JHumbert15
Contributor
Hi All,
I'm sorry, but yet another post about doubles wing size and weighting.
I'm looking into a wing for 2x LP85s, and I'm struggling with the math a little bit to determine wing size. I know people have said 40 vs 60 based off of tank diameter, but I'd rather understand the "why" behind it.
I'm looking at a Halcyon evolve (40 or 60).
Here we go:
As I understand the wing has to do 2 things:
My weighting:
Regs: -4
Bands: -2
Manifold: -4
SS Plate w Harness and webbing: -6
Total: -16
If I really pump the 85s with gas, let's call them 12 pounds.
Right now I'm at -28. If I add 2 AL40 deco tanks, I get to -2.5 x 2 = roughly -5
This brings me to -32. If I have to add a v-weight at 5-7 pounds, I come in at -37 to -39.
I'm afraid adding flashlights and a can light could push me over the 40 pounds.
When I'm in the rig at the surface, I'm not necessarily concerned because the drysuit should be balanced by the ballast of the regs, plate, bands, and manifold plus a small v-weight, so when I'm wearing the rig I'm looking at the wing only needing to compensate for the gas in the back tanks, plus stages, plus my head to be comfortable. However, if I need to float the rig without me in it, this looks like it could be marginal.
Is my math and thinking correct here or have I misunderstood something somewhere? How are people comfortable in a 40lb wing, 85s, and a couple deco bottles?
I also understand the answer could be move weight on a belt, or change the whole setup to deal with 2 deco tanks, but I like the way the 85s are so if I could keep this config I'd rather do that and understand the thinking behind this math and process.
Thanks!
I'm sorry, but yet another post about doubles wing size and weighting.
I'm looking into a wing for 2x LP85s, and I'm struggling with the math a little bit to determine wing size. I know people have said 40 vs 60 based off of tank diameter, but I'd rather understand the "why" behind it.
I'm looking at a Halcyon evolve (40 or 60).
Here we go:
As I understand the wing has to do 2 things:
- float the rig at the surface *without me in it*
- compensate for the loss in buoyancy of exposure protection (I'm in a dry suit so I'm not worried about this as much because I'm not necessarily losing anything due to compression, and while maybe I technically am, I'm sure it's not near 40 pounds)
My weighting:
Regs: -4
Bands: -2
Manifold: -4
SS Plate w Harness and webbing: -6
Total: -16
If I really pump the 85s with gas, let's call them 12 pounds.
Right now I'm at -28. If I add 2 AL40 deco tanks, I get to -2.5 x 2 = roughly -5
This brings me to -32. If I have to add a v-weight at 5-7 pounds, I come in at -37 to -39.
I'm afraid adding flashlights and a can light could push me over the 40 pounds.
When I'm in the rig at the surface, I'm not necessarily concerned because the drysuit should be balanced by the ballast of the regs, plate, bands, and manifold plus a small v-weight, so when I'm wearing the rig I'm looking at the wing only needing to compensate for the gas in the back tanks, plus stages, plus my head to be comfortable. However, if I need to float the rig without me in it, this looks like it could be marginal.
Is my math and thinking correct here or have I misunderstood something somewhere? How are people comfortable in a 40lb wing, 85s, and a couple deco bottles?
I also understand the answer could be move weight on a belt, or change the whole setup to deal with 2 deco tanks, but I like the way the 85s are so if I could keep this config I'd rather do that and understand the thinking behind this math and process.
Thanks!