...... where is the popcorn smiley when you need it? .....
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I believe that it is a paternalistic, ineffective, and indeed counterproductive strategy to withhold information that has a valuable safety purpose (in this case, properly timing a deco stop when a mistake was made and the NDL was exceeded), because of the possibility that the information may be misused (in this case, by a diver deliberately exceeding the limits of their training).
Dive computers don't withhold this information, which is how we started down this rabbit hole.
I am with you... This is "Basic Scuba Discussions" and the information presented here should mostly be in another group... IJS...... where is the popcorn smiley when you need it? .....
That doesn't stop divers from ignoring the information. If you won't pay attention to your depth gauge and watch, you probably won't pay attention to your PDC. You can't blame either tool for a diver's attention deficit.Dive computers don't withhold this information, which is how we started down this rabbit hole.
Much like digital cameras have improved the average photographer.
Every human gets narc'ed with depth. It's a given. That doesn't apply to a PDC. When they fail, it's usually in an epic manner. Nothing subtle about a PDC's failure. A human failure is far harder to detect... especially by the human involved.
That doesn't stop divers from ignoring the information. If you won't pay attention to your depth gauge and watch, you probably won't pay attention to your PDC. You can't blame either tool for a diver's attention deficit.
Whether it's your foot or electro mechanical in nature, a diver and driver have to know their limitations. Think of it as the Harry Callahan mind set of diving.Or better yet getting a ticket in the 45mph zone, when cruise was set on 60. Why did not it tell me I was in the city limits now.
Whether it's your foot or electro mechanical in nature, a diver and driver have to know their limitations. Think of it as the Harry Callahan mind set of diving.
Diving is all about limitations. Air, depth and time are the most obvious. Just don't forget all the rest like skills, gear, training, physical and all the rest.
For the most part - I agree with you.
However I encountered a 'subtle' failure mode on my Suunto Mosquito dive computer early this year. The pressure transducer failed in such a way that the computer was under reading the depth by 3m, based on my observations on the anchor line on the ascent. I can only assume the NDL calculations were off in accordance with the incorrect depth reading. This was a particularly insidious failure as the computer still appeared to be working correctly and on a deeper/longer dive I could easily have unintentionally omitted deco because of it.
That computer has now been permanently retired from further use.