StSomewhere
Contributor
Its no crime to dive a vest BC if that's what you're comfortable with. Vest BCs are called "stab jackets" (short for stabilizer jackets) for a reason, on the surface they stablize you very easily. With a little bit of work you can get pretty much similar results with a backinflate BC, but you may want someone to show you about weight and trim and proper buoyancy for best results. Unfortunately, the ugly truth is that most open water classes do a terrible job at teaching this because its easier to get you up and running with a stab jacket and that's one less thing for them to worry about. (If your instructor has you doing your OW skills kneeling at the bottom of a pool or training platform and you learn "buoyancy" with the infamous "fin pivot", that'll be your first hint.) So if you have someone to help you with buoyancy and trim issues or you learned these from the beginning, the move to a backinflate BC isn't hard at all.
It so happens that I paid a small fortune for a "package" at my LDS including a stab jacket, but if it were me doing it all over again (and my requirements are pretty much *exactly* the same as yours), I'd get the Everything is Special Zeagle and Tusa Package from Scubatoys and save myself a small fortune. Its a heck of a price for some top notch stuff (esp. the upgrade to the Flathead regulator for the extra fifty bucks), and at least if you do change your mind there is a market for used Zeagle stuff, which is more than you can say for a lot of other brands out there.
You could also go the BP/W route, just know that it falls into the domain of tech diving gear (no matter what else you might hear). Many of the BP/W types conform to a entire diving methodology called DIR or "Do It Right", which is a fairly rigid system of diving technique and equipment where everything that doesn't conform to DIR (equipment choice, gear placement, even finning technique) is thought to be substandard and unsafe, and those "unsafe" divers are known in the vernacular as "strokes". Do a search and find out for yourself what that's all about and then you can make up your own mind. After all, as a group these are probably the most proficient and skilled divers you'll find. The important thing for you to know up front is that when you ask some of those folks if a stab jacket or backinflate BC is OK, that goes against the very core of their DIR philosophy. You might as well be asking whether anyone minds if you ride your rice rocket to Sturgis.
It so happens that I paid a small fortune for a "package" at my LDS including a stab jacket, but if it were me doing it all over again (and my requirements are pretty much *exactly* the same as yours), I'd get the Everything is Special Zeagle and Tusa Package from Scubatoys and save myself a small fortune. Its a heck of a price for some top notch stuff (esp. the upgrade to the Flathead regulator for the extra fifty bucks), and at least if you do change your mind there is a market for used Zeagle stuff, which is more than you can say for a lot of other brands out there.
You could also go the BP/W route, just know that it falls into the domain of tech diving gear (no matter what else you might hear). Many of the BP/W types conform to a entire diving methodology called DIR or "Do It Right", which is a fairly rigid system of diving technique and equipment where everything that doesn't conform to DIR (equipment choice, gear placement, even finning technique) is thought to be substandard and unsafe, and those "unsafe" divers are known in the vernacular as "strokes". Do a search and find out for yourself what that's all about and then you can make up your own mind. After all, as a group these are probably the most proficient and skilled divers you'll find. The important thing for you to know up front is that when you ask some of those folks if a stab jacket or backinflate BC is OK, that goes against the very core of their DIR philosophy. You might as well be asking whether anyone minds if you ride your rice rocket to Sturgis.
