As the research study points out,
some dive computers treat forward and
reverse profiles identically, a very risky
prospect for a diver who intentionally —
or unintentionally —- conducts a reverse
profile dive. We contacted Dr. Bruce
Wienke, who developed the RGBM algorithm
used by many computers. He told
us:
There are a bunch of computers out
there with my RGBM algorithm that do
NOT treat forward and reverse profiles
the same. They penalize recreational
air diving slightly if reverse profiles are
less than 30 fsw and depths are less than
120 fsw. Beyond that, bubble mechanics
kicks in, that is, effects of excitation and
growth of bubbles assumed in the model
impact the diver staging regimen more
notably.
Computers that do NOT treat forward
and reverse profiles the same are:
• Suunto RGBM sets (Viper, Vytec,
Stinger, D9, etc)
• Mares RGBM sets (M1, Darwin,
Nemo, etc)
• HydroSpace RGBM Explorer,
• Zeagle RGBM Cobalt
• Steam Machines RGBM
Rebreather Computer Controller
• Underwater Technologies Center
RGBM UDC message-deco communication
computer system
These computers will penalize reverse
profile dives in no decompression limits
and deco time/stop depths. Penalties
increase with depth, and increment of
the reverse profile over the earlier dive,
but are time-modulated over roughly
a four hour period. The penalties are
incurred on air, nitrox, heliox, trimix, or
constant ppO2 rebreathers.
RGBM software on the market (GAP,
ABYSS, Explorer Simulator) all do the
same thing.