I am wondering how people go about securing items to their BC. ... I was also wondering what the best way would be to secure a lift bag and a sausage to my BC, as I have one of each on their way also from Carter.
A few thoughts: 1. You mention a BC, and show a picture of a BP/W. If you are using a backplate, much is possible. If a standard BC, a little less so. Not a slam at BCDs, just a statement of what is doable. 2. I attach my primary back-up light to my BP harness exactly as shown in the illustration you posted, using (as mentioned) a bolt snap on the butt end to attach it, and bicycle inner tube sections to hold the head in place. It is very functional. Yesterday, I didn't take my can light on a dive, so I was using only my back-up. I released the head from the tube, kept the other end clipped, and was able to use the light effectively, AND let it hang from the D ring for a moment when I need both hands free. I carry a second, smaller back-up light in a pocket on my drysuit (as someone else suggested). 3. Some bike shops will give away used inner tubes, but the cost of buying one is trivial. 4. I fully agree with the comment about not attaching too many things to the BC What you want to avoid primarily is having a lot of (often unnecessary) 'stuff' hanging and dangling loosely from the BC. Having said that, I attach my can light (inverted) to the lower right side of my BP, using quick links, so I can reach down with mu right hand, feel for the switch at the bottom, and turn it on / off. I attach my lift bag, in a Dive Rite sleeve, to the lower left side of my BP using pear clips. I clip a double ended bolt snap to the lift bag strap (protruding slightly from the bottom / open end of the sleeve), and clip the other end to the lower pear clip. When I need the bag, I release the double-ended from the pear clip, pull the bag out of the sleeve, and deploy (after removing the bolt snap and clipping it to my rig, and attaching the spool line). 5. The option I use for a sausage is a couple of short loops of bungee cord, run through holes on the bottom of the BP, with the sausage secured on each end so it is horizontal against my lower back. 6. If you are diving dry, having pockets oin the suit is great. I recommend having one bellows pocket, with sewn loops inside, to which anything you put in the pocket is attached with bolt snaps, so items don't fall out when you are retrieving something else. If you are diving wet, and use one of the pockets you can put on your waist strap (like the
H pocket shown in the illustration), the same is true. If you are diving a standard BC with pockets, put a sewn loop in the pocket if there is not already one there.