Sidemount - SPG and Transmitter - HP Splitter? Button SPG?

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I assume everything I’m diving with is going to fail at the worst possible time.

The spg assembly (Guage itself, spool Orings, hp hose) has got to have the shortest mtbf of anything on my rig.
 
I assume everything I’m diving with is going to fail at the worst possible time.

The spg assembly (Guage itself, spool Orings, hp hose) has got to have the shortest mtbf of anything on my rig.

The high pressure system in your rig is designed to transmit pressure and not high flow rates of air, unlike your low pressure system. When the o-rings fail you will get a very low flow of bubbles. Scuba hp hoses are (were ?) designed to leak bubbles along the length of the hose when they begin to fail. SPGs spring tension changes with age and should be recalibrated, but only industrial pressure gauges tend to be calibrated. The variance tends to be minor for scuba applications and it’s easier to replace very old gauges.

Make informed choices for the type of diving that you do. In OW applications it hardly matters as you can always call a dive and head to your safety stop, assuming you/your buddy can assess your depth. If you are deep in a cave system you don’t want to be guessing how much air you have left if you're solely relying on AI and it fails.

I’m old enough to have had multiple laptops, PCs, tablets, household appliances etc. fail. AI and dive computers are not any more reliable than those electronics, if anything they are subjected to a harsher environment — water immersion under high pressure.

Yawn
 
Make informed choices for the type of diving that you do. In OW applications it hardly matters as you can always call a dive and head to your safety stop, assuming you/your buddy can assess your depth. If you are deep in a cave system you don’t want to be guessing how much air you have left if you're solely relying on AI and it fails.


Yawn


ASSume much sir?

The straw that broke this camels back with respect to spg vs ai was having a hp hose blow ~1800’ back in a cave. I would have much rather had a transmitter just stop telling me than to have actually lost gas. Knowing how much gas you have is irrelevant to your survival; clearly you don’t understand gas planning.

Lastly, why were you diving with laptops , PCs, tablets , and household appliances?

Please don’t answer the last question, it too was rhetorical.
 
Lastly, why were you diving with laptops , PCs, tablets , and household appliances?

Perhaps you are being deliberately dense in failing to understand an analogy … all electronic appliances are prone to failure, particularly as they are all composed of multiple components each of which is prone to failure. Dive computers are subject to harsher environments than most other types of electronic devices.

BTW, if your electronic appliance (eg dive computer) was manufactured during or shortly after the COVID epidemic, those appliances are experiencing higher rates of failure.

YAWN
 

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