Do you have an Oceanic Data
Max Pro computer? If so, our
advice is to upgrade or replace it.
Each month, Undercurrent sends
out an informative e-mail to more than 10,000 divers (sign up at www.undercurrent.org/) and we asked them to report any
problems with computers they have had.
Of the forty divers who responded, most all problems were random
and no significant problems could be associated with any
brand with one glaring exception.
Several divers reported failures with the Datamax Pro air-integrated
Oceanic model, and its successor, the Datamax Pro Plus.
In one case, a Data Max Pro’s low battery indicator started flashing
though the battery had just been changed. In another
Datamax Pro failure, the pressure indicator began to show
decreasing values. One Pro Plus failed to even power up. Another
time, the Sherwood version of the Datamax (made by Pelagic,
which manufactures Oceanic, Sherwood and many other brands
of computers) suddenly began providing only depth and time
readouts. Commonly, the owners reported that they could return
the damaged units for repairs or rebuilt replacements. Yet that
was after poor technology had compromised their diving safety.
We called Oceanic tech rep Ron Lendess, who explained that
the Datamax Pro was discontinued in 2000. It was replaced by the
Pro Plus, which debuted in 1999. According to Lendess, Oceanic
will continue to service the Datamax Pro until 2010 and offers an
upgrade program that allows Oceanic owners to “trade in” an old
computer for a newer model, at a discount off retail price. The
current retail list price on the hose mounted Pro Plus is $899, but
the upgrade price is $540.