I'll communicate with SP's technical services concerning this matter to clarify (if I remember to do itHi @BoltSnap
Reading the manual, have not owned a Scubapro computer since my daughter's Air Z Nitrox in 2002, never again.

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I'll communicate with SP's technical services concerning this matter to clarify (if I remember to do itHi @BoltSnap
Reading the manual, have not owned a Scubapro computer since my daughter's Air Z Nitrox in 2002, never again.
That's my exact experience.Depends what you mean by "lock you out". My Perdix keeps going even when the battery indicator is red. The one time the battery actually died, the computer was still working right up until it wasn't (a minute or two after completing my dive).
I wouldn't call this a lock out as such as the battery just dying and no longer holding enough charge to run the screen.
Just sell the POS, cut your losses and buy a SW. We've all made purchases we regret but you might get half your $ back...maybe...so it won't hurt that much in the grand scheme of things will it? Either way, having the best DC on the market will definitely soften the blowSuunto
First, we are talking about recreational dive computers NOT technical diving computers. In recreational diving, there isn't supposed to be "required decompression" diving.
The difference with the Perdix is you can grovel around for an AA battery -- even steal it out of some other piece of kit -- and go diving. Rechargeable computers or those with special disc batteries (watch sized) aren't easily available and generally aren't quick to change or charge.
I'd steal one out of my backup torch for the dive (although I would have checked the battery as part of the pre-dive build ceremony)
They don’t lock you out for that. They give you a longer safety stop and/or a shorter NDL on the next dive.We were in about 25-30 of water and I had put too much air in my BCD and I bounced up to the surface. I came back down and thought everything was fine. My wife went straight to the surface (for a different reason) and I followed her because I wanted to make sure she was OK and did not do a safety stop and probably ascended too fast because I was worried about her. Suunto locked me out for 48 hours as I described. I was fine because I had not been down very long and was only in 25-30 feet to the bottom anyway. I guess going straight to the surface twice in a short time period did it. It was the first (and so far only) time I have been locked out in about 75 dives on this Suunto.
Hi Ken, most on won’t know what a CBL is. But yes, my last one was for AD. The student (an OWI) claimed they could control their suit and wing as well as the casualty’s. All good at 20m by 15 they started to struggle, at 10 I took control to prevent a Polaris launch. Suunto did not lock out.They don’t lock you out for that. They give you a longer safety stop and/or a shorter NDL on the next dive.
Try instructing incompetent new divers to do CBL and see how often you go up and down in an uncontrolled way. It doesn’t bust the computer, just your ears.
Hi Ken, most on won’t know what a CBL is. But yes, my last one was for AD. The student (an OWI) claimed they could control their suit and wing as well as the casualty’s. All good at 20m by 15 they started to struggle, at 10 I took control to prevent a Polaris launch. Suunto did not lock out.