Russoft
Contributor
I own a Mares Puck and my wife owns a Puck Pro. The only thing I don't like: navigating menus. Otherwise, it's exactly what I need for a price I can justify.
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All 3 of the Caribbean LOBs that I use declare that a dive computer is mandatory. I am unaware of how close they examine computers. One day I will drag my bendomatic along? I forget what Bonaire Divi position is.I'm a little surprised you never had a dive charter operator tell you that you were not allowed to dive unless you had a computer.
From what I understand, nowadays most charter operators at least say that they require all divers to have a computer (or a depth gauge, bottom timer, and a set of tables).
I dive 2 computers on every dive. I am not going to fly somewhere for a dive trip, have 1 computer crap out, and have to miss the next dive because, according to the tables, I have no NDL time left (or short enough NDL to not be worth splashing at all). Computers are cheap when you compare them to the cost of a single dive on a fly vacation (pro-rating ALL the trip costs in the per-dive cost).
1. Where did I suggest deco dive to anyone?Open Water certification from all the agencies I'm really familiar with trains people to not exceed the NDL given by their computer (or tables, if they choose to use those instead of a computer).
What you are "suggesting" is for all those people to violate their training. I do not agree with that.
If someone (who is not trained for staged decompression diving) wants to maximize their bottom time, without getting more training and without breaking the rules of their training, their only option is to use a more liberal computer.
And if they are going to dive aggressively, for example by staying down right to the end of their NDL, then they should consider extending their safety stop beyond just the minimum that they were taught in their training. And take extra care to ascend from their safety stop in a very slow and controlled manner.
I'm pretty goog on air, especially after a few dives, I have 300+ so am pretty efficient.
Thanks for your help, if it's only a slight difference it is no bother but if it is know for being concervative or too conservative then I would have an issue with that.
Some good computer advice here, but I get my panty's in a knot over the 1 button vs 2 button argument.
I like a zero button computer. No pushes required. It has buttons, i do not touch them anymore...
My first computer had 1 button. And you had to push it (way to often!) in order to activate it. I still (vaguely) remember having to resurface, hold my arm out of the water and push the stupid button (once under water it refused to activate). Stupid stupid design.
My next computer had a set of "wet contacts" (Uwatec Aladin) that served as buttons, but only above water - if you needed them...
I have not pressed a button on my computer in over 15 years. I configured it once, it now automactically turns on when wet and shows me all of the information I need to know. Buttons? We don't need no stinkin' buttons!
How often will you need to screw with your computer?
1. Where did I suggest deco dive to anyone?
1. A conservative computer will let you dive beyond the allowed ndl, it just goes to deco mode. You then have to clear the "deco obligation" otherwise the computer might lock out for 24hrs.
I have not pressed a button on my computer in over 15 years. I configured it once, it now automactically turns on when wet and shows me all of the information I need to know. Buttons? We don't need no stinkin' buttons!
How often will you need to screw with your computer?
The DG03 seems to have spotty reviews in the SB archives. Anybody have experience with it?