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Actually the risk is the opposite of how you describe it, instead of looking at a map and planning a route including an alternative and bringing the map with you, instead you head off with the smartphone in the blind hope the battery doesn’t die or the coverage doesn’t fail leaving you in the middle of nowhere lost.An automotive analogy:
- Back in the dark ages, to go to an unfamiliar store or town, you got out a physical map, plotted out all the turns and took the map with you. If you missed a turn and got lost you pulled over, reconsulted the map, figured out where you were, made a new plan and tried again. Hopefully, this didn't happen too often on your way there or back.
- Today, your smartphone displays multiple routes, tells you the turns as they come up and updates with a new route if you miss a turn.
I do not think many who have experienced both ways of driving would willingly go back to the old style. Beyond 'let the wind take us where it will' road trips.
Back to diving:
A dive computer does the same as that smartphone.
I understand you can dive without one, particularly if you are very disciplined. But you are risking diving blindly if things go too far off track.
Yep, that's what I do, either with my smart phone or a GPS device. Sounds crazy, huh. I bet there are a few other people like that as well.Actually the risk is the opposite of how you describe it, instead of looking at a map and planning a route including an alternative and bringing the map with you, instead you head off with the smartphone in the blind hope the battery doesn’t die or the coverage doesn’t fail leaving you in the middle of nowhere lost.
Hard to beat a map.Yep, that's what I do, either with my smart phone or a GPS device. Sounds crazy, huh. I bet there are a few other people like that as well.
The odds of my plan recomputing 'smartphone', backup 'smartphone', buddies 'smartphone' and buddies backup 'smartphone' all dying is very low.Actually the risk is the opposite of how you describe it, instead of looking at a map and planning a route including an alternative and bringing the map with you, instead you head off with the smartphone in the blind hope the battery doesn’t die or the coverage doesn’t fail leaving you in the middle of nowhere lost.
But you have only a very small sliver of that map underwater with you. Not even the map, just a few alternate sequences of turns that you wrote down. The dive computer brings your whole desktop planning software, the map, down with you, though with a more limited interface.Hard to beat a map.
Don’t get me wrong computers are a marvellous invention, but I only need to scribble out a map of where I want to go and a plan how to get there and back. There’s something beautiful about simplicity that appeals to me.The odds of my plan recomputing 'smartphone', backup 'smartphone', buddies 'smartphone' and buddies backup 'smartphone' all dying is very low.
But you have only a very small sliver of that map underwater with you. Not even the map, just a few alternate sequences of turns that you wrote down. The dive computer brings your whole desktop planning software, the map, down with you, though with a more limited interface.
Honestly, this thread went further than I anticipated. Some people with much more experience than me intervened and I don’t really have the time to catch up. But I will try.@Dody the OP thanks for starting this thread, my coffee break was longer than planned.
Thankfully we are not using one of the original marine depth measurements these days e.g. fathoms, imagine the calculations for 1 Atmosphere 5.5 fathoms, but let's not go there.
Nitrox is worth it for many divers, especially when doing multiple dives per day over multiple days.
Personally when I dive locally my first mix is 34% for the first dive to 28-30m and my second dive the mix is 40% to allow me to have a reasonable second dive at a depth of 20-24m .... you'll learn that stuff when doing a Nitrox course by an instructor who knows his/her stuff.
Unfortunately all my local dives are square profile, no luxury of a multilevel dive in the Gulf of Oman unless you're interested in jellyfish, salp, or plankton.
I won't comment on the drysuit other than some people get colder quicker than others, especially when doing photography and not moving around much, at 23C for an hour I love my drysuit, plus it keeps me warmer during the SI and on the boat ride back to the marina when people in wetsuits shiver.
I did 29 dives over a week in the Maldives on air back in 1998 and all dives no less than 50 mins
I'd do it on EAN28, but hey that's just me
Only in Tech Mode as far as I am aware
I'd do it on EAN28, but hey that's just me .