Despite its name, the annual DEMA trade show, produced by the Diving Equipment & Marketing
Association and held two weeks ago in Orlando, FL, has almost turned into a dive travel show, with
booths from every possible destination vying for business. While a press release from the Indonesian
tourist office describes the remote Raja Ampat as "well-known," it seems like only yesterday that I
made my way to West Papua's Bird's Head peninsula and the only dive operation in the region. Now,
the Indonesian government is limiting liveaboard licenses in Raja Ampat to 40. How times change.
Is the Sport Diver Taking a Back Seat to Tech Diving?
DEMA provides a good sounding board for what equipment manufacturers
are thinking, and this year, it looks as if they are marketing more products
to existing customers rather than to those who might be tempted to take up
diving for the first time. For example, a plethora of booths proudly exhibited
improved and refined closed-circuit rebreathers, such as the Inspiration
Evo, with its modernized handset and display (www.apdiving.com), and an
apparent obsession with all aspects of technical diving. Most of them seemed
to have given up on providing anything new for the ordinary single-tank leisure
diver, because those who adventure into technical diving buy a lot more
equipment. Why sell a single regulator to a leisure diver when you can sell four
to a techie?
A decade ago, a Mares executive swore to me that his company would never entertain the techie
business segment because it represented such a small percentage of its potential market, but now it
has proudly launched the comprehensive XR extended range product line with the headline, "Farther.
Deeper. Beyond." (https://www.facebook.com/MARESjustaddwater/videos/1063688340322550)
Dive shop buyers seemed to be lapping it all up, and the shelves of those dive stores still in business
next year will almost certainly be full of techie gear. I say "still in business" because dive stores
worldwide are in crisis and are closing down at an alarming rate. Could it be that this obsession with
deep diving is excluding those who would otherwise take up scuba diving? It's a question worth
considering.
Among the techie products in this Mares range, which includes all manner of metal back-plates,
harnesses and wings, is the R2S-VR regulator, which unusually routes its hose vertically downward
from the second stage. This in turn puts that hose conveniently under the arm of the user instead of
over his shoulder. Although it's primarily designed for side-mounted or multiple-tank users, I can see
its tidy design being adopted by single-tank divers, too. The conveniently angled high-pressure ports
put these hoses neatly to one side also. (www.mares.com)
Mostly Cosmetic Improvements
Meanwhile Cressi, a neighbor of Mares in Italy, displayed a sleek and lightweight BCD with integrated
weight pockets called the Ultra Light. I wrote a rave review of a similar BCD, the SeaQuest 3D, 20 years
ago, but it was soon discontinued because in those days, nobody wanted to buy such a thing. Severe airline
charges for overweight baggage have changed the way people think today. (www.cressi.com)
Scubapro, Oceanic Worldwide, Aqua Lung, as well as the brands that are now part of the Huish
Outdoors empire (Suunto, Atomic, Bare, Zeagle), exhibited cosmetically improved products, not too
dissimilar to last year's. Oceanic continues to promote its Explorer semi-closed-circuit rebreather to
the leisure diver who wants to look like a Stormtrooper from Star Wars, but it otherwise confers little
advantage over a simpler, more easily transported and less expensive open-circuit system.
Suunto has responded to the recent research asserting that deep stops might do more harm than
good by allowing one to abandon that setting on its top-of-the-line computer, the Eon Steel, when used
with nitrox. Suunto also revealed its updated range of computers, suffixed "Novo," which will soon
replace the aging but successful Vyper and its siblings. (www.suunto.com)
The Omnix computer from Liquivision claimed to have a new platform design, and it has a much
better "manufactured" appearance than that company's previous worthy but boxy-looking products.
With a brightly colored display, the Omnix features "transflective technology" that increases its legibility
in bright ambient light. Not only can it be wirelessly integrated among up to 10 other divers
(an advantage for instructors escorting trainees on their first ocean dives), techies can also switch it between three different nitrox mixes during the same dive. (www.liquivision.com)
If I may digress, over the years, we have seen various systems for alerting other divers to the airstatus
of individuals, but these have never proved popular. It seems that a diver running low on air
prefers to keep this vital information private until the last moment -- who knows why?
Dive System, another Italian manufacturer, introduced an advanced computer, the Ratio iX3M. It not
only monitors several divers, it has an LED display on the tank-mounted air-integration transmitter that
tells everyone networked what's left in a tank. This also comes with a heads-up display for the user, and is
available as a stand-alone product. I wonder how many people are brash enough to buy into that idea?
