DrysuitWhat are you supposed to wear in cool/cold water?
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DrysuitWhat are you supposed to wear in cool/cold water?
Good pointWhat if it weren't? What if the user isn't very good at it? Do you wait until something is wrong while on an expensive trip on a liveaboard in a remote location? No preventive maintenance? The greater majority of divers don't take care of their own equipment, they don't know how to or just aren't motivated to do it or combination of all the above.
Not supposed to get into cold water!What are you supposed to wear in cool/cold water?
I hope you’re kidding, right?Not supposed to get into cold water!
You have to consider shrinkage.
If it's less than 80 F, I ain't getting in.I hope you’re kidding right?
Well that’s you.If it's less than 80 F, I ain't getting in.
Well that’s you.
Tens of thousands of divers around the world wear wetsuits. They all can’t be wrong.
not so much. getting gear serviced just prior to a trip when gear is working makes it more likely to have issues on the trip or live aboard. If folks aren't getting a couple dives on the gear after service before trip I recommend a inspection vs preventive maint/service. If there is any concern, of course address it. Consumer behaviour is such that they do bring the gear in just before the trip, and shops like that, many instructors teach them to do it because it is revenue. If you have a really good shop that does good work.. fair game, that is FAR from universal however.Good point
Good point.not so much. getting gear serviced just prior to a trip when gear is working makes it more likely to have issues on the trip or live aboard. If folks aren't getting a couple dives on the gear after service before trip I recommend a inspection vs preventive maint/service. If there is any concern, of course address it. Consumer behaviour is such that they do bring the gear in just before the trip, and shops like that, many instructors teach them to do it because it is revenue. If you have a really good shop that does good work.. fair game, that is FAR from universal however.
When living in Cayman, every day a few divers with own gear had issues, without fail they will report "I had it just serviced before the trip and picked them up!" Most common was a slight second stage leak from the tech making the cracking pressure as low as possible and the LP seat taking a set over a couple dives, easy fix and a sign of a poor tech that doesn't really understand how regs work. Followed by a HP seat failure, because they take a set or are a bad batch (which while less common last decade plus, used to really be a problem for many brands, especially with diaphragm regs). Third most common was a couple days diving and the BCD would auto inflate, almost every time they had that silly service tag attached to the corrugated hose and the shop had serviced it using an ultrasound that removed some chrome leaving bare brass that quickly gets sticky. (this does depend on brand of inflator BTW).
I do judge instructors and shops that tell people to get gear serviced immediately before a trip or class as poor quality that put money first