So going over my dive i am absolutely astonished that i improved my SAC rate on this dive to anew record low. My SAC rate was already insanely good, but now... Wow. The dive instructor/guide who was with me said "I've never seen anyone with a SAC rate this low". My SAC rate was 0.4 cubic ft. Per minute (11.3 liters per minute). Most tec Scuba divers have SAC rate of 14 - 19 liters per minute.
Here is the link to my dive profile to check it out:
@freemo Does that basically mean you can stay underwater a lot longer than the average diver?
@trinsec
Sort of. IF both me and the other diver are at the same depth, then yes, incan stay there much longer. However if i go deeper then i will use my gas up much much quicker. So if the depth is different then it depends on the details.
@trinsec
SAC rate is basically just how fast i breathe air (the volume of air i breathe). So having a low sac rate just means i breathe very little air.
Wikipedia says, "After exhaling, adult human lungs still contain 2.5–3 L of air, their functional residual capacity or FRC. On inhalation, only about 350 mL of new, warm, moistened atmospheric air is brought in and is well mixed with the FRC."
But when I experimentally exhale into a bag I get what looks like about 2-3 L.
So, at 2.5 L per breath, that puts you at about 4.5 bpm (breaths per minute), which is low. (WP says adult normal range is 12-16, mine is usually <10 bpm at rest.
With different mixtures, I'm sure that throws the whole thing off, because more O2 would mean lower bpm for the same amount of CO2 produced, I think.
What does SAC mean?
@Pat
At depth despite still breathing 21% o2 in this case the increased pressure means it has a partial pressure of 1.4 which would be equivelant to breathing 140% O2 at surface. So yea. Also nitrogen narcosis slows down the system and likely helps me breath a bit slower.
SAC means "surface air consumption" its basically the rate you breathe at.
@trinsec