Don't dive in a wetsuit with heavy (negative) steel doubles in the first place. Why would anyone take that risk? It's just totally pointless and unnecessary. Have we all forgotten about the infamous incident off West Palm Beach, FL in 1998 when Andre Smith, Mike Elkins, and John Claypool all died due in large part to buoyancy problems caused by diving in wetsuits with negative steel tanks?
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Dive a balanced rig. If wearing a wetsuit, that means Al 80 doubles with enough
ditchable weight to roughly equal the weight of the gas in the back tanks (around 8 lbs or less assuming reasonable helium content) so that you can get neutral if your wing fails when you're at your most negative near the beginning of the dive. If you need extra bottom gas, then bring an Al 80 stage; you can always ditch the stage if you have buoyancy problems. Double bladder wings are an unnecessary convolution, an attempt to solve a problem which shouldn't exist in the first place.