Once you've mastered a drysuit it it becomes lazy diving, if you are using it for bouyancy.
During the descent you have to add air, but on the ascent the cvd will auto vent, making the dive lazy.
For single cylinder diving a drysuit can do all the work rather than the wing. When you move to twins it's arguable that you might switch to using the wing for buoyancy.
As with all diving it's the practice that makes perfect. Once mastered it makes diving far more comfortable when diving in temperate or cold climates. For those of us diving colder waters the fact that you stay warm makes it more likely that you will continue diving and may well divd12 months of the year.
Those of us travelling to the red sea will often take a drysuit during the winter months.
Gareth
During the descent you have to add air, but on the ascent the cvd will auto vent, making the dive lazy.
For single cylinder diving a drysuit can do all the work rather than the wing. When you move to twins it's arguable that you might switch to using the wing for buoyancy.
As with all diving it's the practice that makes perfect. Once mastered it makes diving far more comfortable when diving in temperate or cold climates. For those of us diving colder waters the fact that you stay warm makes it more likely that you will continue diving and may well divd12 months of the year.
Those of us travelling to the red sea will often take a drysuit during the winter months.
Gareth