packeteer
Big Member
How long was a typical dive on a single 12ltr to say 25m?
been a while, but I seem to remember it being about 20 mins (total dive time)
I do remember the day I made a 12L last an hour at 10m. I was rather chuffed
How long was a typical dive on a single 12ltr to say 25m?
been a while, but I seem to remember it being about 20 mins (total dive time)
I do remember the day I made a 12L last an hour at 10m. I was rather chuffed![]()
Why not 100? its just as impractical in the real world
It doesn't take a genius to figure out you cant carry enough gas to plan for a 50RMV at 70m
Yes, why not. I do not know where the upper limit is. Reports I read say 50-60lpm (as an average) with higher peak are realistic. And there's a fair few of them to read, and even a couple of videos.
This we agree on.
Matt.
I think the real problem with 50-60lpm is that it cannot be carried for long dives or deep dives.
Matt.
Sorry to throw sand on both of your contributions but my guess is it's 3 minutes of high ventilation or bust, you either have it in hand or you have stroked out at the end but my guess is that you start at 80 and end at 40LPM
and if you don't make it you don't make it. I think however a breathing average of 50LPM for the first 5 minutes is fair but for both your points, your ability to survive is limited by fitness, gas availability and the role of the dice.
I would like however a tool that helps planing that my first deep bail out is not sufficient for the return to deco depths...
Sorry to throw sand on both of your contributions but my guess is it's 3 minutes of high ventilation or bust, you either have it in hand or you have stroked out at the end but my guess is that you start at 80 and end at 40LPM and if you don't make it you don't make it. I think however a breathing average of 50LPM for the first 5 minutes is fair but for both your points, your ability to survive is limited by fitness, gas availability and the role of the dice.
I would like however a tool that helps planing that my first deep bail out is not sufficient for the return to deco depths...
Mark,Lots of Stuff about the Dude's Malin Head Ascent
Seven normal male subjects performed 5-min bicycle exercise ranging from 50-100 percent maximum oxygen uptake at 4 ATA and three were also studied at 6 ATA. At all pressures, the subjects breathed 0.2 ATA O2 plus nitrogen. All subjects were able to perform maximum work at all pressures. No pressure-dependent variations in heart rate, O2 uptake, or CO2 output were noted. At both 4 and 6 ATA, ventilation was decreased at exercise levels greater than 80 percent maximum O2 uptake. The magnitude of the decrease was not great, however, and signified only minor CO2 retention. In some instances exercise ventilation closely approached the 15-S maximum breathing capacity and these subjects noted severe dyspnea, possibly due to dynamic compression of large airways. In three subjects, respiratory frequency was measured as well as minute ventilation; this relationship did not change with depth. Subjects performing heavy exercise at 6 ATA noted disturbances of consciousness, presumably due to N2 narcosis.
Seems an odd discussion from my point of view as on a cave dive gas is the one thing we really would not be short of. If you plan for the loss of a scooter you need to plan for the kind of gas reserves which make loss of RB look easy![]()
We allow roughly 4 times (depending on volume of gear)
We certainly don't plan for 4 lost scooters and RB failure on the same dive though!