How to quantify that threat?
If something is diagnosable pre-dive, then is it a major threat? In contrast, if something is most likely to fail in-water, with no prior warning and no means to diagnose potential failure in advance... is that the more major threat?
In respect to technology advances in diving; I'd much rather see the design effort turned towards improving safety/reliability of existing components. If someone improved, say, materials technology in o-rings, or connection design. I'd like to see an improvement to LPI designs.... mask and fin straps fail... why do manufacturers not embrace alternatives as a standard?
Do you diagnose an impending failure inside your SPG pre-dive?
AI is an electronic SPG.
If you want to see design effort turned towards improving safety/reliability of existing components, then I would have thought you'd be ecstatic to see all the effort going into replacing mechanical SPGs with electronic ones.
The electronic ones seem to have close to nil chance of causing you to lose gas when they fail. An SPG certainly can't say that. And the electronic SPG has 1 static O-ring to fail. The SPG has at least 3. The electronic SPG has one threaded connection that could come loose. The mechanical has two.
The list of mechanical things that have been replaced with more reliable, safer, electronic versions is ridiculously long. Why would anyone not see SPGs as inevitably being on that same list?
The electronic SPG has a lot less failure points. It's less likely to result in loss of gas if it does fail (at least, I think). It's more convenient to use. It gives the user more/better data. It's hugely more precise (notice I made no assertion about accuracy, though I suspect that they are more accurate, too, in general, after some time in service).
And the current crop seems to be just as reliable as a mechanical SPG (assuming proper maintenance of both). Can any of you that keep asserting that electronic SPGs are less reliable provide data (that is even somewhat current) to back that claim up?
To the poster who talked about having to recharge AI, I have to ask HUHH?!?!? I haven't seen any AI transmitters that are anything but a battery that you change once a year or so. I think my Oceanic transmitter says a battery is good for 300 hours. It's over a year old and when I check the transmitter battery status on my computer it still says "Good". I will keep using it until the computer warns me of a transmitter low battery, or it just dies. If it happens to just die during a dive (which seems extremely unlikely compared to going to use it and finding it to be dead before I even get in the water), oh, well. Worst case, I thumb the dive because my SPG has died. But, I'm reasonably confident that if the battery is low enough to die during the dive, the computer will give me a transmitter low battery warning before I get in.