leadweight
Contributor
Roak, I'm doing the deep stops now, just not getting credit for them. I think they had their origin with pearl divers or something like that. They felt better after the dive. Frankly, diving always makes me feel better.
What I suspect, after reading a thread about RGBM conservatism in Dr. Deco and other things, is that Suunto started with very short no-stop times and then further reduced them for short surface intervals and multi-day diving, possibly reverse profiles, but mainly through a series of reductions in the M-values.
I usually ease up on my Aladin when remaining no-stop gets down to 5 minutes or even a bit more. With the M1 it is likely that I will not back off so much becuse it is taking into account some of th ethings that the Aladin did not, thus reducing the need to outguess the meter.
That said, I have found that the menu system is easy to use, the buttons havea positive action (at least on land) and many of the Icons are too small to see without reading glasses. Fortunately, the layout of the display changes enough from mode to mode so that I can tell where I am without being able to read the icons.
One of the reasons I chose the M1 is their use of cheap and universally obtainable AAA bateries. Mares also made the battery change operation very easy, about as much effort as replacing the cells in the average dive light. The thing even comes with the batteries out.
Some of you have PM'ed me about where I bought it. Rather than give them a free plug, I will just say that it came from the best known and most obvious source of low price mail order dive gear.
What I suspect, after reading a thread about RGBM conservatism in Dr. Deco and other things, is that Suunto started with very short no-stop times and then further reduced them for short surface intervals and multi-day diving, possibly reverse profiles, but mainly through a series of reductions in the M-values.
I usually ease up on my Aladin when remaining no-stop gets down to 5 minutes or even a bit more. With the M1 it is likely that I will not back off so much becuse it is taking into account some of th ethings that the Aladin did not, thus reducing the need to outguess the meter.
That said, I have found that the menu system is easy to use, the buttons havea positive action (at least on land) and many of the Icons are too small to see without reading glasses. Fortunately, the layout of the display changes enough from mode to mode so that I can tell where I am without being able to read the icons.
One of the reasons I chose the M1 is their use of cheap and universally obtainable AAA bateries. Mares also made the battery change operation very easy, about as much effort as replacing the cells in the average dive light. The thing even comes with the batteries out.
Some of you have PM'ed me about where I bought it. Rather than give them a free plug, I will just say that it came from the best known and most obvious source of low price mail order dive gear.