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Suunto Stinger Advanced Dive Wristop Computer Watch

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 Location:  Home » TVs and HDTVs » GPS & Navigation » Suunto Stinger Advanced Dive Wristop Computer WatchSeptember 6, 2008  
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Suunto Stinger Advanced Dive Wristop Computer Watch
Suunto Stinger Advanced Dive Wristop Computer Watch

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Brand: Suunto
Category: Sports
Department: Unisex-adult

List Price: $769.99
Buy New: $699.00
You Save: $70.99 (9%)



New (1) Used (1) from $675.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 20197

Color: Titanium
Size: Titanium
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 4 x 2 x 2

MPN: Stinger-Elastomer
UPC: 045235112241
EAN: 0045235112241
ASIN: B00005N9E2

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Features:
  • Full-decompression dive computer
  • Backlit LCD display
  • Separate air, nitrox, and free/gauge modes
  • Complete watch functions
  • Titanium case

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The Suunto Stinger is is a full decompression Dive Computer, and is perfect for Scuba Diving. It is the only watch that gives separate reads on Air Nitrox, and Free Dive Gauge Modules. The Stinger gives a clear read on depth, duration of your dive, ascent time and no-decompression time. A fashionable watch, the Suunto Stinger is ideal to wear even when not diving. Choose between sleek Stainless, Titanium or Standard outer casing.

Amazon.com Product Description
Suunto's top-of-the-line wristop computer has everything a demanding diver could want. The Stinger has three separate diving modes with its own profile memory: regular air dive, enriched-air nitrox dive, and freediving/depth gauge with timer mode. In addition to having information available to you at all times, the Suunto Stinger records and stores data for later analysis. You can view, compare, and analyze your diving performance through a specially designed PC interface.

The Stinger comes in three different versions: this one with a titanium housing, one with a metallic band, and one with an elastic strap.

Suunto Stinger implements a Suunto-specific ceiling and floor feature. The decompression floor is the deepest point at which the ascent time will not increase. The decompression ceiling is the shallowest depth to which you should ascend. These depths provide the range where the diver utilizes the decompression stop most efficiently. Suunto Stinger uses the Suunto Reduced Gradient Bubble Model (RGBM) for decompression calculations.

You can adjust the Suunto Stinger for diving at altitudes up to 3,000 meters (10,000 feet), and a personal level of conservatism can be added if desired. It enables you to set dive time and maximum depth alarms before your dive. The clear electro-luminescent backlight is activated automatically when dive alarms are given, making the dive parameters clearly visible and legible. The system is highly energy-efficient with only minimal power consumption. The built-in dive planning function helps you plan your next dive by showing you the no-decompression time data for different depths.

In the Nitrox mode, you can program Suunto Stinger for nitrox mixtures of 21 to 50-percent oxygen in 1-percent increments. You can also adjust it for oxygen partial pressure from 1.2 bar to 1.6 bar in 0.1-unit increments. Suunto Stinger gives both visual and audible alarms when the limit for oxygen partial pressure, CNS or OTU values are exceeded.

For freediving enthusiasts, Suunto Stinger introduces a 1-second precision timer with selectable 2, 4, 10, 20, 30 or 60-second profile memory-sampling rates. After 5 minutes of continuous diving in the Free mode, it automatically switches to Gauge mode. In both the Free and Gauge mode you can use a run-time timer. This makes Suunto Stinger also ideal for technical and military diving.

The triple o-ring pushbuttons and its monocase design without a separate rear cover make Suunto Stinger virtually leakproof. The case has a pressure rating of 20 ATM (660 feet), so you can rely on the Stinger to work at the deepest depths.

The Suunto Dive Manager (SDM) software that enables deeper understanding and better graphical representation of the data recorded and stored with Suunto Stinger. With SDM you can upload your dives to a PC and create a more detailed dive logbook. Here you can analyze and plan your sports activities and keep a training diary.

Suunto Sports Community The SuuntoSports.com Internet site enables you to share information with other cross-sport enthusiasts from around the world. You can share statistics, learn new things, exchange ideas, and pick up useful tips from people equally passionate about sport. You can also upload your data from Suunto Trek Manager to SuuntoSports.com in order to compare your performance with others, relate tales of your wildest adventures or simply share your hiking and training experiences, travel reports and digital photos with friends or the entire

What's in the Box This package contains the titanium Suunto Stinger wrist-top computer and printed instruction manual. It is backed by a one-year warranty.


Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Good diving computer   August 22, 2006
 6 out of 6 found this review helpful

This is my first diving computer. I was pleased with its functions and ease of use. It logs all your dives and you can transfer them to your computer. It really simplified logging all my dives.
The computer will track your every aspect of your dive and you can set warning for depth and time. It tracks your dive time, surface time, no flight time, ascending speed, recommended safety stop and mandatory stops.
Overall I am very happy with it and every diver should have one.



5 out of 5 stars Great Product, Great Customer Delivery, Great Sale Experience   March 17, 2006
 4 out of 6 found this review helpful

Wonderfull watch! Great sales experience. I bought that for my wife, and I called the vendor asked to expedite the shipping. It was delivered ahead of schedule, on time for her anniversary. Excellent price and smooth purchase. I definitely recommend and would return to purchase more. The product itself has all the required features and functions that a professional diver would expect!


5 out of 5 stars Get one!   March 5, 2003
 39 out of 39 found this review helpful

On thing...this is not a watch. It is a dive computer. I would not get this to wear around except on dive trips.

I've owned one for almost two years and the best feature I can think of is that its very simple to use. It takes care of all the administive details for you. Depth, dynamically keeps recalculating how much time you have left at your current depth, safety stop timer, when you're topside it keeps track of your surface intervals and refactors for your next dive. No flying warnings appear as appropriate.

It made me a more aware diver. When I started using it, I noticed it kept beeping at me telling me I was ascending too fast or descending too fast - ie breaking rules. It was annoying at first but the sad fact was that I was breaking rules and didn't even know it and I was putting myself in a higher risk category. I paid attention to the warnings and I think I'm safer for it. Now my Suunto doesn't beep much when I dive.

The algorithm it uses is very conservative so I'm comfortable.

It is not air integrated so you still have to look at your pressure guages. But if you rent your equipment or you're a new diver, this is the first thing to buy (literally buy it with your mask, fins, snorkle, and wetsuit) before you start going out for regulators or BCDs and stuff like that. It just takes makes diving more enjoyable. Its especially useful for multiday dive trips where you're renting gear every day...it keeps track of your no fly times which on long dive trips can extend more than 12 hours so the computer tells you when not to fly.

Titanium is very light. I use the plastic strap mostly because its easier to put on and off with a dive suit. The Titanium strap looks cool though. I generally don't wear it as a watch...its huge and you can tell its a dive computer - if you're 6'5" maybe you can use it as a watch. I do wear it on diving vacations though as my primary.

It has a bunch of features too nitrox mixes, dive planning, and a whole bunch of other stuff.

An interesting thing is that if you break too many rules or do something that puts you in a higher risk of microbubbles and things like that, it will give you warnings telling you not to dive. I received one of those infractions once. Consider it your diving police officer. It is pretty merciless though.

When I get home I download the data to my computer and it tells me exactly what I was doing.

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