Well,
I finally did get a chance to take the camera underwater again and I think it makes sense for me to update my initial assessment of the camera.
Last month we went to Grand Cayman and stayed at Sunset House and enjoyed a really relaxing dive holiday. I was able to take some of the feedback from this thread and many others here and try some new things.
On the GC trip I used the manual mode on the camera exclusively and I believe that allowed for much better control and better final images than using the S & A modes as I did in Borneo. I was also able to switch out the ports between the standard port and the Zen Dome to allow for the use of an add-on UCL-165 close up lens.
By moving to manual mode, I was able to keep the aperture higher than 7 most of the time and this made a big improvement in edge sharpness when using the Zen dome. See, I did learn from this thread.
In Borneo the 9-18mm lens and the Zen dome were the right tools for the large schools of fish, In Grand Cayman, they were the right tools for the recently sunk Kittiwake wreck.
My replacement Sola600 worked through all of my dives this time, so I'm happy with that. And the S2000 strobes performed flawlessly.
All in all I am more convinced that I have actually ended up with a near perfect setup and at a really nice price point. That still doesn't keep me from itchin' to get a housing for my T2i.
As it was with Borneo, travel with this setup (E-PL1, 14-42 and 9-18 lenses, Oly housing, Zen dome, UCLS tray & Arms, two S-2000 strobes and a Sola 600 video/focus light) all fit into single sling-style camera bag that also had room for my backup (G9 in canon housing) and a laptop that I was able to take onboard as my "personal item" in addition to my carry-on that I use for my regs, etc. I did put the standard port on the carry-on, not the camera bag.
There are a lot more things that I wished I had tried while there, but one has to just dive sometimes too. There never really seems to be enough time when you are a warm water vacation diver. Those of you who can drive (or walk) to warm clear water, or enjoy diving in green cold water in February consider yourselves lucky!
Well here are a few pictures from this trip that show some of the flexibility.
If interested, more can be found at
Grand Cayman 2011