Dive Talk Go Recreational Rebreather at
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- Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2024
- Dive Talk Go Recreational Rebreather at #DEMA
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Damn, Guz keeps on deflating... good for him! ♥
Do you need a computer with a Fisher connecter (or similar), to dive it?
Yes, and that isn't included in the unlike most other units.
How do you inflate your dry suit with a chest mounted rebreather?
For this one. Diluent/bailout on your back or sides (regular scuba tanks)
@@federicodelgado3091 That wasn't the question... Usually the inflation valve of the dry suit is where? Right, on the Chest! When you now have the CCR on your chest... How do you reach your inflation valve of the dry suit?
And that's a serious question because Chest mounted CCR are really interesting for me
That's a fantastic price, maybe it's finally time.
Except it isn't ready to dive at $3,500. By the time you add a computer and sensors you are talking around $6k.
@@TeampeglegThe presentation and website kinda borders on misrepresentation of the pricing, or, at the least, walks a gray, very thin, misleading line.
Have you guys thought about this as a bailout rebreather?
BOV?
I dive this unit and absolutely love it. Amazing work of breathing, super simple to operate, light, takes up hardly any space on a boat, and so much fun to dive. Every CCR is going to have pros and cons. For me and my diving, the pros of the GO far outweigh the cons.
@@Garrett__H Hi. Did you pay the mentioned price?
What do you see as the cons? Who was your instructor?
@@jamesnichols3060 This is my first rebreather so I paid for the unit, computer, sensors, and tank. Same prices as listed on their site. For rebreather divers that already own the computer, sensors, etc. they'd only need to pay for the unit itself. Also, have to factor in training costs, but that will apply to all units.
@@Navy1977 IMO cons are based on what kind of diving you want to do. If 4hr long cave dives is your thing, this isn't the rebreather for you. Same for super deep dives past 200ft. Some people see the size and scrubber capacity as a con, but I see it as a pro because of the types of dives I'll use it for. I wanted a unit I could dive all the time for most typical dives and wouldn't be wasting 2+ lbs of scrubber due to the larger capacity in other units. It's a mechanical ccr, which is what I wanted also. Some may see that as a con if they prefer eccr. So again, just a matter of preference and how you envision using it.
@@Navy1977 Doug Ebersole was my instructor
Can you actually dive this with no additional options required? Website shows ADV, computer, 02 sensors and the like are options? I've watched the videos and looked at the website and still can't figure it out. I might consider buying one even though the DiveTalk boys block commentators on their channel for no legitimate reason, you know differing opinions, calling out BS, telling the truth. And I'm not going on next year's dive trip either, for the same reason. And the truth shall set you free. 😔😒🥴🤭🤦
You can, but it isn't ready to dive unless you already have a compatible monitor and sensors. The ready to dive price is just under $6k plus tank.
@Teampegleg Well then, it's marketed to recreational rebreather divers who might not have those items, I mean, come on, who has sensors lying around unless they already have a rebreather? At that price point, I'd have to take a look at more mature technology from a bigger, more established company. Thanks for getting me smarter on this. I think I'll pass afterall.
@@Navy1977 Which is a point I've made to Gus when he responded on FB to a post in a group. Claiming that it is so much cheaper than the competition when their competition advertised prices are often ready to dive if you add tanks.
And it is really not that much cheaper than their competing chest mount units, about $,1500 IIRC. Which while cheaper it isn't nearly as much as he implies when he markets it as "Fraction of the cost..."
I know he wants to sell units but in the CCR market where trust is a big deal., it leaves a bad taste in my mouth.
@@TeampeglegI know you are one of the more prolific contributors with valued, insightful comments on their channel. I appreciate your candor and think you are spot on correct. I'm fairly certain my questioning of the price and value of this unit, both publicly and offline, was a major factor in my getting banned from posting on their channel. Dive Safe, Dive Often.
@@Navy1977 I think you might have be confused with someone else. I haven't watched DT in years not since they first started the channel.
As we have largely similar diving credentials and experience I don't really need to see someone else's reaction to a video, I have the knowledge and experience to come to my own conclusions.
Doesn't look very recreational to me.
How come? Why not? Seems to me it's designed for more recreational diving, although I think you could use it for more technical diving in an open overhead environment.
@ equipment looks too technical in my perspective compared to a Mares horizon. The mares looks more fail proof with less hoses etc. Price pretty much the same. I'm no rebreather diver so my opinion is just by visual.
@Richard1976 not sure if it's less complicated, less hoses, etc, but the Mares unit sure is packaged nicely and at a solid price point. It's also from a well established company, not an unknown startup.
Have you ever seen any normal, "non-recreational" rebreathers? That thing is indeed as recreational as it gets.
@@Navy1977
I saw couple Mares units in my marina when they were making videos of units, they look nice, but its still not real ccr its semi closed rebreather, and to be honest for price of them I would say its better to buy used JJ or meg