My buddy John and I (yes we're still friends) were discussing the pros and cons of Nitrox diving over compressed air. We bought the NAUI Nitrox workbook and after reading it, we were still undecided about it.
With compressed air you can go to 190ft with only being "narc'd" and having to make decompression stops in a worst case scenario. A diver recently went to the sand at the "O" on air, something Nitrox would not allow, with no unforseen effects.
Nitrox, with its higher O2 content, "draws" a line in the water column which youMUST NOT pass under penalty of Hypoxia, which could lead to convulsions and/or DEATH! That's a hell of a penalty to pay if for instance a cobia or amberjack drags you past your planned depth.
According to NAUI, the safe ppo should not be greater than 1.4ata. But of course with all the different physiologies and environmental concerns the individual diver brings into the equation, you may still experience hypoxia.
If any of you have read my dive stories, youknow how things can go south pretty quick. A penalty of "convulsions and/or death", is in my mind, too high a price to pay if things don't go according to plan.
If any of you Nitrox divers have found violating the "line in the water column" is not a big deal, please give me some insight.
With compressed air you can go to 190ft with only being "narc'd" and having to make decompression stops in a worst case scenario. A diver recently went to the sand at the "O" on air, something Nitrox would not allow, with no unforseen effects.
Nitrox, with its higher O2 content, "draws" a line in the water column which youMUST NOT pass under penalty of Hypoxia, which could lead to convulsions and/or DEATH! That's a hell of a penalty to pay if for instance a cobia or amberjack drags you past your planned depth.
According to NAUI, the safe ppo should not be greater than 1.4ata. But of course with all the different physiologies and environmental concerns the individual diver brings into the equation, you may still experience hypoxia.
If any of you have read my dive stories, youknow how things can go south pretty quick. A penalty of "convulsions and/or death", is in my mind, too high a price to pay if things don't go according to plan.
If any of you Nitrox divers have found violating the "line in the water column" is not a big deal, please give me some insight.