If the scuba diver is at 33 fsw (10 msw/2 ata) of depth, this means that for a constant mass of air, the volume will be half. Turning this on its head, for a constant volume of air, the mass of air will be doubled. When the scuba diver breathes off of a scuba regulator, the volume of air they draw into their lungs is a constant volume irregardless of where they are in the water column. The mass of that air will be greater the deeper they go, and therefore the scuba diver will consume more air the deeper they go.
The formula for how much air they consume is:
( consumption rate ) = ( RMV ) * ( atmospheres absolute ) * ( time )For the US this looks like:
( cu ft ) = ( cu ft / min @ 1 ata ) * [ ( fsw ) / 33 + 1 ] * ( mins )
Surface Air Consumption Rate (SAC) is the pressure of gas in the tank at ambient pressure and temperature being consumed. It is equivalent to the RMV but is expressed in psi / min, and is dependent upon the size of the tank.
Consumption rate at depth (Cd) is a measure of the amount of gas which is actually being used at depth. This is measured in cu ft / min similarly to RMV, but measures how fast the tank is actually being drained. It is the volume of gas being breathed adjusted for a pressure of 1 atmosphere.
These definitions agree with both the US Navy and NOAA definitions.
When I started out diving the first time I checked my RMV I measured it as 1.10 cu ft / min averaged over the course of the entire dive (this was in Puget Sound in spring-time pea soup sometime around dive #10). After I gained considerable diving experience I got my RMV down to 0.60 cu ft / min on a good day and 0.75 cu ft/min when stressed where it stayed for a quite awhile. Eventually I managed to hit 0.45 cu ft / min which feels like a good minimum value for me since if I start to breathe more relaxed than that I tend to build up CO2. Divers should assess their own RMV on a regular basis to build up a good understanding of how fast they use up gas and how it changes over their diving career.
Diving recreationally on thirds would mean computing rockbottom and reserving that gas. Then taking the rest of the available gas supply and turning when thirds was hit. This might be appropriate on a deeper wreck in the open ocean where there were significant currents and returning to the upline was considered essential to the safety of the dive. In this case the dive would be turned considerably before the tank was drained to 2/3rds.
The rationale behind thirds is that the trip back will take as much time as the trip out, and if your buddy has an OOA at the worst possible moment the trip back may take twice the gas ( 1/3 + 2 * 1/3 = 1.0) and you still need to reserve enough gas for both divers to ascend the upline.
If it is possible that there may be a gas emergency at the turn point and there may be stiff current on the way back, then thirds may not be conservative enough. At this point in complexity the dive is also starting to become a technical dive and probably needs technical equipment (doubles, long hose) and technical training.
In some circumstances, experienced divers in good viz and warm waters may do dives to 100 fsw routinely on Al80s so this rule may clearly be stretched.
It is probably not a good idea to be doing dives to 130 fsw on Al80s under any circumstances, though, and inexperienced divers (100 dives or less) doing coldwater dives to 100 fsw on Al80s are what this rule is squarely aimed at preventing. Also, the diver with 100 dives who think they're okay with an Al80 at 100 fsw in warm water and good viz is probably at the edge of being overconfident.
For Al80s/HP100s/LP80s/LP72s (small tanks) use a rockbottom value of 10 times the depth in fsw plus 300 psi. So, for an Al80 at 60 fsw, you must leave the bottom with at least 900 psi left in the tank.
For both of these rules, never use a rockbottom value of less than 500 psi.
Be aware that this simplified extrapolation breaks down as you go deeper. For an E8-130 at 130 fsw the appropriate rock bottom value is closer to 1600 psi. If you are diving deeper than 100-110 fsw you should be able to follow the full rockbottom and SAC rate calculations below.
The rock bottom ascent is your bailout plan if anything goes badly wrong. If you plan on always doing 1 min stops from 50% of max depth (i.e. 1 min stops from 50 fsw on a 100 fsw dive), or you start stops 50 fsw off your max depth and start at 70 fsw on a 120 fsw max depth dive then rockbottom should be adjusted accordingly. This becomes more important when diving with 30/30 helium mix and is on the edge of what is recreational and what is technical and requires additional training and equipment.
For those familiar with GUE rockbottom protocols this may look different from what they are used to. There is no 80% pause, but I believe this is consistent with what GUE is currently teaching which is to simply stop at 50% of max depth (at 80% of depth/ATAs on recreational dives divers are still rapidly ongassing). I am mentioning but not using the 50% max depth rule because with recreational diving on nitrox/air mixes in an emergency situation I feel ascending to 30 fsw is more appropriate and is what I would do. Add in the deeper stops and pad the rockbottom time appropriately if you disagree.
For the stops, I compute them as a single stop at the time-weighted average depth for the total time of the stops. For example:
( 1 min * 10 fsw + 1 min * 20 fsw + 1 min * 30 fsw ) / (3 mins) = 20 fswSo I'll be doing a 3 min stop at 20 fsw. I've plugged through the math and shown that algebraically this is an identical computation to doing three different computations for the three different stops.
