As far as I know only one of the Uwatec Aladin model was found to be faulty over last 20yrs.
Divers still got the "hit" even diving well within the limit. WHY?
So a Mares Puck at US$150.00 is as safe as a Shearwater Perdix II at $800.00!
Do you have any evidence that either one is safer than the other?
I bought a Perdix AI and I had no thought whatsoever that my need for it was for increased safety from the deco model it uses.
The highest GF the Perdix AI will let you use is in Tec mode, and that is GF99. In Rec mode, it's GF95. In me experience, that puts it very, very close to what DSAT produces on recreational computers. So, pending actual data to change my mind, I'd say neither (the Puck or Perdix) is any more dangerous than the other.
Another point I was making earlier in the thread is that the algorithm is not an important 'feature' when it comes to a new diver buying a computer because that diver will probably find that other factors limit the dive before the computer.
So, a new diver should buy a computer with the idea that once they are no longer a "new" diver, they'll probably buy another computer?
Anyway, just because you may have taken a long time to get to where you could stay down long enough to be limited by NDL does not mean that anything like "most" people are like that. I was consistently limited by my NDL (using Nitrox and a liberal computer) within 6 months of getting OW certification. And my SAC is nothing special. Lots of "new" divers have a SAC as good or better than mine. I completely disagree with your statement that [new divers] "will probably find that other factors limit the dive before the computer." But, my disagreement is based on my feeling that anyone with less than 50 dives could legitimately be regarded as a "new" diver. If you're talking about people with less than 10 dives since OW, okay, maybe. But, why would you recommend someone buy a computer just based on the needs of their first 10 dives?
The mares puck is likely to be safer having fewer ways for an uninformed user to ask it to do something more risky.
Also, since there is no planner for the Shearwater it is hard to figure out if it does anything other than the simple disolved gas modelling in the face of different profiles and doing so would be counter to the claim that is uses Buhlmann ZHL16 with GF. The Puck manual says that it gets more conservative with repetitive diving, multi day diving and reverse profiles. An informed user could do the same with the GF computer, but we are talking about new divers here.
Another way to look at the different risks is that the $650 difference could be spent on training in how to perform deco dives safely with the Puck. Round here you can do the course with the man who wrote the book for that money.
How is the Puck safer again? With a Petrel/Perdix, even if you put it in Tec mode, the highest GF setting you can possibly set it to still only makes it behave (for recreational dives) pretty much just like a rec computer running DSAT. Do you have any data to support the idea that a DSAT computer produces a higher risk of DCS than a Puck?
What do you mean there is no planner for a Shearwater? You can download Subsurface for free and plan away. Or are you suggesting that maybe Shearwater doesn't use a strict Buhlmann w/GF implementation and, instead, maybe has something proprietary in their algorithm implementation that makes it not behave just like any number of plannings applications (e.g. Subsurface, Mult Deco, etc.) work?
Yes, you could spend the extra money on training - and then be certified for deco and not have a computer that is good for deco....
I'm not saying the OP (or anyone else) SHOULD buy a Shearwater (unless the person knows they want AI and are interested in tech diving - then I AM saying they should buy a Perdix AI). I'm just saying that I don't see any facts to support your statements, which seem to be trying to assert that a new diver would be safer with a Puck than with a Shearwater computer.