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A ScubaBoard Staff Message...
Unfortunately, no... I don't think there's a BC out there that would make ice diving less crazy.![]()
Given how few new divers start with BP/Ws it would be interesting to see if it was reversed - how many new divers would go from BP/W to jackets. I suspect it would be much lower than the reverse.
I started out with a single tank BP/W that I got before my basic O/W. I loved it then as I love it now (with a larger wing and doubles) I have used back-inflate and standard style jackets and just feel they are bulky, cumbersome and not nearly as secure.
I started out with a single tank BP/W that I got before my basic O/W. I loved it then as I love it now (with a larger wing and doubles) I have used back-inflate and standard style jackets and just feel they are bulky, cumbersome and not nearly as secure.
I use my small wing with an STA for swift current river dives and my doubles setup for everything else.
I often wonder what is that the people who prefer Jackets prefer about their system. Is the bp/w not bulky enough? Not cumbersome enough? Far too secure for their liking?
I guess the cummerbund, with it's plastic quick release clip, does fasten a smidge faster than simply threading a 2" belt through a buckle, and the loose fit can sometimes be a smidge easier to get into. Is that it? Or perhaps it's the upright floating position on the surface... great for long discussions with students while floating, I'd certainly agree. But I don't really see how that helps with the diving part.
The devil you know, I guess?
I have a wing and a BC and have not used the wing for the last 75-100 dives this year. Unless I am taking a stage bottle (which works better with a BP harness), I prefer the ease with which I can get in and out of my BC. A comfortable posiion while floating on the surface can be an important factor if you drift dive and sometimes spend some time on the surface. Having the ability to have your head held vertically and out of the water improves your ability to see and be seen by the boat operator when it is rough.
I just don't buy the crap about leaning back and not putting too much air in the back inflate wing. It is simple physics, if the bouynacy is all on the back, that is the part that will tend to be up and the rest of the system (the diver) will be down. It amazes me that some BP/W wacko's think the Wing is great when it suspends you horizontally when underwater, but somehow when you get to the surface it magically is perfectly designed to hold you vertically???![]()
I just don't buy the crap about leaning back and not putting too much air in the back inflate wing. It is simple physics, if the bouynacy is all on the back, that is the part that will tend to be up and the rest of the system (the diver) will be down. It amazes me that some BP/W wacko's think the Wing is great when it suspends you horizontally when underwater, but somehow when you get to the surface it magically is perfectly designed to hold you vertically???![]()
If you are having trouble at the surface in a BP&W you don't have it properly set up, and or you are not properly weighted.
Ya, it's really that simple.
Tobin