The issue with Suunto is the CYA (cover their arse) by turning a $$$$ computer into a brick for two days at the drop of a hat. Changing modes for example.Set the Suunto Eon to the Buhlman algorithm and it will not lock out. This feature is over 4 years old.
And do you really plan to miss over 4 minutes of Deco and then go on another dive?
Deco isn’t a fixed “law”, it’s merely an algorithm with lots of conservatism added. There are many reasons to cut short one’s deco without this being dangerous. For example you’ve set your conservatism lower — which adds more deco time — but you need to get out due to conditions or other circumstances: you’ve set your gradient factors to 50:75 and you’re at SurfGF of 80** and need to get out; that’s not a problem and you shouldn’t have any surface time penalty.
With Shearwater, no issues.
With Suunto, the computer’s now bricked for two days.
4 mins of deco isn’t a large amount. From my experience, it’s about 7 “GF highs” which will be well under the 100% value.
** SurfGF: Surface gradient factor: this is your tissue loading at any point in the dive should you be instantly transported to the surface. On NDL dives this will always be less than 90. On deeper decompression dives this can be 400 or higher, i.e. instant death should you be on the surface with that tissue loading. This drops quite quickly during your hours of deco, eventually reducing down to the GF high setting when you can ascend slowly to the surface.
I don't believe that Suunto will have a SurfGF data box as they're still wedded to their proprietary RGBM deco model (or whatever extended TLA they use). Shearwater does have SurfGF as they use the defacto standard Buhlmann deco algorithm and you can have this on the middle or lower rows of data in technical mode.