Dave Sutton
Banned
^^^ to the above, I reject the agrument. Really... and I say this with a smile.. it's nonsense.
Hypoxia in rebreather use is caused by technical failure (IE: a freeflowing ADV with hypoxic diluent near the surface), or human error (IE: not turning on 02), but not by any deliberate act.
Divers do not "Push" towards low PP02... there is no positive value to it. Low PP02 is an error state, not a concious decision that is actively made. Normal Target PP02s are a full order of magnitude above that which causes hypoxia for reasons of narcosis and decompression.
I think that rational analysis shows this argument to be a non-player. In the same rhetorical way the same exact argument would be considred a non-player in aerospace (where pilots can *also* choose the cabin altitude of pressurized aircraft). By that same argument, pilots should not be taking high altitude training because they might "push the pressurization system".
It's just not a rational argument. It is, in fact, a rationalization of a decision not to obtain a holistic and complete set of training targets, knowing that every tiny bit of knowlage that you obtain increases your survival potential. I mean... "I refuse to learn because after I learn I might mis-use the information" is not a sensible thing when the sport you participate in weeds out the weak by killing them.
Best quality training pays attention to both proactive and reactive responses. One hopes that the former precudes need to use the latter, but does not ignore the possibility.
Dave
.
Hypoxia in rebreather use is caused by technical failure (IE: a freeflowing ADV with hypoxic diluent near the surface), or human error (IE: not turning on 02), but not by any deliberate act.
Divers do not "Push" towards low PP02... there is no positive value to it. Low PP02 is an error state, not a concious decision that is actively made. Normal Target PP02s are a full order of magnitude above that which causes hypoxia for reasons of narcosis and decompression.
I think that rational analysis shows this argument to be a non-player. In the same rhetorical way the same exact argument would be considred a non-player in aerospace (where pilots can *also* choose the cabin altitude of pressurized aircraft). By that same argument, pilots should not be taking high altitude training because they might "push the pressurization system".
It's just not a rational argument. It is, in fact, a rationalization of a decision not to obtain a holistic and complete set of training targets, knowing that every tiny bit of knowlage that you obtain increases your survival potential. I mean... "I refuse to learn because after I learn I might mis-use the information" is not a sensible thing when the sport you participate in weeds out the weak by killing them.
Best quality training pays attention to both proactive and reactive responses. One hopes that the former precudes need to use the latter, but does not ignore the possibility.
Dave
.
Last edited: