Proper weighting is critical to enjoying a dive and has a huge impact on buoyancy and body control. There are two times weighting is crucial. The first is at the outset of the dive. You need proper weighting to descend. The second, and most critical point, is at the end of a dive. You need adequate weighting to control your ascent and to hover without exertion for a safety sop at 15-20 feet at the end of the dive. That is the practical formula. If you can't hold a relaxed hover at the end of the dive, add weight for the next dive in the same equipment and conditions. One reason I am a nut about logging dives is that the long becomes a data base for the diver concerning, among other things, proper weighting when using specified gear in specified conditions. Divers get lazy about weight checks, and so do dive concessionaires ( though liveaboards invariable have a weight check moment that everyone should have). That's why a log book of data is so useful. For my wife and I, assuming no great fluctuation in our personal weight, I can reference our last dive in the same gear and conditions and note the proper weight.
One last comment, and I know some will disagree with me, BUT... for Recreational diving, it is better to be a little bit overweighted than to be underweighted.
DivemasterDennis
One last comment, and I know some will disagree with me, BUT... for Recreational diving, it is better to be a little bit overweighted than to be underweighted.
DivemasterDennis