I never knew how important weighing was, but it is extremley important.
Whats even more important, is not to be negitive, and not have ditchable weight for single tank diving. Theres no reason to be.
As for doubles, the same rules apply. Somone had mentioned before, DIR does not recommend diving steel tanks with wetsuits, and they are correct. Yes, i do dive a single steel 100 wet, but I have a lift bag on the bottom back of my B/P and wing set up.
A few years ago, I had a failure and had no lift for my BC, so we shot a lift bag, and inflated my BC oralley, and didn't relize until then how important weighting was.
And this thread was actually going along very well... at least for a while.
First off - hate to say this - but in general, blanket statements tend to be wrong...and more specifically, the Steel tank/wet suit comment is wrong.
There are some aluminum tanks that are negative when empty... some steels that are positive... you need to know the specific tank.
Wetsuit - which kind - how thick?
A far better statement would be to not dive doubles with a SS back plate, and not dive with high pressure tanks.
Example: Compare a pair of Catalina C100's (aluminum) versus a pair of Worthington LP - 108's. The Worthington's are zero when empty, the Catalina's are -.8 (two tanks). The weight difference is 16 lbs from full to empty versus 16.4 for the Catalina's... and you get more air with the Worthington's..
Several Faber FX tanks are positive when empty, and if you use them as low pressure tanks...compare very favorably with aluminum.
This issue of suit compression, ditchable weight... overall weighting is a not very pretty picture. Using a lift bag would not be consided by most, a proper safety response...but that should have a whole thread.. or several threads dedicated to it.
Assuming you start a dive adjusted for the air weight, meaning you are neutral when the tank is near empty (500 psi) at 15 ft. That means you are entering the water around 14 - 20 negative at the surface. At say 99 ft, and just picking a wet suit requirement for 20 lbs, you will be around 30 lbs negative... that assumes that the suit just lost 75% of it's buoyancy, but some of the newer materials, when compressed actually go negative (density of the material is heavier than water, and when the gas is compressed, will go from buoyant to sinking..you can see it with a small piece of the material, by the way). So, have a super stretch suit, and you might be 35 lbs negative or more. If you ditch all your weight, you are still 15 lbs negative..which you can swim against, unless you are in an inclosed space..
Which makes a BP/W failure not an option... as the results could be really, bad.
Could you make this situation safer? Sure... have a plastic backplate (more ditchable weight). Pick your tanks very carefully. Consider having an oil filled (light weight, non-compressable liquid addition to the tanks - I know, they don't make them, but they should.)
As a note,consider the following:
1. The weight of 500 psi varies with the volume of the tank.
2. Almost all of the mfg have math errors in their tank numbers... Luxfer is the best, but even they have some. The worst is Faber... don't trust anything they publish.. some is good, so is not.