Steelyeyes
Contributor
Trim and weighting are important.
Going slow is the most impactful in a couple of ways. Increasing drag is not a linear function. For a fully submerged object that's relatively cylindrical it takes 8 times the force to double the speed. The difference is to compensate for drag and turbulence caused by the increased speed of motion through the water. Less speed mean less force, less force mean less metabolic expense to produce that force which translates to lower CO2 production. The result is a lot more efficient use of your breathing gas.
The lower your metabolic rate the more insulation you need to stay warm. Staying warm helps cut gas use too.
The end result is that not only do you get more bottom time you see a lot more stuff. That's a lot more bang for your buck.
Going slow is the most impactful in a couple of ways. Increasing drag is not a linear function. For a fully submerged object that's relatively cylindrical it takes 8 times the force to double the speed. The difference is to compensate for drag and turbulence caused by the increased speed of motion through the water. Less speed mean less force, less force mean less metabolic expense to produce that force which translates to lower CO2 production. The result is a lot more efficient use of your breathing gas.
The lower your metabolic rate the more insulation you need to stay warm. Staying warm helps cut gas use too.
The end result is that not only do you get more bottom time you see a lot more stuff. That's a lot more bang for your buck.