On 01 July, 2014 - Dirk Hohndel wrote: > On Tue, Jul 01, 2014 at 10:07:13AM +0200, Robert Helling wrote: > > > > here are two patches for the planner: The first computes separately the > > gas used during the ascent and displays that in the planner notes. This > > information is crucial if you want to know how much gas you should leave > > as a reserve to cater for the case when you have to provide gas for your > > buddy at the point furtherest from the surface, i.e. the end of bottom > > time. > > Useful. That's always my favorite moment in tech classes. When you explain > to the students that in tech diving you are not expected to save your > buddy at all cost but that it's ok to say "you're fucked buddy, have fun" > and then ascend on your own... >
Begin side track: When i re-red this for the third time it actually made sense, but just so no one else misunderstands this: When the shit is deep into the fan, one dead diver is better than two or three. I try to plan "emergency reserves" after something like a 100/100GF or something like that. I don't care if I'm properly decompressed at depth if one of my teammates is left down there, or if i teared my dry suite and I'm about to go into hypothermia. You can treat decompression sickness, and its way easier to treat than severe hypothermia or if you breathed water. I just love the Alternate GF-mode that the OSTC's have. That way you can runtime re-plan if the shit is in the fan. End of side track. //Anton -- Anton Lundin +46702-161604 _______________________________________________ subsurface mailing list [email protected] http://lists.hohndel.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/subsurface
