rstofer: Actually yes, it is taught that way by some
And as boulderjohn pointed out, not all tissues are equal, so no, on the ascent not every minute at 'depth' you'll be ongassing. It all depends on which tissues. As far as my understanding goes anyways
boulderjohn: I usually spend more than an hour between dives. I quite like Peter Steinhoff's tables actually. I think the problem is that many would not have the ability to hold those stops effectively.
daniel1948: A (large?) number of people believe that your last 20 feet should be your absolute slowest ascent. Based on my own experience, I know that feel much less tired if I take it real nice and easy of the last part of the ascent.
And as boulderjohn pointed out, not all tissues are equal, so no, on the ascent not every minute at 'depth' you'll be ongassing. It all depends on which tissues. As far as my understanding goes anyways
boulderjohn: I usually spend more than an hour between dives. I quite like Peter Steinhoff's tables actually. I think the problem is that many would not have the ability to hold those stops effectively.
daniel1948: A (large?) number of people believe that your last 20 feet should be your absolute slowest ascent. Based on my own experience, I know that feel much less tired if I take it real nice and easy of the last part of the ascent.