eelnoraa
Contributor
Yes 150ft deep 30F water, the regulator choice is the toward the bottom of the concern. I went to ice land for diving once. maybe 35F water, I even use a piston reg, it did completely OK. But of course I didn't go to 150ft. 35F water is unbelievably cold. Drysuit, 440g thinsulate and heated vest, I was still cold, couldn't last 40 minutes. It takes a strong commitment to keep diving at that temperature.beginning with the end in mind is always a good thing when it comes to scuba purchases but there are only a handful of people truly qualified to dive to 150f in 30F water, probably an order of magnitude more to dive in 37f, but we are still talking about a couple of hundred divers worldwide that are truly qualified to do that safely. This is not to discourage you from doing it, it's just that those are considered very extreme conditions and even 150ft/37f is considered an extreme condition.
The Deep6 regulators are top of the line in terms of design and build quality and also offer the lowest total cost of ownership on the market if you take their repair course, I've bought several sets of them and they've certainly seen some things over the last 6-7 years and I would not hesitate to take them on any dive that I am personally willing to go on, which certainly includes 150ft/37f diving, albeit I better have my heated vest for deco....
Someone above, I think Jim Lap motioned, don't buy anything other then the necessary items for open water class. Shop should provide reg, BC, suit. Get throught the class, then starting thinking buying. And honestly, I don't even think reg is the first piece of gear to buy. At 3xF cold water, I would say buy a proper suit first. No reason to spend on a shiny new reg while shivering cold.