Chris Brown
Official CAMRA ale tester
Once RESA get involved you will probably be limited to 10 metres!
Lol
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Once RESA get involved you will probably be limited to 10 metres!
Tis a balance. Get up quickly enough to limit excessive deco obligations, but not too fast that you blow a red light and slam the wall. Difficult to achieve espec as we do it so little.
I reely went for it on this dive (look at all the ascent warning diamonds) but after when I did the maths i only managed 6.6m/min![]()

The joke is a lot of deco tables are bassed on a 9m/min ascent and hardly anyone I know gets close to that.
I have tried and it feels scary fast to me.
I reely went for it on this dive (look at all the ascent warning diamonds) but after when I did the maths i only managed 6.6m/min
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ATB
Mark
Interesting Mark. I get nowhere near 9m/mim, I also think our own kit configuration contributes to the ease of a speedy ascent. For example, using a bov and fmcl's, the faff of an oc bailout ascent with bleeding the valve and then the bov later getting in the way of the oc reg, took a bit of getting used to. Now I have switched to bmcl's and the bov and find the whole process of dumping gas during the ascent a damn sight easier, control's easier and no need to switch the bov valve between oc/loop to vent gas whether or not on it. Hand back, pull lung dump cord, problem sorted.
What unit was this? Did it have an OPV on the FMCL's? I just squeeze the lungs - job done. I find my BMCL inspo harder as I have to reach round and pull a valve cord.
I guess its what we get used to.
I believe I'm responsible for derailing another good thread with this issue. My apologies to Jeppe for that.
However it would be intresting to know how you plan for bailout. Personally I use MultiDeco to calculate this first stage - from bailout to first stop. I've set it to reasonable (in my view) 40 lpm.
If you use other means or methods for calculating your gas comsumption during this first stage please give a comment on that.
For those of you who are not yet metric;
20 l = 0,71 cuft
30 l = 1,06 cuft
40 l = 1,41 cuft
/nils
I double my actual SAC rate, bailing out assumes a serious problem. I assume that that means worse case scenario.
But if you are forced to exit in near 0 viz without your scooter even thats no where near enough.
Its unlikely for anyone to survive a dive with 3 major issues.
A group in Thailand did some dry controlled testing with a group of willing participants around SAC rates with a C02 hit. They found that the recovery from a CO2 hit went in stages and so developed some standards around SAC rates.
45LPM for the 1st 5 mins (3x)
25LPM for the the next 5mins (1.67x)
Back to normal post this....it assumed a 15lpm sac rate as the base so would need to multiply out with a higher SAC rate.
Of interest was how long people could hold on before bailing, if memory serves me correctly the average was 7mins without a scrubber in place. Out of 7 participants 2 could not bail themselves out and 1 of those 2 was non responsive when symptoms presented. The group bailed out that participant.
The other interesting piece was about the onset and recovery from C02 issues, the longer it took for symptoms to come on (retainers as opposed to breakthrough) the longer it took for a full recovery.
I'd have thaught the opposit in so far as most bailouts will be inoperable units due to handset failure or floods. So anoying but hardly anything to get stressed about.
Surely the only bailout on a CCR that will result in sustained super elevated SAC is C02?
OK alowance made for the initial OH SH?T moment, but after that surley its just a routeen ascent / exit on OC?
No CCR, blind exit, no scooter is a little drastic but thats should only be an issue if you planning right to the limit of your bailout.
After all OC cave divers do OC exits all the time??
If we are using third for me third for my buddy and third for stress on OC cave, isnt it caclulating at 150% SAC on two divers exiting?
If so seeing as we dont need gas for a buddy, surley if we ran the equivelent of thirds we would run 150% of SAC?
As it is I do a bit more than that
ATB
Mark
Mark,
I'm not so sure, for experienced CCR divers the only reason to get off the loop is a flood or CO2 issues, but most CCR divers will never get to that level because most CCR divers just dont do the kind of dives that require that level of skill and thats great, bailing out is the safest and best option.
I've had a caustic cocktail and a co2 hit and I was amazed at how much gas it took just to get squared away,
Are we all at the point where we understand 45lpm is physically possible and sensible for B/O calculations for CO2 hits yet??
No I still maintain is a stupidly high number that makes absolutly no sense in proper planning for deep dives and is simply not sustainable on long decompression.
IMHO the maximum any OW wreck diver can carry safely is three AL80s or 10s Past that point the task loading becomes more of an issue than the perceived benifit
Three not four for issues of pure physical weight for carrying on the boat, gtetting back on the boat and because having only three keeps access to one leg pocket easy for critical equipmnet like spare mask and emergancy SMB & spool
I also found it the only side I could access my Pee valve when I had an unbalanced rig
If you disagree then gas plan me a bailout stratagy for 45lpm for my recent 25mins at 95m dive
Or a normal dive for me 45mins at 70m
Teem bailout is about as good as Russian roulette in my book so forget that as a primary responce as it has far too many failure modes.
ATB
Mark
Don't get me wrong, I agree that 45lpm is a challenge to carry. Thats why bailout calculation threads are so interesting. Once you get past 50m it gets unwieldy to say the least.
My point is that you were previously claiming it was impossible to breathe those volumes, but we have had both medical professionals stating it is, plus real live experience from divers who have experienced it.
So, we should move the debate on a bit from "what rates should we calc" to "we can't physically carry enough gas for a deep bail from a CO2 hit, so what do we do?"
Personally, I don't plan for a CO2 hit. I mitigate it as much as poss by using CO2 monitors / Temp sticks and I fastidiously maintain my o rings and mushroom valves. I also don't push my scrubbers.
Didn't help me when I forgot to install the lid on my MKVI and skipped the pre breatheBut that was a few years back, in a pool and I modified my behavior as a result.
Sorry ponit me at the post where any medical expert said a RESTING sac of 45 was safe?
If your running a marathon its fine. IF your stationary on deco your f##ked
ATB
Mark