It looks as though most people scour the interwebs for months on end to finally land on two and then flip a coin on which rebreather they land on. Im hoping I can give a few bits of information and some tried and true experts on this forum can help me narrow the search while my wife will still let me make this purchase.
1. Currently diving with a Shearwater Perdix computer - which I thoroughly enjoy but am not 100% married to
2. Want the ability to travel with
3. Not really into tech diving - looking more for extended bottom times - super deep is not a big concern, but Id like to still have options down the road
Hopefully this narrows the field a bit.
Thanks!
Back to the original post. I've been off the grid (working) for a few days trying to play catch up. Probably missed some of the others replies...
1) Shearwater electronics are the major player and can be found in most brands. The Perdix will make a nice backup.
2) This is the biggest one I would suggest a lot more research on. Traveling has weight and size restrictions. The Revo micro packs small and fairly light, often as a carry on depending on airline. Others are not a travel friendly. So while not answered directly, this would be one to keep an eye on. I did a Revo not because it is the best rebreather, but I plan to travel and it looks like a good balance of travel and function. Unfortunately I have not traveled with it yet.
3) You can dive a tech rebreather recreationally, you can't dive a rec rebreather technically. For what you want to do they will all work fine. Yes, plenty of personal choices. None of them are perfect. Yes, that is correct. Pick the aspects that are important to you and filter that way.
So while I have not told you what to get (a few hints may have been put in there of my taste), hopefully I have cleared up what to look at a little more. Honestly, half of the rebreathers on the market would all fit your needs just fine. And do a few try dives. They are not and end all, but a bit of a sanity check to the piles of research you are about to get yourself into. Also research the instructor. The local instructor may not be the best choice. And while "free training with purchase" sounds good, with a rebreather you really need a good instructor and not just an instructor. So there is a whole pile of added research you need to do.
Just a little notice, for what you are wanting to do it is not the most economical way to dive. Rebreathers are expensive is so many ways. The up front costs are huge. Training is not cheap. And the running costs stack up as well. Getting O2 refills, sorb, regular O2 cell replacements. They can be economical, but that comes when you start going deep and needing Helium. But don't let that put you off. If you want one, you want one. That is all the excuse you need to get one. You have to have a technical background, understand PPO2. There is a lot more to it than open circuit of just attaching a regulator to a tank of air and jump in the water and watch the air consumption. You are making the air you breath, blending the amount of O2 with inert gas. While there are controllers that should take care of this on most models, you have to watch the controllers. Take over when they are not right. You are an active part of the diving system.
And your buoyancy is going to go to hell.