EdMcNeill09
Contributor
The hydros is +2lbs buoyant. Most jacket styles are +1 or +2 lbs buoyant regardless of their weight. A BPW by contrast is typically-2 to -8 lbs buoyant depending on materials. But since most divers dive jackets I went with the hydros since I have 7 of them and know it pretty well. Rarely dive the things but I know them and people love them.@EdMcNeill09 I'm not familiar with the Hydros, but golly, a 13 lb bcd that needs an additional 14 lbs of lead? That's ridiculous. What have they got in there, block styrofoam? To be clear, I'm not saying you're wrong, I'm just shocked at a BCD that floaty. My Cressi Aquawing (a BP/W with removable padding) weighs ~7 lbs, and with a full AL 80 is negatively buoyant even with the padding. I usually dive it with 4 lbs in still water to account for air loss, maybe 6-8 if I'm wearing a 3mm suit. So, yeah, a 13 lb hydros that requires an extra 14 lbs of lead must be floaty as balls.
Sidebar for comparison: my BCD weighs 7 lbs, I'd probably dive 4 lbs of lead in a shorty, 6 in a 3mm, so 13 lbs there. If my goal was to go ultralight, I'd dive a steel 72, which when I weighed mine came in at 32 lbs full (And at ~2400 PSI, have roughly the same gas as Avelo when you leave room for water, as I understand it). With an AL 80, it's more like 35-40 lbs, so weighs in at somewhere between 45 and 55 lbs I'd say. All that, and I can travel with it just by putting it in the carry on and renting tanks.
Now, that being said, I feel like the real selling point of avelo is the easy buoyancy, which I have no frame of reference for, as I've never tried it. Seems like a cool idea, though tbh my breathing is where most of my buoyancy related struggles come in, but at some point I would not mind giving Avelo a try.
When I fill. As I hope to soon, my Avelo tank to 300 bar I will have almost as much gas as a steel hp 100.

I currently fill to around 3500 psi so closer to a n al80 which weighs 40lbs filled and 34 completely empty. Give or take a few ounces.
So basically Avelo is substantially lighter. We can argue about how much lighter with different fills etc, but I think I basically agree with you that weight is not the real point. It’s definitely nice to have lighter gear but the biggest deal is the incredible large zone of stable buoyancy.
I recently certified a couple of scientific divers who are also professional underwater photographers. They love it and feel it’s an incredible platform for underwater photography and scientific diving. Managing buoyancy is a task in both these disciplines and removing the need allows a greater focus on the tasks at hand.