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Flying a spamcan at 1000-2000ft after scuba-diving is identical to
diving in mountain lakes at these specific altitudes (well it's actually saver because diving in mountain lakes gets you to altidude immediatley after surfacing, in contrast to flying where some additional time is needed to remove the dive gear and climb into the plane. Although, I should try to fly with my dive gear on at least once ;*). Build it in your dive profile or switch the dive computer to the specific mountain level if it can be switched manually. Chris PADI Divemaster PP-ASEL Student glider pilot New Mexico (maybe unbelievable for most, but one can find some wet holes to dive into in the Land of Enchantment) R. Hubbell wrote: This is for everyone that considers it safe to fly after diving. The problem with diving is that the different people have different responses to the effects of diving. Don't forget how those dive tables were concocted. They used young, strong, healthy men to develop those numbers. Yes I know the recreational tables are not the same but are conservative derivatives of those tables. But there's a reason they are still doing studies of the effects of diving. http://www.diversalertnetwork.org/ne...asp?newsid=210 There is still much to learn about the effects and responses of diving,flying, mountain climbing on human physiology. They have found that mountain climbers have permanent cognitive changes. I suspect they will find the same with divers if they have not already. Humans are adaptable to a point. I play it way safe and am conservative when diving and/or flying. R. Hubbell |
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Chris, it is advice like that causes my instructor liability insurance to be
so high. :-) Even when you altitude dive (above 1000ft MSL) a quick jump to a higher altitude puts you at a higher risk for DCS. Also when you arrive from a lower altitude to the mountain lake you now have residual nitrogen in your tissues due to the reduced atmospheric ppN2 at your dive altitude. You may need to plan your first dive as a repetative dive due to the increased ppN2 in your body tissues being the same thing as residual nitrogen from a dive. Most tables and computers calculate the off gassing during a surface interval on only one tissue compartment (60min for RDP, 120min for Navy & Haldane). This aviation newsgroup really is not the place to have a detailed discussion about all this, but suffice it to say that after diving, going to altitude entails a risk of DCS. Scott -- ------------------------------------------------------------------ Scott F. Migaldi, K9PO PADI Master Instructor-150972 PP-ASEL-IA Are you a PADI Instructor or DM? Then join the PADI Instructor Yahoo Group at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/PADI-Instructors/join ----------------------------------- Catch the wave! www.hamwave.com **"A long time ago being crazy meant something, nowadays everyone is crazy" -- Charles Manson** ------------------------------------- "Chris" wrote in message ... Flying a spamcan at 1000-2000ft after scuba-diving is identical to diving in mountain lakes at these specific altitudes (well it's actually saver because diving in mountain lakes gets you to altidude immediatley after surfacing, in contrast to flying where some additional time is needed to remove the dive gear and climb into the plane. Although, I should try to fly with my dive gear on at least once ;*). Build it in your dive profile or switch the dive computer to the specific mountain level if it can be switched manually. Chris PADI Divemaster PP-ASEL Student glider pilot New Mexico (maybe unbelievable for most, but one can find some wet holes to dive into in the Land of Enchantment) R. Hubbell wrote: This is for everyone that considers it safe to fly after diving. The problem with diving is that the different people have different responses to the effects of diving. Don't forget how those dive tables were concocted. They used young, strong, healthy men to develop those numbers. Yes I know the recreational tables are not the same but are conservative derivatives of those tables. But there's a reason they are still doing studies of the effects of diving. http://www.diversalertnetwork.org/ne...asp?newsid=210 There is still much to learn about the effects and responses of diving,flying, mountain climbing on human physiology. They have found that mountain climbers have permanent cognitive changes. I suspect they will find the same with divers if they have not already. Humans are adaptable to a point. I play it way safe and am conservative when diving and/or flying. R. Hubbell |
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![]() "R. Hubbell" wrote in message news:20040304085855.36bd9f5b@fstop... This is for everyone that considers it safe to fly after diving. The problem with diving is that the different people have different responses to the effects of diving. Don't forget how those dive tables were concocted. They used young, strong, healthy men to develop those numbers. Good point. I know that skiing at high altitudes (11,000 feet+) has become more difficult for me in recent years. Although I'm in pretty good shape for a 50 year old, there are no illusions that my body works the way a 22 year old kid's works. (On the other hand, I don't drink all night anymore...) Michael |
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