I am a New England diver. I wear a full 7mm wetsuit and accessories. I have been diving with aluminum tanks (got them for free) but want to ditch some of the lead I have to carry because of it. So, I am kinda' commited to buying steel tanks but had a final question before I wrote the check.
Is there ever a time when you want the bouyancy of the aluminum tank? Let's say you were diving in warmer water and using just a 3mm wetsuit (perhaps a shorty) is it possible that you could be overweighted with a steel tank? I mean, isn't it inherently unsafe to not have any lead to dump to create positive bouyancy? Would you then be relying on the BCD to keep you from sinking and prone to problems if the BCD failed?
Maybe I'm over-thinking (my tendancy) but I am just curious about any possible pitfalls.
Thanks in advance!
Steel tanks last forever, if you care for them properly, and make sure no water gets inside of them during the refill process (such as on a boat).
Aluminum tanks are subject to stress fractures at the threaded end.
With a wetsuit, there is a theoretical basis for diving with aluminum tanks, since at depth these tanks tend to become slightly positive as they are depleted of air/nitrox. Since the wetsuit compresses at depth, you need very little weight if any to be neutrally buoyant at depth, maybe only 4 to 6 lbs while wearing a compressed wetsuit at depth.
Your regulator system will comprise about 2 to 3 lbs of negative/weight. (I hate to say "negative buoyancy" because that is a contradiction in terms, technically speaking.)
This leaves you with only about 3 lbs available for nonditchable negative/weight.
Here are your choices for the remaining nonditchable negative/weight:
1) aluminum backplate 2 lbs -or-
2) single steel tank 0 to 2 lbs -or-
3) small cannister light 2 to 3 lbs.
As you can see, it is a very short list. Note that as was pointed out above by xiSkiGuy, an LP-85 would be neutral when empty, however. This would give you a little more leeway, but not much.
If you marry an aluminum tank with a steel backplate, you have virtual neutral buoyancy between the two. This beats the 6 to 8 lbs negative weight of a steel tank and steel backplate. Of course, with a steel LP 85 and an aluminum plate, you are only negative by about 2 lbs plus the weight of the air/nitrox (0.08 lb per cu ft).
If you decide to over-weight yourself, then you should make sure and get a double-bladder wing. The good news is that Oxycheq does indeed manufacture and sell these!
www.oxycheq.com
The bad news is that with a double-bladder wing, everyone on the beach or boat will look at you like you are some kind of dinosaur with 2 inflator hoses running down left and right, and some people will not even go diving with you then.:no
Good luck, in your choices.