This is apparently a very difficult concept.
Your buoyancy is based on your entire package--your body, your thermal protection, your BCD, your fins, your mask, your light, your tank, your regulators, your weights--everything. That whole package has a certain total weight. It also has a total volume. If the total weight of your total package is equal to the weight of that volume of water, then you are neutrally buoyant. If it weighs more, you are negatively buoyant.
In your total package, there are individual items that are negatively buoyant. There are certain items that are positively buoyant. The negatively buoyant items include your thermal protect, the fat in your body, some BCDs (especially with air). The negatively buoyant items include all tanks at the beginning of the dive, some BCDs, and the weights you carry. To be properly weighted, you need to consider all the factors over which you have control. Ideally, you want to be slightly negatively buoyant with no air in the BCD at the end of the dive so that you only need a minimum amount of air in the BCD to remain at depth.
- Let's say that a diver's total package needs to weigh 250 pounds in order to be be properly weighted at the end of the dive. If the diver uses a PST 80 steel tank, the tank will be 9.3 pounds negatively buoyant at the beginning of the dive. If the diver uses 4 pounds of gas during the dive, then that diver must make sure he or she weighs 254 pounds at the beginning of the dive to compensate for air loss. That weight can be achieved by adding lead or by using a different BCD.
- Let's say that a diver needs to weigh 250 pounds in order to be be properly weighted at the end of the dive. If the diver uses a Luxfer 80 aluminum tank, the tank will be 1.4 pounds negatively buoyant at the beginning of the dive. If the diver uses 4 pounds of gas during the dive, then that diver must make sure he or she weighs 254 pounds at the beginning of the dive to compensate for air loss. That weight can be achieved by adding lead or by using a different BCD.
If we are talking about the same diver in each case, the diver with the aluminum tank will need to have about 7 more pounds of added weight in the form of lead (or a different BCD) to achieve the needed weight.
If the diver adds that extra weight, he or she will be in exactly the same situation throughout the dive as the diver with the steel tank.
I mentioned that I don't use any additional weight when using one of my steel 85s with a 5mm wetsuit in salt water. That is because I use my steel back plate. If I used my aluminum back plate, I would have to add some lead to achieve the same buoyancy. If I used an aluminum tank, I would have to use more weight to achieve the same buoyancy.
But it all comes out the same.