As inferred by scubafanatic, the fact that your reg:
displays this behavior, in itself, tells you that hose length and/or mouthpiece selection is incorrect.
For example:
Everyone has a subtly different build in the shoulders, so the stock hose may not be right for you. This is a reason that LP hoses come in so many sizes.
Swivels, either at the second stage (and to a lessor extent, on the first) will give you a greater tolerance for incorrect hose lengths, and if the correct lengths are in place, a very "fine tuned" comfort.
Generally, good swivels are not free moving when pressurized; they have some "stiffness" that allows you to easily bend the reg into a comfortable position, where it stays nice and comfortable for the rest of the dive. A loose, floppy swivel can be a safety hazard, because it will allow the second to flail around willy-nilly, especially when donating or knocked out of the mouth, where retention of configuration is a good thing.
All the best, James
<snip> and it felt like it was trying to pull out of the one side of my mouth.
displays this behavior, in itself, tells you that hose length and/or mouthpiece selection is incorrect.
For example:
- Hose to short for your build: pulls on right side of mouth
- Hose too long: pulls on left side
- Hose way too long: pulls on right and twists clockwise
Everyone has a subtly different build in the shoulders, so the stock hose may not be right for you. This is a reason that LP hoses come in so many sizes.
Swivels, either at the second stage (and to a lessor extent, on the first) will give you a greater tolerance for incorrect hose lengths, and if the correct lengths are in place, a very "fine tuned" comfort.
Generally, good swivels are not free moving when pressurized; they have some "stiffness" that allows you to easily bend the reg into a comfortable position, where it stays nice and comfortable for the rest of the dive. A loose, floppy swivel can be a safety hazard, because it will allow the second to flail around willy-nilly, especially when donating or knocked out of the mouth, where retention of configuration is a good thing.
All the best, James