Arsalan Ahmed
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I can buy one for relatively the same price right now and I was wondering which one of these would be better for someone as their first ever dive computer?
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Have an old Aeris Atmos 2 and a Zoop. Dive both on every dive. Zoop is a bit more conservative. Aeris has slightly easier buttons to use. Both are downloadable. Batteries seem to last a bit longer in the Zoop. Aeris well past 300 dives and a flood that was my fault.
I think the Zoop does not have Gauge mode.
Personally, I would take the one with Gauge mode and the OPTION for longer bottom times.
I should add, Gauge mode is only really important to have later, should you move onto doing more advanced types of diving.
At that point, you may want to buy a more sophisticated computer. If/when you get to that point, having the computer you buy now support Gauge mode means that you can continue to use it as a backup to the new computer you buy later. If you buy a computer now that does not have a Gauge mode, then IF/when you move on to more advanced diving later, that computer you buy now will likely have little value you to you.
Also, even if you don't move on to technical diving, but you do move on to more advanced recreational diving, you may find that a computer that you buy now, that has a particularly conservative algorithm and also does not have Gauge may still be of little value later, as a backup computer. A backup computer doesn't do you much good if it's locked out because it thinks you went incurred a decompression obligation which you did not fulfil. E.g. You get a newer computer later that has a more liberal algorithm, allowing longer bottom times on NDL dives. You do your first dive and your new computer says you are within your NDL, but your backup computer disagrees and said you violated your NDL. You go to do your second dive and your new computer is good to go, but your backup computer is now useless because it has locked you out and it doesn't even have a Gauge mode to let you use it as backup in that way.
one can move on to "more advanced recreational diving" by exceeding those NDLs
It sounds like you are using the term "more advanced recreational diving" to mean "riskier recreational diving."
Where did you get that? I never suggested anyone exceed any NDLs.