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Decompression stop - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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A decompression stop is a period of time a diver must spend at a constant depth in shallow water at the end of a dive to safely eliminate absorbed inert gases from the diver's body to avoid decompression sickness. Shorter and shallower decompression dives may only need one single short shallow decompression stop,
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I tried to correlate the severity of symptoms with a wide variety of factors, such as the magnitude of the exposure, the amount of extra time I spent on the 10-foot decompression stop, the strength of the current, the clarity of the water, water temperature, how much sleep I had the night before, level of dehydration...you...
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Brief and Straightforward Guide: What is a Decompression Stop? A decompression stop is a pause in a diver's ascent made to allow the body to express dissolved gases in the blood.
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PURPOSE: Decompression sickness is initiated by the formation of gas bubbles in tissue and blood if the divers return to surface pressure too fast. The objective of this field study was to evaluate whether mild, continuous exercise during decompression has a similar impact.
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Flying within 12-48 hours after diving: Most experts consider it reasonably safe to fly 12 hours after your last dive if you dove once, dove easily within the dive tables, and no decompression stop was required.
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Decompression stop summary with 3 pages of encyclopedia entries, research information, and more. A decompression stop is a period of time a diver must spend at a constant depth in shallow water at the end of a dive in order safely to eliminate absorbed inert gases from the diver's body to avoid decompression sickness.
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Decompression stop. A Decompression Stop is a period of time a diver must spend at a constant depth in shallow water at the end of a dive in order safely to eliminate inert gases from the diver's body to avoid decompression A no stop dive is a dive, which required no decompression stops during the ascent.
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Decompression stop. A Decompression Stop is a period of time a diver must spend at a constant depth in shallow water at the end of a dive in order safely to eliminate inert gases from the diver's body to avoid decompression A no stop dive is a dive, which required no decompression stops during the ascent.
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A friendly Napoleon comes to play while we are at safety decompression stop. Some video at our decompression stop diving underneath the Ellen offshore oil rig off the coast of San Pedro, Ca.
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