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Andy Davis used to post here quite a lot. Some of his reviews, of Suunto Eon for example, have not included him doing dives with the actual computer. He doesn’t seem believe that Suunto make technical dive computers of any sort.I concur. I bought my first Suunto Cobra nearly 20 years ago. (It was nearly a thousand dollars.) Yikes. I still have (2) of them....haven't used them in years.
The Author of this page, at the bottom makes his "Suunto." opinion known.
he Best Technical Diving Computers 2019 %
Have a great day @boulderjohn Again.....I always enjoy your post.
Cheers.
As I just wrote, it will lock you out if you ascend too quickly after being in decompression.
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Summary: I do not believe there is any computer currently on the market that will shut down simply because you go into deco. I believe they will all try to get you safely to the surface through mandatory stops. Most will shut down if you do not do those mandatory stops, but not until then.
Andy Davis used to post here quite a lot. Some of his reviews, of Suunto Eon for example, have not included him doing dives with the actual computer. He doesn’t seem believe that Suunto make technical dive computers of any sort.
I have done a load of deco dives with a Zoop, including Trimix dives on pre cut tables which would bend it. Until the gas switch it is quite happy. Back then my main computer was a HelO2. That was eventually a backup to a Shearwater integrated a rebreather. When I eventually bought a second Shearwater for a backup I would end up diving OC with the HelO2 and a Perdix. All this time I had buddies with various combinations of Shearwater and Suunto, sometimes with 30 Or 40 Minutes of accelerated deco.
Algorithms are not very important.
Usually all Suuntos other than the bottom couple of models do multiple gases. So not Zoop (£190) but Vyper (£290) and above can switch to a deco gas when you are shallow enough.Algorithms are not very important? Really? What Suunto computer is being used for "Accelerated Decompression."
Cheers.
I have never heard of a computer that will, for example, indicate a stop at 20', have you ignore it and go to, for example, 10', then lock you out because you skipped the 20' stop
A Zoop will. Take it to 60m for a bit with it set to 21%. Use 40 and 80 for deco, by the time you get to about 8m it is telling you to stop, your other computer, the one that knows about the 40 and 80, will let you go to 6 and 3 minutes later the Zoop will only show depth and time.
It is quite hard to bend one assuming you didn’t run out of gas or completely forget to look at it. That is why I think the people claiming these things have not seen it happen, or incompetent people are running the dives.
Why do you persist in this? No computer on the market today will lock you out just because you went into deco. None. Zero. Nada. Zilch.Excert from my post. Hypothetical situation: Let's say that you didn't have any real reference point, went deeper than planned, and you've exceeded your N.D.L. by a very wide margin?
Regardless of how it happened your now facing a "Deco Obligation." Their are many "Recreational.' dive computers that will "lock you out."
What do you do then? Just pull your decompression table, out of your cargo pocket, and use your watch, and depth gauge. No problem....Right?
Right. Now your'e essentially "Trapped." underwater.
My experience is limited. But, I am not aware of any computer that will lock you out of anything while you're still in the water. Period.
To respond to both....Algorithms are not very important? Really? What Suunto computer is being used for "Accelerated Decompression."
Why do you persist in this? No computer on the market today will lock you out just because you went into deco. None. Zero. Nada. Zilch.