I would.not put too much faith in this info. It was probably something he heard, read, or learned some years ago, and has not upgraded it. the point of AI is primarily to put your pressure on your wrist, which is usually easy to see. Removing a hose or not is secondary, and depends on your risk management. I, and others, do NOT carry an extra SPG except in our dive bag.His response was “ you sure can but I strongly suggest you have a backup SPG as I have seen more than a few transmitters fail and divers not knowing how much air they have”. I thought the big draw to ai was the elimination of a hose and being able to be more streamlined. His response is making me rethink the importance of ai.
The old "not reliable" info is heavily skewed by many of the early transmitters being from Suunto, and they were, well, not reliable. The reliability of the PPS transmitters is awesome. And, the reliability is much more an issue of the transmitter than it is the computer.A number of us here cave and wreck dive with just transmitters, but we’re using Shearwater Perdix or Teric computers. I do it myself. That should give you an idea of the reliability of some AI, anyway.
Agreed. Back when you bought the HUD, which I assume is the Oceanic DataMask, the tech/wreck divers were way over on the side of points of failure, too often based on assumptions about things.Edit: when I got my HUD I think AI's were less reliable, so I saw a fair number of responses from tech/wreck divers that this AI stuff was just another possible point of failure. But with the Perdix and Teric it seems the technology has become 'more' reliable (though I would still dive with redundancy).
Depends on the brand. The AquaLung i200C to i470Tc upgrade is just $110 (plus transmitter, of course). And you need not buy the transmitter initially, so the total costs can be spaced out.On the other hand, it's typically a $300-400 upcharge for AI.