gasgirl, loosebits' statement was entirely true -- you can incur a deco obligation on a Suunto computer, and have it clear as you multi-level the dive up. You can do it on some other computers as well; any computer that gives you credit for offgassing above the offgassing ceiling will clear some deco during your ascent. And the reason why is pretty easy to understand, if you look at some of the graphs that decompression software generates for technical dives. Technical dives include a segment which is considered bottom time (which often is not spent at a single depth, but within a certain RANGE of depths) and then a portion of the dive that is considered "decompression", which is periods of time spent at specified depths while ascending -- sound like a multi-leveled dive?
The objection we're trying to articulate is that, if your dive plan is to incur a deco obligation on your computer and then multi-level the dive to clear that obligation, you are gambling that a) you will have the gas to do the amount of multi-leveling that's required, and b) you won't have any kind of a problem that prevents you from extending your dive long enough to clear the deco obligation. Gas is an absolute limiting factor. When you no longer have enough gas to stay underwater, you MUST surface. And a variety of factors can deplete your gas faster than you think; swimming into current, having any sort of leak, or having to share gas can have a huge impact on the supply you have to do your multi-level portion of the dive. Equipment or personal problems can make that extension unpleasant or intolerable, but once you have committed to the profile, it has to be done, or you have to accept the additional risk involved in not doing the multi-level portion that you need to clear the computer (and, one assumes, the decompression obligation that you have).
I get the feeling you think we're piling on you, and we aren't. I know at least Lamont and I do technical dives. I'm not allergic to deco. But I also know how to do the gas planning for it, and I also know how much risk I'm willing to take while diving a completely non-redundant equipment setup. When I think I'd like to incur some deco, I stack the odds that I'll be able to complete it safely by establishing some personal redundancy, and by diving with buddies who gas plan and also have redundancy. That way, the dives are smooth and easy and stress-free.