According to the "rules" of diving with a computer and no tables, if your computer dies you abort the dive and can't dive again for a while (24 hours??)....which is not what I'm willing to live with. Let's say I fly to Roatan ($700), book a room ($400), pay ahead for twenty dives ($600), and set aside some cash for food ($300) for a decent set of meals whenever I want with reserves.....and I go with my wife. That's $4000, and it's 24 hours before I can get back in the water again??? Nope! I'm on the tables and back in.
If your computer died, how do you know what your max depth and BT were?
If you're going to spend that much money, why not spend $200 to dive with a backup DC?
Once you're there, if your DC really dies (as in, permanently), why not spend a few bucks a day to rent a DC for the rest of the trip? You'll get more BT that way than using tables, right?
---------- Post added April 13th, 2015 at 11:09 AM ----------
Oh, and if you follow the "rules" of diving and the tables say your first dive was into deco and you can't dive again, wouldn't you be a lot happier if you had just taken a backup DC along on the first dive and it said you COULD do your second dive (because it wasn't assuming your first dive was square, like the tables do)?
---------- Post added April 13th, 2015 at 11:22 AM ----------
The rule of 120 is based on Navy no deco tables (table 9.6). In depths in the 100 foot range or shallower, depth plus bottom time is about equal to 120 or thereabouts for no deco limits. But I wouldn't know that if I hadn't figured out for myself. I actually thought I discovered it, turns out lots of way smarter folks than me figured it out when I was a twinkle in Mom's eye. I figured it out by looking at tables as an OW student, something you say you didn't do in your class.
And yes, I wear one computer and one bottom timer for recreational no deco dives because I am familiar enough with the tables to use the bottom timer. When planning a 300 foot multilevel dive, I cut tables on v-planner for the plan, 10 feet deeper, and 10 minutes longer (3 sets of tables), dive with 2 Shearwaters, and still use the Stinger as a bottom timer.
it just doesn't do to have the Captain get bent. Some would consider it rude.
Teaching the 120 rule would be simple and easy to do in OW class and does not require tables, in any way.
You can get a brand new DC for $200, easily (that even supports Nitrox), and often cheaper. How much does a backup depth gauge and bottom timer cost?
If a new OW diver has bought their first DC and they decide they want some way to keep diving, in the event their DC dies, would you tell them to buy a depth gauge, bottom timer, and learn to use tables tables? Or would you tell them to spend $200 or less on a backup DC?
And between the two options, which do you think a new OW diver would get the most safety and most pleasurable diving experience from? Regarding safety, I am stipulating that your response should factor in the likelihood of a new OW diver doing thing correctly, too. No response of "if the diver follows the tables correctly, that will be the safest." No kidding. Following the tables correctly is not the point. ATTEMPTING to follow them correctly is the issue where overall diver safety comes into question. New diver. DC dies mid-dive. Will the diver follow the tables correctly as often as they would follow a backup DC?
I AM a pretty new diver and I know how to use the tables. Even with my knowledge of the tables, I can say with complete confidence that, if my primary DC died during a dive, it would be a much more pleasurable dive experience for me to have a secondary DC than backup gauges and a set of tables. I would be able to continue my (typically) multi-level dive. I would be able to do my second dive without the much-reduced bottom time I would get from using tables to calculate my pressure group from the first dive and then calculate my NDL for the second dive. And it would be WAY better than if I did my first dive without carrying backup gauges and pre-planning my NDL based on tables, as that path would require me to abort the first dive as soon as my DC died. And, as the example of the OP shows, even if I did pre-plan my NDL, when the primary DC dies, I might still have to abort the dive immediately, since, in this example, the tables allowed 25 minutes and the DC allowed something much longer.