Hey folks, thanks for all the input.
So from my understanding, people's biggest hangup with using them is less practical or technical and more hinged on their personal beliefs regarding redundancy?If you stick with diving long enough
So for a bit of personal history; I have a background in aviation. There, every backup system has a backup, and you never leave the ground if one backup proves faulty. Even while flying and using GPS you still follow your course using the paper chart on your knee. You know your check-in points, time to next action, distance to next point, airspeed, wind speed, etc. This is because you PLAN on your GPS failing at the most inopportune time. The same goes for my diving gear. These notions of redundancy are hard to kick, especially while you are in an environment where the gear you use is literally life support.
It may just be due to my limited experience as a diver, but I don't understand how someone can say that redundancy is required in one situation and not another.
And this I totally disagree with, but that's a whole other can of worms.