NOTE: If your eyes just glassed over all I'm saying is that 1 min stops from 30 fsw is mathematically identical to a single 3 min stop at 20 fsw. I'll be using the latter in all future computations, but doing the former on the ascent.
problem gas = ( 2.00 cu ft / min ) * [ ( 60 fsw ) / 33 + 1 ] * 1 min = 5.63636 cu ft time to ascend = 60 fsw / 30 fpm = 2 mins ascent gas = ( 2.00 cu ft / min ) * [ ( 60 fsw / 2 ) / 33 + 1 ] * 2 mins = 7.63636 cu ftnote that the depth used is the average depth of the ascent: 60 fsw / 2 = 30 fsw
stop gas = ( 2.00 cu ft / min ) * [ ( 20 fsw ) / 33 + 1 ] * 3 mins = 9.63636 cu ft Rock Bottom Volume = problem gas + ascent gas + stop gas = 22.9 cu ft
For the example above, you are spending 1 minute at depth, 2 mins going up in the water column and 3 mins at your stops for a total of 6 mins. Your average depth (just take max depth / 2 ) is going to be 30 feet or about 2 atmospheres. This gives:
2 cu ft / min * 2 ata * 6 mins = 24 cu ftFor a dive to 100 fsw you're going to spend 3 mins ascending for a total of 7 mins at 2.5 ata:
2 cu ft / min * 2.5 ata * 7 mins = 35 cu ftFor a dive to 130 fsw you're going to spend 4 mins ascending for a total of 8 mins at 3 ata:
2 cu ft / min * 3 ata * 8 mins = 48 cu ftWhile not entirely precise, values computed this way work fine in practice.
66 fsw: 24 cu ft * (3000 psi / 77.4 cu ft) = 930 psi 100 fsw: 35 cu ft * (3000 psi / 77.4 cu ft) = 1356 psi 130 fsw: 48 cu ft * (3000 psi / 77.4 cu ft) = 1860 psi[*][*] using an Al80 to 130 fsw is not a good idea under any circumstance.
( 77.4 cu ft / 3000 psi ) * 100 = 2.5 cu ftFor a Worthington X8-130 tank this works out to:
( 130 cu ft / 3500 psi ) * 100 = 3.7 cu ftWe can use these values mentally to convert from volume to psi. For example to convert from 24 cu ft to psi in an AL80:
24 cu ft / 2.5 is appx 10 => 1000 psi.For doubles, it should hopefully be obvious that the Tank Factors are multiplied by two (double E8-130s would be 7.4).
| Depth | Rock Bottom | Al80 pressure | LP80/HP100 pressure | LP95/HP120 pressure | LP104/HP130 pressure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30 fsw | 12 cu ft | 700 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi |
| 60 fsw | 24 cu ft | 1000 psi | 800 psi | 700 psi | 700 psi |
| 100 fsw | 35 cu ft | 1300 psi | 1200 psi | 1000 psi | 1000 psi |
| 130 fsw | 48 cu ft | 1800 psi | 1600 psi | 1400 psi | 1300 psi |
This works just like dive tables in that if you are at 80 fsw you'd use the 100 fsw value. The important point here is that the table is very easy to memorize and use on a working basis. It doesn't require calculations and doesn't require extensive wet-notes. You can easily shift where you are in the table on-the-fly to adapt to changes in your dive plan.
usable gas = 2800 psi - 1000 psi = 1800 psi gas used on swim out = 1800 psi / 2 = 900 psi turn pressure = 2800 psi - 900 psi = 1900 psiIn other words, we expect to use 1800 psi on this dive by the time we get back to the up-line in order to still have our rock bottom pressure at the up-line. We will therefore turn the dive after we have used half of that.
If we had been doing a drift dive, we could have continued at 60 fsw until we hit our 1000 psi rock bottom and then ascended. In either case the actual total bottom time of the dive will be the same -- but in the case of the wall dive it will be composed of two phases going out and back.
