NudeDiver
Contributor
Wow! I'll take that as a "yes".Moderator,,please show me how to delete me from form SB completly,all profiles ans otherwise
Well, there is nothing wrong with this. There is more to life than ONLY economicsYes this is true. I find it hard to imagine why some people I know spent a fortune on their BC (i.e. over $1000, which is what it costs for top of the line BCs in Australia) when they may only do 25 or even less dives a year. I sat down before buying gear and worked out how long it would take before my gear purchase would have paid for itself versus renting. I think it was about 40 or so rentals, which I would have done by now had I not bought. But I guess some people just like to have their own stuff, even when it does not make sense economically.

Sometimes, fit is an issue. For some body types, having your own stuff is the way to go, no matter what kind of gear we're talking about.
Other times - you have to look at cost a different way. I ended up buying my drysuit based off the cost of a single trip. I was going to be traveling, and so I needed a suit for something like 8 days, even though I was only planning on 4 dives. So, the rental cost was going to be something like $400. I could get my OWN suit for only $850. So, even though my "per dive" cost is still quite high (about 25 dives on this suit), it's pretty clear that it still made sense to buy a suit at the time. By buying for that trip instead of renting, I effectively got the suit for half-off. My "per dive cost" more appropriately starts from $450 or so. Excluding the 2 dives I ended up making on that trip, we have $450/23, or about $20/dive. Not too bad, but I have a ways to go

Other times - you have to look at the non-dollar economic cost. For example, what's your time worth? If every time you want to dive, you have to go to a dive shop, find something that fits, go through the paperwork (every shop I've ever been to operates about as efficiently as government on a bad day), and then go through the return process when you're done. You can easily burn 2 hours of this BS every time you go diving. So what's that time worth? Varies on the individual.
Other times - maybe you want to dive with better stuff than you can rent. Some shops have only low-end, crappy gear. Maybe you don't want crappy gear. By crappy, I just mean, not what you want to use, not that it's necessarily crappy from an objective standpoint. If you can't rent, you have to buy.
But yeah - you're right - sometimes, there is just nothing like having your own gear. It may surprise you to know that I have a $1000 (US) pool cue. Most people would say, "are you ****ing crazy??!" Maybe I am. There is no way that, from an economic standpoint, such an expensive pool cue makes any sense at all - given that you can use one for FREE when you go out and shoot pool. But you know, I've had this cue for, uh, more than 15 years. While I may not use it often, I'm still glad I have it. Besides giving me a better game, I simply enjoy using it. Can't say the same for a house cue

All I was getting at a few posts back, to which the OP seemed to take much offense, was that one does not NECESSARILY need to buy a BC. It's not a given - and one shouldn't let anyone convince one that it is. My first inclination is to analyze the economics, but that's not EVERYONE's first stop - and that's OK too

Cheers!
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