The all-singing, all-dancing Ratio iX3M also claims to be the first diving computer with integrated
GPS navigation, although it was not clear how that would function underwater. Like many current
computers, it gives the knowledgeable user a choice of algorithms to use. (www.divesystem.com)
Some Useful Dive Accessories
So what products were relevant to the typical traveling diver? The Scuba Capsule encloses an
iPhone and turns it into a useful diving instrument that evidently can be taken down to 660 feet. A
downloadable app allows the iPhone to act as a dive computer with a choice of algorithms, comprehensive
dive planner and automatic data storage. One must wonder whether the iPhone will eventually
drive computer manufacturers out of business. (www.scubacapsule.com)
The more complex Diveroid works with the latest Samsung
Galaxies to provide dive computer, camera, compass and automatic
logbook functions to recreational no-deco diving depths. When
used as a camera underwater, the Galaxy retains essential diving
information on the display. But don't expect to make phone calls
underwater with either the iPhone or Galaxy. (www.diveroid.com)
The Buddy Watcher, which you wear on your arm, allows
fast and soundless communication between buddies, guides and instructors up to 66 feet apart, using a vibrator and a set of LEDs. It provides a more discreet method
of contact than those annoying rattles or banging on your tank. (www.buddy-watcher.com)
If you want to carry out a conversation underwater and spend less than $50 in doing so, Voice-inthe-
Sea showed a selection of solutions that were as simple as two cans and a length of string might
be. The basic Toucan model is a soft plastic tube around a couple of feet long, with diaphragms at each
end. One diver holds one end to his ear, while the other speaks normally into the mouthpiece at the
other end, once purged of water, sort of an underwater ear trumpet. Will this be a one-DEMA-showonly
product and sink without a trace? (www.voiceinthesea.com)
There were numerous remotely-operated vehicles, both free-ranging and sea floor-traveling, but the
Swedish TTR-SB SeaWolf particularly caught my eye. It carries a GoPro camera and is operated by a
diver using a controlling leash, rather like walking the dog. One can control it in shallow water from
the surface with an iPhone or from the shore by radio control. (http://ttrobotix.com/product/seawolf)
Sharks continue to be the subject of a love-hate relationship with people. Isn't it ironic that companies
advocating shark deterrents like NoShark (http://bluvand.com) and Shark Shield (https://sharkshield.
com) were in the convention center booths cheek by jowl with those of dive operators advocating
in-your-face shark diving experiences and conservation groups advocating shark protection?
The Busiest Part of the DEMA Show Floor
The underwater photography section of the DEMA show was as busy as ever, with the American
company Ikelite (www.ikelite.com) and the Austrian manufacturer Subal (http://subal.com) both rising
to the recent challenges mounted by Nauticam in Hong Kong with new and vastly improved DSLR
camera housings.
The Japanese manufacturer Acquapazza brightened the trade show floor with a dazzling array of 15
different colored metal housings for the popular Sony RX 100 Mk4 compact camera, with an optional LCD screen hood for bright conditions. They can work with either M67 or
LD (bayonet-fitting) wet lenses. Similarly using Inon dome ports and wet
lenses, the APSG-dpQ housing accommodates the Sigmas Quattro range of
cameras. Divers suffering pixel envy may be satisfied with the APSO-A72
Acquapazza housing, which is made for the 42.4 megapixel Sony A7 fullframe
mirrorless camera. It can be used at an astounding light sensitivity
level approaching ISO 41,000. (www.acquapazza.jp/en)
Someone ruefully asked me how many light mounting solutions could
a niche market as underwater photography bear, with so many companies
offering their versions of the one-inch ball-and-clamp system?
While Fisheye showed some clever electronics with its FIX range of
lamps (evidently we don't judge light by Kelvin any more; it's now by the color-rendering index, or
Ra), Orcalight demonstrated a 30,000 lumen monster that was only rivalled by Keldan's Swiss-made
modular video lights with up to 26,000 lumens output (www.orcalight.co.uk; http://keldanlights.com).
At the other end of the price range, iTorch offered a range of lamps that complimented its equally
impressive range of options for housing iPhone cameras (complete with wide-angle lens options) and
even for taking a GoPro to 500 feet deep. (http://itorch.ca)
Most impressive, but still in development, by i Torch were the Simbiosis SS-1 and SS-2 underwater
photographer's strobes that work in conjunction with -- and were powered by the battery by -- one of
the same manufacturer's LED video lights. It might provide an important alternative to those products
from Sea & Sea and Inon that monopolize the market. At the same time, iTorch exhibited the prototype
of a mini lighting system with two heads mounted on flexible arms, intended for use with a mini pointof-
view (POV) camera.
GoPro cameras and the other mini POV clones have come to dominate underwater videography
as much as they have every other sporting activity, and various accessories for them were revealed,
including a 360-degree system by 360Heroes (www.360heros.com). Backscatter demonstrated its
improved and refined Flip4 flip-filter system for the GoPro, to be priced lower than its popular Flip
3.1. (www.flipfilters.com)
The Most Significant New Product on Display?
Strangely enough, it was not intended for scuba divers, but merely for those who want to lie on the
surface looking down at the underwater world -- a full-face snorkelling mask.
Several manufacturers offered it, and all but one appeared to be exhibiting the same product, the
Aria, made by Ocean Reef (www.oceanreefgroup.com). Allowing one to breathe naturally through the
nose, it is designed to eliminate jaw discomfort and mask fogging, as well as water in the snorkel, by
circling the air down through a top tube, around the face and back out through an exhaust. Users can
even talk while using it, though it cannot be used for breath-hold diving.
The H2O Ninja Mask, an almost identical product, is similarly made from polycarbonate and silicone
and has the almost obligatory docking point for a GoPro POV camera. Its Hawaiian manufacturer
claims to have already sold 5,000 units. Available in a wide range of pastel colors, it will be a great treat
for nondivers and especially kids. (www.h2oninjamask.com)
John Bantin is the former technical editor of DIVER magazine in the United Kingdom. For 20 years, he used and
reviewed virtually every piece of dive equipment available in the U.K. and the U.S., and made around 300 dives
per year for that purpose. He is also a professional underwater photographer, and most recently the author of
Shark Bytes, available at www.undercurrent.org