Hello-
I know that this topic comes up regularly, and yes I've done a lot of searching & reading other threads.
I'm currently shopping for gear, and recently had the opportunity to try a friend's Halcyon SS BP/W (Pioneer). Really loved the way it felt. I was, however, overweighted in the pool w/ my new 3mm neoprene wet suit & the 6# plate w/ an AL80 (at 2000psi). I didn't have weights with me, but went back to a pool another day (without gear....just the suit) & found I need about 4# of weight to achieve neutral surface buoyancy with the exposure suit only.
My diving is generally warm & is both fresh & saltwater. I don't own a dry suit, and if I do in the future I'd get a new setup for that type of diving.
So, given that I only need about 4# to neutralize my exposure suit, it seems that an aluminum plate & lightweight STA is what I should get with some trim weights if necessary. Seems that a stainless plate would just turn me into a rock. Am I missing something, or does this sound reasonable?
Jim
I know that this topic comes up regularly, and yes I've done a lot of searching & reading other threads.
I'm currently shopping for gear, and recently had the opportunity to try a friend's Halcyon SS BP/W (Pioneer). Really loved the way it felt. I was, however, overweighted in the pool w/ my new 3mm neoprene wet suit & the 6# plate w/ an AL80 (at 2000psi). I didn't have weights with me, but went back to a pool another day (without gear....just the suit) & found I need about 4# of weight to achieve neutral surface buoyancy with the exposure suit only.
My diving is generally warm & is both fresh & saltwater. I don't own a dry suit, and if I do in the future I'd get a new setup for that type of diving.
So, given that I only need about 4# to neutralize my exposure suit, it seems that an aluminum plate & lightweight STA is what I should get with some trim weights if necessary. Seems that a stainless plate would just turn me into a rock. Am I missing something, or does this sound reasonable?
Jim