| Depth | Rock Bottom | HP80 | Al72 | Al80 | LP72 | HP100 | LP80 | Al100 | HP119 | LP95 | HP130 | LP104 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 fsw | 13.01 cu ft | 569 psi | 542 psi | 504 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi |
| 20 fsw | 14.59 cu ft | 638 psi | 607 psi | 565 psi | 534 psi | 510 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi |
| 30 fsw | 16.36 cu ft | 715 psi | 681 psi | 634 psi | 600 psi | 572 psi | 540 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi |
| 40 fsw | 18.34 cu ft | 802 psi | 764 psi | 710 psi | 672 psi | 642 psi | 605 psi | 550 psi | 539 psi | 509 psi | 500 psi | 500 psi |
| 50 fsw | 20.53 cu ft | 897 psi | 855 psi | 795 psi | 752 psi | 718 psi | 677 psi | 615 psi | 603 psi | 570 psi | 552 psi | 521 psi |
| 60 fsw | 22.91 cu ft | 1002 psi | 954 psi | 887 psi | 840 psi | 801 psi | 756 psi | 687 psi | 673 psi | 636 psi | 616 psi | 581 psi |
| 70 fsw | 25.49 cu ft | 1115 psi | 1062 psi | 988 psi | 934 psi | 892 psi | 841 psi | 764 psi | 749 psi | 708 psi | 686 psi | 647 psi |
| 80 fsw | 28.28 cu ft | 1237 psi | 1178 psi | 1096 psi | 1037 psi | 989 psi | 933 psi | 848 psi | 831 psi | 785 psi | 761 psi | 717 psi |
| 90 fsw | 31.27 cu ft | 1368 psi | 1303 psi | 1212 psi | 1146 psi | 1094 psi | 1032 psi | 938 psi | 919 psi | 869 psi | 841 psi | 793 psi |
| 100 fsw | 34.46 cu ft | 1507 psi | 1436 psi | 1335 psi | 1263 psi | 1206 psi | 1137 psi | 1033 psi | 1013 psi | 957 psi | 927 psi | 874 psi |
| 110 fsw | 37.86 cu ft | 1656 psi | 1577 psi | 1467 psi | 1388 psi | 1325 psi | 1249 psi | 1135 psi | 1113 psi | 1052 psi | 1019 psi | 961 psi |
| 120 fsw | 41.45 cu ft | 1813 psi | 1727 psi | 1606 psi | 1519 psi | 1450 psi | 1368 psi | 1243 psi | 1219 psi | 1152 psi | 1116 psi | 1052 psi |
| 130 fsw | 45.25 cu ft | 1979 psi | 1885 psi | 1753 psi | 1659 psi | 1583 psi | 1493 psi | 1357 psi | 1330 psi | 1257 psi | 1218 psi | 1148 psi |
| Depth | Rock Bottom | Al6 | Al9 | Al13 | Al19 | Al30 | Al40 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 fsw | 6.51 cu ft | N/A | 2379 psi | 1478 psi | 980 psi | 650 psi | 500 psi |
| 20 fsw | 7.29 cu ft | N/A | 2668 psi | 1657 psi | 1099 psi | 729 psi | 546 psi |
| 30 fsw | 8.18 cu ft | N/A | 2993 psi | 1859 psi | 1233 psi | 818 psi | 613 psi |
| 40 fsw | 9.17 cu ft | N/A | N/A | 2084 psi | 1382 psi | 917 psi | 687 psi |
| 50 fsw | 10.26 cu ft | N/A | N/A | 2332 psi | 1547 psi | 1026 psi | 769 psi |
| 60 fsw | 11.45 cu ft | N/A | N/A | 2603 psi | 1726 psi | 1145 psi | 859 psi |
| 70 fsw | 12.75 cu ft | N/A | N/A | 2897 psi | 1921 psi | 1274 psi | 956 psi |
| 80 fsw | 14.14 cu ft | N/A | N/A | N/A | 2131 psi | 1414 psi | 1060 psi |
| 90 fsw | 15.64 cu ft | N/A | N/A | N/A | 2357 psi | 1563 psi | 1172 psi |
| 100 fsw | 17.23 cu ft | N/A | N/A | N/A | 2597 psi | 1723 psi | 1292 psi |
| 110 fsw | 18.93 cu ft | N/A | N/A | N/A | 2853 psi | 1892 psi | 1419 psi |
| 120 fsw | 20.73 cu ft | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 2072 psi | 1554 psi |
| 130 fsw | 22.63 cu ft | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | 2262 psi | 1696 psi |
( 0.75 cu ft / min ) / 2.5 = .30 --> 30 psi / minFor the example of an E8-130 with a tank factor of 3.5:
( 0.75 cu ft / min ) / 3.7 = .21 --> 20 psi / minThis is the amount of air that you expect to consume on the surface. At depth you just multiply this value by the atmospheres that you are at, to get your air consumption rate at depth, e.g. for an AL80:
30 psi / min * 2 ata = 60 psi / min @ 33 fsw 30 psi / min * 3 ata = 90 psi / min @ 66 fsw 30 psi / min * 4 ata = 120 psi / min @ 100 fsw 30 psi / min * 5 ata = 150 psi / min @ 133 fswYou can then multiply this number by 5 or 10 to give you the amount of gas that you expect to be using per a manageable time interval:
33 fsw = 600 psi / 10 mins 66 fsw = 900 psi / 10 mins 100 fsw = 1200 psi / 10 mins 130 fsw = 1500 psi / 10 minsThis can be very useful since if you're at 66 fsw with 1900 psi you know that you've got another 10 mins left before hitting rock bottom. You now don't need to be checking your SPG, but only need to check your BT/computer for your dive time. You can also monitor your SAC rate underwater by taking SPG readings at 5 or 10 minute intervals.
SAC rate calculations can be useful for planning a dive since they can tell us how long we expect to be able to dive before hitting rock bottom. They can also be useful while actually executing a dive since we can adjust our expectations for dive time based on how rapidly we are actually using our air.
You should not adjust the Rock Bottom RMV of 2.0 cu ft / min even if you tend to use less gas. The assumption is that you may be buddied up with a hoover on any particular dive who can easily exceed 1.0 cu ft / min and that everyone will be breathing heavier in an emergency. You plan the non-emergency part of the dive with your own non-emergency RMV rate. You plan the emergency part of the dive with the standard emergency RMV rate of 2.0 cu ft / min.