No! The inability to back their boat at a boat ramp does!Does the use of GPS, Radar and Sonar make boaters bad boaters?
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No! The inability to back their boat at a boat ramp does!Does the use of GPS, Radar and Sonar make boaters bad boaters?
Get the readings or settings mixed up. Like the computer set on a high O2 and you have air on your back. Some computers are now giving tank contents, could you mix up contents with some other reading and empty your tank. I'm just asking as I know nothing about them. The thing I like about making a dive plan is it gives me a mental picture of the dive before I get in the water, and a schedule to keep to. I recently got a uwatec and have it set on the most basic screen giving depth, dive time, no stop. Or deco stop depth and time. I still wouldn't go without a plan. Just habit maybe I could be saying something totally different in a few years.What information might be too distracting, and what sort of poor decision might that lead to? It makes sense; I just can't come up with any specifics.
Ah ha, more information has arrived for the dive planningThose were NDL dives--no decompression stops.
They were, of course, multi-level, which was my point. The tables can't plan or track multi-level dives like that. If you are going to use tables to plan your dives or as a backup to a computer, you will have to limit yourself to square profile dives.
Thats my fear, that I'd misread something or not understand the information I'm getting,Too much information?
Some of them could not even understand the meaning of ndl. Paid no attention to alarm.
That's my fear that I'd misread something critical. Or set it up wrong. I have no experience with a computer. I now carry a uwatec but don't rely on it entirely.Absolutely. Too much information, or information presented in a confusing or unclear manner can lead to a poor decision. Part of that can be the fault of the diver, as many don’t seem to know what their computer is telling them. Part of that can also be on the manufacturer for designing a confusing interface.
Even if a diver confuses temperature for depth, the computer will still track what’s happening, but it’s up to the diver to understand what it’s trying to tell them. I think re computers can be especially problematic, as it’s unlikely that the diver is familiar enough with it to be able to quickly understand what is on the display.
You fall back to your backup computer. If that fails you fall back to your buddies. If they’re not available then you’d use emergency ascent techniques, extending your decompression using your SMB and experience as a reference.Difference is, if your GPS quits you can continue by following maps and a compass. If your computer quits when you already have 30 minutes with a max depth of 110 feet you have to bail.
Alas there’s new problems introduced with all the technology. GPS means incredible accuracy, meaning "traffic jams" at popular waypoints in the middle of nowhere. Fine until it’s foggy.Does the use of GPS, Radar and Sonar make boaters bad boaters? No. But it is still a good idea to understand and implement basic compass, charts and dead reckoning in case the electronic crutch ever fails.
Deco For Divers — Mark PowellWhats the book name?
If I remember correctly the Shearwater Perdix used to default to the highest O2 mix at the beginning of the dive until an update (probably because it was selecting the best gas …) which was annoying as you had to revert to your back gas in your selection.Get the readings or settings mixed up. Like the computer set on a high O2 and you have air on your back. Some computers are now giving tank contents, could you mix up contents with some other reading and empty your tank. I'm just asking as I know nothing about them. The thing I like about making a dive plan is it gives me a mental picture of the dive before I get in the water, and a schedule to keep to. I recently got a uwatec and have it set on the most basic screen giving depth, dive time, no stop. Or deco stop depth and time. I still wouldn't go without a plan. Just habit maybe I could be saying something totally different in a few years.