The personal gear for open-water scuba (tanks and weights rent locally). A dive computer that tracks depth and time, a BCD-fitted regulator, a mask, fins, and boots, a dive light, and a surface marker. Get certified, dive within your limits, come back slow.
Plans
Choose a plan that fits your needs and budget
Item List
5Personal Gear
2 itemsLife Support
2 itemsSafety
1 items| Item | Category | Specs | Qty | Price | Link |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Life Jackets | TypeSMB InflateOral / inflator ColorOrange | 1 | $50 | View Shop |
FAQ
Common questions about this kit
Own the regulator?
Yes if you dive regularly — your regulator is your life support, and owning it means you know its service history. Rent tanks and weights; own what you breathe through.
Dive computer — necessary?
Yes — it tracks depth, time, and nitrogen load, the numbers that keep you safe from decompression sickness. Dive within its limits and ascend slowly.
Why ascend slowly?
Nitrogen dissolves in your tissues under pressure; ascend faster than your body (and the computer) can clear it and you get "the bends" — painful and sometimes fatal. Slow and safe, every time.
Buddy diving?
Always, with pre-dive checks (BWRAF). Your buddy is your backup air and your rescue. Solo diving is a specialty for experts, not a default.
User Reviews
Scuba kit and my tri-swim training share the dive-computer-is-the-pace-clock brain — ascend-slowly is the rule that keeps you alive. Good kit.