… but a great one I guess. Is it all we know about this issue?
I see no connection between step size issue and the article but just the idea to controll the rate of change from He to N2. Is there any deeper theory available behind the 0,5 bar rule? (It is not a rule anymore if you make the steps small enough).
Is there someone who knows some other ideas how to plan such a dive if mix management would not be any issue? Or what did I undestood wrong? CCR can not be automatially right.
I dive between the danger of long dives and IEDCS. I suppose it is possible to do it one hour more safe if I just would know how.
I really do not understand after all this how the “part of the question” mix list is of no big risk as it is so much less concervative than what CCR gives without any flushes?
Jukka