Where I take offense is when someone states that Wireless AI is more reliable than a Brass and Glass SPG. Especially someone without long term experience using the equipment.
With the SPG, you have a hose failure as the most common point of failure. Routine maintenance generally will take care of this. You also have the airspool o-ring failure, which really is a nuisance but not a real problem. I had my O2 side of my CCR airspool o-ring fail last weekend. Did all 4 dives with it failed. When I got home, I did the maintenance. I have not seen one cause a serious failure but rather just a bubble trail with no appreciable gas loss. I have 19CF tanks BTW.
With the wireless AI, you have 2 batteries and a wireless transmitter in between and the software used to interpret it. You can have a failure of either point, either battery or the sync of the transmitter. There are numerous reports and issues of transmitter sync failure on SB and on manufacturer web sites. Every time you open the compartment you subject the units to flooding. You can damage the hard mounted transmitter during a dive. You can have a bad battery that does not last long. You can leave your tank pressurized overnight and drain the battery, etc. You must maintain, just like the airspool, the battery compartment o-rings.
Stuartv – I have my original SPG from 1984 still serviceable. When your wireless AI is 32 years old please let us know about the reliability. My wife’s original SPG is from 1992 and is still serviceable. Both were in active use until late 2013. So that is 2 units at 32 and 24 years old. The only maintenance is 1 or 2 hoses and a couple of airspools. No batteries, no sync issues etc. Keep in mind that there are many million bourbon tube gauges in use around the world. Not just diving. Our gauges are not special. There are probably a couple hundred thousand, at best, wireless AI in use. Of those, many are probably unique even to the manufacturer, at least at the software level if not at the hardware level. On one of your experienced threads, you commented on the fact that a computer could have software logic errors causing erroneous depth or deco information. This also applies to your wireless AI equipment which you seen to have no similar thoughts on. Oh and on CCR, I can very much ASSURE you I would never buy a wireless 'connected system'. I would not want to bailout at every single hiccup. Have you even seen a CCR?
As for my stance on AI, I like AI but I do not care for wireless AI. I have 3 AI computers at home. I love my family on AI as I can better judge their gas supply information. I do not believe it ‘makes’ a diver less knowledgeable. I believe depending on the AI information and not interpreting it can make a diver less skilled. AI is a tool available and for recreational divers, it is a very good tool.
For technical diving, AI or wireless AI will not kill a properly aware diver. It may cause dives to be turned but will not kill them. A tech diver would be expected to not be dependent on information like air time remaining etc but just using the pressure information. However, if I was technical diving with someone using wireless AI who had multiple sync issues over several trips and as a result had to turn the dive, I can assure you I would not continue to dive with them. If they had no issues, I would dive with them.