My journey with Deep 6 isn’t one of technical specifications and truth in lending, I’m not an impartial source.
I started with Zeagle (meh) and went to Dive Rite (better).
When I trained some more and needed my own deco regs, a mentor (moderator here) recommended I take a look at Deep 6.
I poked around in advance and found three things - 1) owner accessibility and presence; 2) Deep 6’s position on right to repair (RTR); and 3) Chris’ irreverence towards the conventional, head-in-sand minds in the dive industry. Those aspects were refreshing and attractive to me.
I bought the precursor to the Excursion series (Scribble) and they simply performed better than the Dive Rite regs. Gas delivery was noticeably “cleaner” with no downside in cracking sensitivity.
The Zeagles got tossed in a box, the simple little pre-Excursion regs moved forward into backgas duty and the Dive Rites moved into deco gas duty.
I trained some more and wanted to upgrade my regs so I bought the Signature series. Those are on backgas duty, the Excursions are back on deco duty and the Dive Rites are on ST rec duty.
On the odd occasions I’ve dived ST with Landon, he’s never said a single thing to me about the Dive Rite regs. He could’ve easily shamed me about diving a competitor’s regs but never has.
I’m getting another DPV through Deep 6 (most likely a G3.2) and after that purchase I’ll pure fleet my regs to Deep 6. I’ll probably let the Zeagles go for a song and keep the Dive Rites simply out of the subconscious middle class habit of collecting clutter.
I took the D6 maintenance class and it was superb but also helped me realize that my aspirations to disassemble a first stage on a rocking LOB in the middle of a gale storm with a few basic tools are unrealistic. So I bought a spare 1st and 2nd Signature. That doesn’t diminish the value of RTR for me. Why? Because if SHTF overseas six time zones away in a remote location where English is a distant third language (BTDT), I know Landon would get on a Teams call and walk me through how to get my reg repaired and get me back UW.
In my previous career, I enjoyed the best equipment from individual weapons, optics, tactical satellite communications, attack and assault helicopters, close air support, no-fail missiles, blah, blah, blah but more importantly I enjoyed superb, immediately-responsive, no-fail maintenance support to keep the force in the fight. I don’t have that provided to me anymore so I have to arrange that and Deep 6 is who I choose to mount that kind of expeditionary support.
Also, this is the internet. I don’t know why but we get on here and say the stupidest things and go online with the craziest expectations. Landon has exercised incredible restraint in dealing with weirdos whereas I would’ve gone into Ranger Smash mode and I think that says something about his character.
For what it's worth, I can assure you we will be here for long to come.
I can attest to this - this is a factual statement. If you want to find a flaw with Deep 6 it could be the durable solvency relaxes the urgency for a more aggressive marketing campaign. That much said, kicking ScubaPro off the top of the hill isn’t anywhere in Deep 6’s organizational objectives but neither is being at the top of that hill. They’re comfortably standing strong in a niche position in the industry.
Landon is working on warehouse improvements, product initiatives and inhouse prototyping capabilities. The future of Deep 6 Gear is bright and I’m motivated to be a part of it.
For full disclosure, I’ve never been a “free lunch bunch” kind of guy. I don’t ask for, expect or desire a “buddy” discount and Landon doesn’t offer it.
Lastly, I think the Deep 6 logo is bad ass.
OK, here’s a negative comment to keep it real. Deep 6 runs out of inventory before I can get off my butt to buy stuff.
OK, now I’m done.