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@KevinNM
"Don't know. The cells break down over time and dive cycles, it gets less buoyant and less warm. Though I've heard of that being an issue after enough dives, not just time."
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Kevin of New Mexico You are So Correct...
Some years ago there was a very large active world wide company called "Voit" Willard Voit the founder and owner wanted his company that held his name to be number one diving company and only sell the very best products
One was to produce the very best wet suit
I was a consultant /advisor to Voit and Fred Roberts (the author of Basic SCUBA) was the chief and only engineer. It was Fred who created a very crude but never equaled test for wet suits. He collected samples of all known wet suit manufactures of that era and attached them in a row to a piece of wood/aka test board
On a sunny SoCal day we ventured to Catalina Island to a secluded cove called Italian gardens where the ocean drops off very fast ,
We attached the test board to a weight belt with 100 feet of line. We jumped over the side with a micrometer and measured and recorded the thickness at 25, 50 75 and 100 feet. We surfaced and as Fred recorded the data I repeatedly dropped the test board over the side and retrieved it after 25 times. Then over the side measuring the thickness at 25, 50 75 and 100 feet.
Then surface and repeated dropping and retrieving the teat board 3 more times until 100 submersions and retrievals to 100 feet had been completed.
The test revealed that some of the wet material began deteriorating to due compression after just a few submersions, after 100 submersions several suits were almost useless as effective thermal protection.
So it can be concluded that usage (repeated submersions ) and possibly age that probably most wet suits even in todays market deteriorate after ageing and repeated usage.
And that about all I have to say about west suits...
Sam Miller, 111
@Ayisha
@drbill You dive to 200 feet - what at 175 at Italian Gardens
@KevinNM
Two years ago I visited "The blue hole"-- an event I will remember for ever - met a PADI instructor who informed me that there was no diving, no books , no instruction until PADi was created--Hope that was not you --sdm
"Don't know. The cells break down over time and dive cycles, it gets less buoyant and less warm. Though I've heard of that being an issue after enough dives, not just time."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Kevin of New Mexico You are So Correct...
Some years ago there was a very large active world wide company called "Voit" Willard Voit the founder and owner wanted his company that held his name to be number one diving company and only sell the very best products
One was to produce the very best wet suit
I was a consultant /advisor to Voit and Fred Roberts (the author of Basic SCUBA) was the chief and only engineer. It was Fred who created a very crude but never equaled test for wet suits. He collected samples of all known wet suit manufactures of that era and attached them in a row to a piece of wood/aka test board
On a sunny SoCal day we ventured to Catalina Island to a secluded cove called Italian gardens where the ocean drops off very fast ,
We attached the test board to a weight belt with 100 feet of line. We jumped over the side with a micrometer and measured and recorded the thickness at 25, 50 75 and 100 feet. We surfaced and as Fred recorded the data I repeatedly dropped the test board over the side and retrieved it after 25 times. Then over the side measuring the thickness at 25, 50 75 and 100 feet.
Then surface and repeated dropping and retrieving the teat board 3 more times until 100 submersions and retrievals to 100 feet had been completed.
The test revealed that some of the wet material began deteriorating to due compression after just a few submersions, after 100 submersions several suits were almost useless as effective thermal protection.
So it can be concluded that usage (repeated submersions ) and possibly age that probably most wet suits even in todays market deteriorate after ageing and repeated usage.
And that about all I have to say about west suits...
Sam Miller, 111
@Ayisha
@drbill You dive to 200 feet - what at 175 at Italian Gardens
@KevinNM
Two years ago I visited "The blue hole"-- an event I will remember for ever - met a PADI instructor who informed me that there was no diving, no books , no instruction until PADi was created--Hope that was not you --sdm