So the “plan” is flexible, if everything goes sideways do you adapt or die, DCS is a bit more treatable than drowning. All computers only offer solutions based on guessgorythims anyway since every persons physical needs are different and some times change.
Obviously, we adapt. The question is, which computer decides HOW to adapt? The one on your wrist, or the one between your ears?
The lock out is a disappointing “feature” but I understand the point behind it which isn’t much different than the instructor who only allows shearwater.
I'm not sure I follow how a computer that will lock out and an instructor that only allows Shearwater are "not much different".
What I will say from an instructor's point of view are the following:
- I'm not able to be fully proficient and knowledgeable about every computer on the market. Not even every tech-capable computer. And I kinda feel like it would be unreasonable for a student to expect that.
- I need for my students' computer to behave in a way that is predictable and that I expect. Giving a really long deco stop when nobody else on the dive had a deco stop at all was - from my perspective - not something I could predict or would have expected. As such, I choose not to accept future students that use that computer. I.e. based on both the manual (as reported by Sevenrider860) and my personal experience, I find that computer unacceptable for use in tech diving.
- In the future, I may be asked to teach someone with some other non-Shearwater computer that is purported to be tech-capable. Say, for for example, a Ratio or HW OSTC computer. As I don't KNOW those computers, accepting that would run the risk of finding out that, like the G2Tek, that other computer behaves in some unpredictable and unexpected way that makes it unacceptable for tech diving. Maybe not. But, as I am not fully proficient and knowledgeable on those other computers, I would not want to run the risk. I would accept other computers, as long as the student has at least one Shearwater. I might even rent or loan a Shearwater to a student that doesn't have one. But, I don't think I would take on another student that did not have a Shearwater and wouldn't use one that I provided. They can do whatever they want after (if) they finish their certificaiton. I am not the Scuba Police. But, it disrupts the class and impedes progress when you have to deal with a computer that does not work as expected.