TEarrington, I think what you are learning in this thread is that there is a wide range of approaches to technical diving, some of which is related to what KIND of technical diving you are doing (eg. square profiles on wrecks) and some of which is related to what kind of training you have taken and what you have been taught.
A lot of technical divers have planned their dives on laptops, using decompression software, and plotted contingency profiles, and transferred all of that to slates or wetnotes. Thus there was no need or desire for a computer to be doing an iterative calculation of decompression status during the dive. Some divers are using a curve-fitting process, which allows much of this to be done mentally. Again, no need for a computer as such.
Some divers plan their dives with software, but prefer to execute them with a computer that will take into account deviations from the original plan which might not be covered by contingency plans.
What kind of gauge you want depends on which of these strategies you end up using. Decompression computers that manage helium-containing gases are quite expensive, so buying one before you know where you are headed may not be the best use of funds, unless you can come up with another reason why you particularly want that gauge (as I did, with the X1, because I can read it).
Mentally tracking the dive, figuring the average depth, and monitoring your own decompression status is something most of us had to practice for a while before we were good at it. Letting the computer run as a computer during that period was a safety factor -- but I know of at least two of us who eventually forgot to reset the computer for Nitrox on a recreational dive, ignored the information the computer was giving us and bent it thoroughly. That usually results in the device going into gauge mode as soon as it stops sulking.
A lot of technical divers have planned their dives on laptops, using decompression software, and plotted contingency profiles, and transferred all of that to slates or wetnotes. Thus there was no need or desire for a computer to be doing an iterative calculation of decompression status during the dive. Some divers are using a curve-fitting process, which allows much of this to be done mentally. Again, no need for a computer as such.
Some divers plan their dives with software, but prefer to execute them with a computer that will take into account deviations from the original plan which might not be covered by contingency plans.
What kind of gauge you want depends on which of these strategies you end up using. Decompression computers that manage helium-containing gases are quite expensive, so buying one before you know where you are headed may not be the best use of funds, unless you can come up with another reason why you particularly want that gauge (as I did, with the X1, because I can read it).
Mentally tracking the dive, figuring the average depth, and monitoring your own decompression status is something most of us had to practice for a while before we were good at it. Letting the computer run as a computer during that period was a safety factor -- but I know of at least two of us who eventually forgot to reset the computer for Nitrox on a recreational dive, ignored the information the computer was giving us and bent it thoroughly. That usually results in the device going into gauge mode as soon as it stops sulking.