Oh god, I am sure that there can be many challenging conditions in Florida. As you could or should imagine I as person from New York have spent a fair bit of time diving the common wrecks in your area. I have done drift dives at night on the Rodeo 25 for example; of course there are more challenging situations afforded in Florida. The conditions taken as normal in the North Atlantic are on average pretty tough and the use of an anchor line in many cases a "jonline" is a safety precaution and sometimes a necessity!! "Drift" diving many of our wrecks in the conditions common here would be nothing short of fool hardy. The currents at times in some areas are simply too powerful and unpredictable to safely drift dive. A diver lost his life on the Andrea Doria because his Jonline broke while decompressing; current up-swell apparently brought him to the surface in seconds and that was it. The conditions here can involve cold under 40º, strong unpredictable currents, total lack of visibility, rough seas, and great depth as you could find anywhere. In addition many divers up here got into the wreck diving for the artifacts and artifact retrieval can be physically taxing especially when the artifact is affixed to a corroded wreck. If you think that the "muck" diving here is a "walk in the park" then all i can say is the same as i said before and that is that you are foolish. You are welcome to drift dive the Texas Tower, The Andrea Doria or any other deep, dark, current ridden dive site here but i and I am sure many others would advice strongly against it!
There will be no agreement between you and I on the BC issue...and I am sure we can agree on that

As to the wrecks in Lauderdale, they are practically without currents, and can be dived by anchoring. The Rodeo 25 is a novice wreck dive, with no challenge. The only challending dives in Lauderdale are in 225 to 280 feet of water, where Lauderdale diving begins to really shine...the 120 foot or less areas in Lauderdale are pretty tame and lame..to me.
Our wrecks in Palm Beach get far more currents and far more large marine life, these currents being much stronger on some days than others.....on a normal day, on a wreck like the Zion or the Bonaire, you would not be able to anchor it. No one would consider a jon line, that is for mild current scenarios...
Our advanced deep wrecks, like the Skycliffe at 225 feet, sit in currents that would make a jon line approach suicidal.....Palm Beach created a drift style of diving deep wrecks ( to over 280 feet in huge currents) that has us drift in at a nice fast descent speed, but with no exertion....and then get into the ship from the lee side. Deco in done in the water collumn, free floating. Michael H Kane used to do the Doria, years ago, and he used to think their jon line ideas were valid...after he did a few of our advanced wrecks, he forever altered this misconception.. You guys use them for the very poor vis, and maybe the large seas that make it hard for a boat to see a SMB or Torpedo float with Flag....althout we dive here sometimes to 10 and 12 foot seas, and my torpedo float with dive flag is easily visible.
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Here is a night dive with currents that would make the jon line an extremely dangerous choice....on one of our recreational depth wrecks sitting in about 90 feet of water....
http://youtu.be/qeQp5aqy2_s?hd=1 in several places you can see how fast the current is, as it pushes the Goliath groupers to the point they are swimming at 45 degree angles to move through it... Once in the protection of structure, there is not problem with the currents....but when you want to see something like a spawning event, you need a diving technique that suits the conditions.....These fish are typically aggregating at high current structures. Using a bp/w, having slick in the water trim, and good drift diving techniques ( how to use the bottom contours like a white water kayaker) all come into play for this.
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I agree that the cycling analogy works but more to point out that (in my estimation) 99.5% of the cyclists ability to propel himself is his individual strength fitness level and skill. Not his bike's configuration. As I pointed out, a pro rider would always beat me, even on a beach cruiser.
Now to compare the difference between a jacket and BP/W is nothing like comparing a beach cruiser to a high end racing bike is just silly. The difference may be closer to comparing medium priced 10 speed and one that costs a few hundred more. But it is all still in that .5% range when if comes to how well a diver performs.
Hi Dave,
I don't know if you have heard of Ralph Clemente, but he was one of the most spectacular cyclists in South florida for over 20 years. A category one rider ( Olympic level), Ralph could get in the front of one of the big 70 person pacelines on A1A, and run the pace up over 35 mph and keep it there till the 70 person group dropped to 20, then 10, and then just 4 or 5.
On a few occaisions, as a joke, he would show up on a mountain bike. He would usually be able to stay with the paceline for most of the ride, but would not really have any place in the final mile leading to the big sprints. There have been only one or two other riders who have ever tried this, and been able to stay with a fast pack --on a mountain bike.
My point though...was that someone that likes pedaling at 12 mph, on a cruiser or a mountain bike, will not have any interest in getting on a $9000 race bike, and trying to ride faster. This is not what they like to do, and they would not care for the feel of the race bike. They would not want to ride fast, either.
I agree...if you are talking about the bikes in the fast paceline, there is not a huge difference between most of the bikes in how well the riders do on a 25 mile ride averaging 25 to 32 mph....With the exception of the full aero time trial bikes.... Strong riders can pedal away when the wind conditions are right, with the aero bikes, and the pack may never catch them. For me, it is somewhere between a 3 and 4 mph sustained speed difference...I have the full Aero Fuji Time Trial bike....I used to have a Pinarello Prince ( full on road race or crit bike), and while it is a legendary bike, on a road like A1A, the aerodynamics of the Time Trial bike overwhelm all the other issues of the Pinarello. I have been on a 2 man breakaway with Ralph--the pack never caught us from the start....chasing hard the whole time...Ralph was much faster than me on a normal ride or in a time trial on an aero bike, but on this day, he was using a traditional race bike, and I was using an aero bike...the Extra 3 or 4 mph my bike gave me, was the Holy Grail. Ralph had to put out much more power than I did for the ride. I will say this again..Ralph is a much faster, better cyclist than me....but at this high speed level with no hiding in a paceline..just the two of us to share the draft, power takes a back seat to aerodynamics.... I ride at a Cat 3 level...Ralph was riding at a cat 1 level...Big difference.
Water is so dense, just increasing speed a tiny bit has enormous implications in power from propulsion, and also in how much drag you have....this is why I see the cycling anology effective, as it shows how much more power it takes to just go from 21 to 23 mph....and how someone who can hold 25 mph is inhuman compared to the person that maxes at 23. That 2 mph is huge.
Underwater, just adding a half a mile per hour is a huge big deal. Adding another one gets even crazier, and so on. At some point, aerodynamics makes a huge difference.
The bp/wing won't magically make someone a better diver. But it won't limit a person that wants to improve, that has the innate coordination and drive to train hard, and to optimimze.....the pufferfish bc WILL limit this same person.
There are very streamlined vests that are used by Palm Beach divers in extreme currents, and they are fine diving with good bp/wing divers.
The marketplace has many non-streamlined vests also..... A backplate and 30 pound wind, rigged DIR style with no danglies, is just going to be slick...And like I said, you CAN accomplish slick if you know what vest to look for, and how to rig it....Too many divers do not.
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***when I first linked the video in my last post, I used the wrong video....the right link is in now, but here it is again...
http://youtu.be/qeQp5aqy2_s?hd=1 This does a good job of showing the currents on advanced Palm Beach dive.....Dives you would not ever try to have a boat anchor for.