Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.
Benefits of registering include
I'm always amazed at the amount of water I see being expelled from other people BCDs after a dive as I always check and have never had any in my BCDs.It's not uncommon, particularly if you use your dump valves to correct buoyancy (which a lot of new divers do). Nothing particularly bad or wrong with it; it's part of the learning process.
As said above, eventually you will reach the point where you correct your buoyancy primarily with breath control. Amazing things start happening then: your BCD will have significantly less water in it, you will consume less air, your hair will become radiant and have more body, your skin and nails will be flawless, you will become popular among certain religious sects who may worship you as their god. Your personal experience may vary.
In seriousness, regardless of whether you have a lot or little water in your BCD, make sure you are rinsing it out thoroughly with fresh water post-dive. I use a little bit of antibacterial detergent (maybe a capful) and water when rinsing; I put the solution in, blow air into the BC and slosh the mixture around the bladder (like shaking an unusual cocktail), empty it out, and then flush several times with fresh water. Hang it upside down in a dry room with air inflator hose disconnected for a couple days.
So you’re compensating for 5 pounds of gas in addition to the loss of buoyancy of your exposure gear entirely with your lungs? Why?I've gotten to the point where, on initial descent, I'll fin to stay above the surface holding the inflator above my head until the BC is fully deflated. No more water to dump. But ...
And I don't put any air back into the BC until I'm at the surface waiting to climb back aboard.
I found that dive knife you're missing... in my back!What the old man said.
What he said ^^^I first learned to dive in 1969 without a bladder and was not introduced to a BCD until much later. Our kit was always balanced so we could breathe ourselves up or down using only our lungs. It appears that trim and buoyancy have been abandoned by some to a mere gadget.
What is "exposure gear"?So you’re compensating for 5 pounds of gas in addition to the loss of buoyancy of your exposure gear entirely with your lungs? Why?