It has a long and colourful history. You should not have any trouble of digging them up.I have a Suunto EON Core and have been quite happy with it, I would like to hear why an earlier poster said to "avoid Suunto like the plague", why?
thanks,
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It has a long and colourful history. You should not have any trouble of digging them up.I have a Suunto EON Core and have been quite happy with it, I would like to hear why an earlier poster said to "avoid Suunto like the plague", why?
thanks,
I am only recently open water certified and I am not doing any kind of advanced diving currently. Advanced open water maybe in my future at some point, but that maybe a while.
Please stop speaking about RGBM model, gradient factors and other things without interest in this case. There are other folders in this forum to discuss this.
Please refer to the original post :
Please adapt yourself to the beginner level and don't try to make him buy something unuseful....
@FloridaMan : you'll easily find a computer for less than 300 USD ...no need to have 187 features that you'll never use ! (oh, yes perhaps in 5 years, when you'll be master diver... it will be when you should want to change your old computer)
Most likely because of the proprietary algorithms, although their reputation for service seems to be an issue for some too,I have a Suunto EON Core and have been quite happy with it, I would like to hear why an earlier poster said to "avoid Suunto like the plague", why?
thanks,
Yes I prefer the Eon to the Perdix. There's nothing bad about the Perdix, it's just that it has more annoyances (to me) than the Eon
I have a Suunto EON Core and have been quite happy with it, I would like to hear why an earlier poster said to "avoid Suunto like the plague", why?
Hi as a recreational diver I have been using Scubapros G2 Computer and has worked well for me.Just wondering if it would be suitable to use for Technical diving as I am keen to start some decompression training diving with a twin set up?This neatly sums up my experience with Suunto.
I bought the D9tx when I was a novice, swayed by the "tec" credentials - literally lusted after it and swallowed their marketing guff hook, line and sinker. I really was their target market; knew nothing, dead keen, looking to my "tec" ambitions, even respected DiveMASTERS who wore such symbols of competence...
Only after I gained the experience with a few hundred dives under my wing, trimix, accelerated deco, do you then really learn of the Suunto's severe shortcomings. That I was using it as a backup to my Shearwater Perdix simply exacerbated it's recreational-oriented features.
As a "tec" computer it's thoroughly useless. It's illegible; horrendously difficult to use; has ridiculous lockouts (including having to ascend above the ceiling to change gasses - 100% won't switch until 5m); has a mass of overcautious nonsense; and the compass has never reliably worked.
As a recreational computer used when straying into occasional decompression it's OK. It's not great, just OK.
As a wristwatch it's good.
The main requirement is the computer must support "standard" decompression algorithms as you will be diving with other people, sharing common plans and working together.H
Hi as a recreational diver I have been using Scubapros G2 Computer and has worked well for me.Just wondering if it would be suitable to use for Technical diving as I am keen to start some decompression training diving with a twin set up?