rcohn
Guest
Wow, lots of questions, lets see
Thank you for your comments.
Ralph
simbrooks:Back to Ralph's discussion, it is a great report, i have some questions/comments, some on the subject of BP/W vs SP Classic, some more on your dives:
Youre the first person to pick up on the dive story. No, he was telling people on the boat about cave diving and how beautiful the caves were. He definitely presented himself as a cave diver. I dont actually remember hearing him say he was an instructor that came from my wife. Also, I had no reason to doubt him, he had good trim, decent SAC, and a better command of hand signals than I do. Obviously his buddy skills could use improvement.simbrooks:Did cave diver tell you he was a cave diver or was he just dressed the part? I take it he and Buddy were same ocean buddies then?
simbrooks:I am surprised you needed all that neoprene for
Actually I was wishing I had more! Expected 79 degrees like last year had 77 the first day and 75 the second. At those temperatures I would have brought my 5 mm suit and been happier. The Body Glove suit had 46 dive on it so it lost some buoyancy. And, I dont believe relaxation has much to do with how much lead you need. With use and experience suits loose buoyancy and divers learn to get the trapped air out of their BCs, which should account for the reduction in lead.simbrooks:SE FL, its about 78F now isnt it? I was surprised at the little amount of weight you had for all that neoprene, i guess you are a lot more relaxed than me in that respect (therefore need less weight).
Trim was fine, no help needed. I used 8 lb lead and the Al backplate throughout. Id reduce some on the next dive, along with other adjustments if I continued using the system. I stripped the extra padding off the SP Classic years ago, so it has little residual buoyancysimbrooks:If you used a SS BP that might have helped the trim out, although you pretty much wouldnt have had around 4# ditchable (or did you drop lower than 10# total in the end?). Due to its lack of extra padding, typically you can lose more than the just the buoyant weight of the plate (ie more than 2/6# for AL/SS) as noted elsewhere, ] i found the ranger to be a load of extra weight to get to stay down with compared to other jackets i rented before purchasing my BP/W.
See, easy to slip into a less safe habit with a crotch strap. With my wife donning in the water the crotch strap it would be difficult for her to get the crotch strap under the weight beltsimbrooks:I understand your concern about wearing the weight belt inside your crotch strap (again dont have to wear the strap), i do that more for convenience than anything, easier to sit down with it on and buckle up than wait until i have buckled up and then put on the belt - personal choice and if i need to drop the weight (IF) then it pulls out fairly easily from within the CS area once the belt buckle is released.
Have you actually tried sleeping or is that just a guess? It is very easy to confuse minimal effort with no effort. Very few divers try going completely limp and seeing how they really float with no motion. Everyone should try it, you may be surprised. Most BCs put you on your face or on your side.simbrooks:As for the rest of the strap, i am currently tightening up my shoulder straps and the belt (mostly due to losing 20# in the last 4 months). I find it easy enough to float on my back (face-up) on the surface and could probably sleep like that, i dont have that forward rolling thing going on - just have my BP and a few # in the back pockets of my weight belt - although thinking of putting some of that up on the tank straps.
Nice try but you really need to measure it, there is a big lump of BC behind you head in the flow. Fluid flow is not that obvious, that's why flow tanks and wind tunnels are needed (or complicated finite element models) And the arm thing is a bit silly, I can put my arms wherever I want. If your jacket forces them out to the side, you definitely have the wrong BC.simbrooks:Oh and as for the surface area thing and drag, if you inflate the wrap around stab jacket, that would provide an extra 1-2" around your whole torso in the direction of flow, whereas the wing is only 1" across your back (and actually fills in that gap under your tank slightly too) so has less resistance. Your arms arent forced out to the side like stay-puft marshmallow man like the jacket, they can be streamlined behind your shoulders as they lie down your side - just a few places its more streamlined.
simbrooks:All in all, you highlighted some good points about both BC types, i saw that overall you gave the SP Classic more +'s, and if i wanted a stab jacket, that looks like a good choice (however most jackets i tried were nasty in the past - personal thing) i prefer it my way, you prefer yours, c'est la vie. At least you can say you tried it, lots dismiss it without even trying it
No I usually only read the Massachusetts section. Maybe next trip, previously we dove with Suzuki from the D2D board, but she has moved away.simbrooks:
BTW, did you get any of the Conch divers out there with you over your time down here - we are always up for a dive.
Thank you for your comments.
Ralph