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that doesn't make it ideal for cold water diving because it is still positively buoyant. vs 6lbs or more negative where you get to distribute the weight significantly better
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I believe it's a back inflate, so a BP&Wing doesn't have any real benefit over it. I'm not a big fan of the vest style, but at least it has neutral buoyancy padding.
Poppycock!the drag is insignificant for 7.25 vs 8 inch tanks for reference. We don't move fast enough through the water for that to be of concern, especially compared to the BC's that most people use acting like sea anchors. Having a dangling SPG or octopus will cause more drag than going from 7.25 to 8 inch tanks. There is the mass penalty of going to 8" and that comes at energy required to accelerate and decelerate, and that is noticeable.
Can we presume that your '22%' value is a reflection of the change in the area of a circle, from a 7.25" diameter (area=41.3 square inches), to an 8" diameter (area=50.2 square inches)? The actual value of the change (increase) is 21.758%, but 22% is acceptable as a reasonable round-off. And, that really sounds impressive. But, I think that tbone's point was that the increase in cylinder size (and therefore, the cylinder area exposed during horizontal movement - which is the relevant factor in the drag equation) is not the defining factor in total drag associated with a diver moving underwater. In fact, it is relatively trivial by comparison with other factors.Poppycock!
The difference in drag for a 7.25 vs. 8 inch diameter tank is a 22% increase in the tank's intrinsic drag. That's before you take into account the increased interference drag between the larger tank and the diver. The severity of that depends on many factors.
The tank is usually a lot more than 10% of the divers total drag. The actual percentage will depend on many factors relating to other gear choices and how it is configured, but the average recreational scuba diver kit will approximately double the drag of the diver's body. Of that doubling, the tank is probably contributing about half. The cleaner the kit, the larger impact the choice of tank will have on the outcome. My kit is very clean, so the tank contribution is much more than half of the kits drag contribution (probably more like 80%).ok, so assuming 22% increase is valid, I'm sure you have done the math, however what is that compared to most divers less than perfect trim, and the drag of the bouncy compensator?
Sure a 22% increase is significant, but if the tank is only causing say 10% of the overall drag, and say drag is 100 units, drag increases from 100 to 103, that is pretty insignificant in the grand scheme of things.
You can't just say the tank has a 22% increase and therefor you can notice it without qualifying what percentage of the total drag the tank is causing, which for an elongated cylinder, compared to a diver, I'm willing to be is pretty insignificant in the grand scheme of things