Right. I was only quibbling with this statement.
It seems like I often see posts that are somehow implying that using an AL80 makes you light or a steel tank makes you heavier. Which is wrong. If you are properly weighted, then you will start the dive negative by the amount of gas you're carrying. It has nothing to do with aluminum vs steel tanks.
Similarly, if you use an AL80 and 3 pounds of lead or an HP80 that has the 3 pounds of "lead" built in, none of that is what makes you negatively buoyant at the start of a dive. It's only the gas in the cylinder that makes you negative. You use it during the dive, it's gone, and you're neutral at the end.
Whether you understood that or not, it seems like statements like the one you made lead some people into confusion about weighting and cylinder materials.
I dived with someone once who was using an HP100 for the first time. She'd always used AL80s before. She blamed her feeling of being heavy and struggling to control her buoyancy on the tank being heavy and steel. She didn't get that that had nothing to do with it. Being heavier than she was used to was simply from carrying more gas. She was used to starting 6# negative, but with a 100 (whether it's steel or aluminum), she was starting 8# negative. And that means it required more gas in her BCD at the start of the dive than she was used to putting in. And more gas in your BCD makes it harder to control your buoyancy.
Anyway, my apologies for being didactic. I'll shut up now.