Unfortunately I do not have a thin hood. I have a 6 mil hood for my 5 mil suit but can't use it in warm water. If anything my head always get hot during warm water dives so I personally prefer diving without it. Last time I was at blue grotto and devils den caverns everyone in my scuba club was shivering with their 3 mil suit combos and I was pouring sweat. Halfway through the dive I just pulled my hood back.
I'll have to look into some sort of skin suit hood thingie. Goal is to not have to think about it at all while diving.
can someone please explain me why SRP charges an arm and a leg for their red lens filters? There are kits which allow you to replace go-pro glass permanently for $14. Most red lens filters go for $30 ish... so why does SRP charge $75+? seems a little steep if you ask me.
You can make a basic chinstrap for the headband and not need to worry about a hood, thats what I use when wearing it head mounted as I only wear a hood when are water is very cold.
Regarding SRP pricing on filters they use URPro filters which are as good as you can get for underwater use and I would rather pay extra for a quality filter then waste my money on something that has poor optical qualities or filter performance. Just have a look at land based filters you can get a cheap and nasty generic off ebay but many people would much rather pay the extra to get the best performance they can get, still considering URPro are generally regarded as the best with only magic filters being a close competitor.
Good luck finding either brand at much less then what SRP sells the URPro range for
All other brands selling URPro filters are at pretty much the same price as SRP, you can buy generics or copies quite a bit cheaper but like I said you get what you pay for.
Here is the Magic Filters price list in pounds so the 55mm at £50 is $80 usd
M A G I C - F I L T E R S
Not sure which ones your talking about when you say most go for $30ish as neither of the 2 highest regarded and proven brands are close to that price and they are the only ones I would realistically consider, unless that extra $50 was way over my budget. But I would likely also find a cheaper hobby then underwater video if that was the case lol. I spend close to $50 on a round trip to the beach and back in fuel so its all relative and a single boat charter dive is $60+ so its not the cheapest hobby but I gladly pay what I need to as I think its well worth the costs for the enjoyment I get from it.
I have tried most of the cheaper options so far and have yet to see anything that matches the URPro range so I stick with them, some are closer then others but in the end if you buy 4 $30 filters that may or may not be good enough for what you want you would have been better of just getting the proven brand from the beginning.
Much like saying why would you buy a video light from Light and Magic at $350+ when you can get another for under $50 or why would you buy a Canon 5D mkIII for $3000 when some other camera on ebay is selling for $50. Not everyone wants the cheapest product you can possibly get if it means sacrificing quality, but that's all up to the individual and that's the reason why you have so many options to choose from to cater for people of most budgets nobody is forcing anyone to buy anything.
GoPro is bringing underwater video to many more people which is a great thing and the main reason I started using them, not because I couldn't afford a full underwater camera setup but I was more scared about destroying a $3000+ camera with a rookie error hoping to rather learn from such mistakes at cheaper price.

I wanted something smaller and more compact too which the GoPro can do and at the time I couldnt justify spending 3 times the price of a camera just for the housing alone without all the extras, this is when talking $1000+ cameras with housings close to triple that price and then you need lenses and everything else so the $400 gopro ($300 for my first one) sure was a much more attractive way to get into UW video for me and many others.
Though its a cheap starting point I always have been looking for ways to get the most out of it and many of these things arent exactly cheap but nothing is overly expensive if you compare it to how much you'd be paying for everything on a larger setup.