Dive Computer advice please

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Hey gang. New here and I thought I'd ask the experts...no doubt this has been discussed here a lot and I have done some searching so bear with me;

I'm a "veteran" (read OLD) diver and I pretty much just do warm water resort dives. I have a liveaboard excursion on my bucket list but that's not immediate.
My typical Caribbean holiday (mostly Cuba these days) includes a 10 dive package, 2 per day one deep one shallower

So it seems like I need a computer, or least that's what I'm told by fellow divers. I've been looking at some cheaper options like Novo Zoop but a peregrine is also in the mix.

Question: for a person who's lucky to get in the water 2-3 trips a year (apx 10 dives/trip) does it really make sense to spend almost $800 on a computer?
(for context, I was licensed in 1978 and we did tables) Up until now Ive just been following the dive master and do whatever they do....

Thanks for any tips or advice. Sorry for the lengthy post.
I am an old diver, too, and for a number of reasons also I do not dive much anymore.
I was very happy with just my trusted old US Navy tables until 2019, when my analogue depth meter broke. So I decided it was time to get a digital computer instead of a new depth meter.
I bought a Cressi Leonardo for 99 eur on Amazon Prime Day.
It revealed to be perfect for my sporadic use: the display is large enough for my old eyes, it allows for planned deco dives and Nitrox (no gas switching), and can be easily mounted in my console (I want my arms free from obstructions).
Frankly, spending more than 150 eur for something more fancy appears to be overkilling for sporadic recreational diving.
 
awesome sir - thanks so much. I've read some very strong reviews re the Leonardo. Thanks for your suggestion.
 
Another couple of benefits of a Peregrine are unmatched customer service compared to any dive product company. The 2 button user interface is so simple and intuitive you could probably figure the basics out on your own sitting on the couch. I used to have Suunto Vyper 2 and zoop, very reliable, not that great at night but I’d always need to refresh my memory with the manual before every trip with the Vyper.
The dive screen layout IMO is the best I’ve seen. It is very customizeable as well. They are pricey but they command very good resale value. They are reliable so there are few concerns buying used.
 
I was brought up on tables - in my case, the original BSAC tables that were especially penal towards repeat dives. The year our club bought its first RIB, we dived on the 1st November 1987 on Wolf Rock, some 10 miles off the Cornish coast. One of our pairs had one of the first modern dive computers in the UK, the Suunto SME, and we were amazed that their dive was twice as long as ours on tables - because it gave credit for the time not spent at maximum depth. Tables assuming a square dive profile.

I bought the same computer at the Easter Dive show the next year, at a reduced show price - £250. I think the only competitor at the time was the Uwatec Aladdin? I used it for many years & probably still have it somewhere. I've dived with Suunto computers ever since, albeit rarely the latest model. Adjusted for inflation, they are much cheaper now.

I currently have an air integrated Suunto Cobra - replacing SPG on the HP hose, not a transmitter. And a Vyper as a backup.

In fact, due to a cock up (kit left at our holiday house...), I've just bought a couple of computers secondhand as we're off to Indonesia next week. A Vyper & a Zoop - £50 each, plus a new battery.

Good, simple to use computers, easy to read, conservative, but not overly so. Simple to change the battery with care - although with some you have to remove one arm of the strap. The battery is a CR2450, the O ring an 026.

BUT, Suunto computers of that sort of vintage have a well known depth sensor issue - it can fail. Normally what happens is that after a dive, the sensor gets stuck, registering some shallow depth. At this point they are junk. However, familiarity & low acquisition cost win out.

For the diving you describe, any of Gecko, Vyper, Zoop would be fine; Cobra if you have your own regulator.

To add balance, my son loves his Cressi Leonardo.....

Regardless of what you choose, please get a computer of some description!
 
Another couple of benefits of a Peregrine are unmatched customer service compared to any dive product company. The 2 button user interface is so simple and intuitive you could probably figure the basics out on your own sitting on the couch.
This is absolutely the case. I’m not a good test subject as I tend to read the manual thoroughly before using. I did that with my Perdix, but after using it, figured I could probably figure most things out by just pushing some buttons, but I’d already read the manual, so not a good test subject.

A friend of mine has a Cressi. I can’t remember the model, but one of the artists or turtles (Leonardo or Michelangelo). It’s one with the awful single button interface. He hates the UI. Anyway, he asked me about my Perdix. Specifically, about how easy it was to change the gas mix. Instead of showing him, I handed him my Perdix. The only instruction I gave him was how to turn it on. He played with it for a bit and quickly found the gas mix setting. I should have set a timer, but it was real quick. Definitely under a minute, and more like 30 seconds.
 
I always recommend Shearwater....always. they're canadian, and offer superb service....and I like that. with that said.... if you're looking for something cheaper, I've got a couple Mares Puck Pro +, in good shape, and a never wet Sherwood Amphos we won at a raffle that I'd part with reasonably. I'm in Hamilton. I was about to post them up on Marketplace, but I'd rather they go to a Scubaboarder.
 
If this is all you’ll ever do, follow a guide and do what they do you don’t really need a computer to ignore.
What the heck kind of advice is that when I read here that a lot of dive ops/boats require computers?
 
What the heck kind of advice is that when I read here that a lot of dive ops/boats require computers?
He’s been diving over 40 years, is used to just following the guide, not a serious diver just someone who likes to get in the water for a few moments on vacation, he doesn’t need a computer, if he has never had to have one he is unlikely to ever learn the basics of one, he also dives mostly in places with nearly unlimited viz, he is unlikely to lose sight of a guide and always has the big air reserve called the surface.

maybe he needs a rebreather.
 
https://www.shearwater.com/products/perdix-ai/

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