AdamARF
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Will the pool hurt my fusion drysuit?
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worried all the chemicals in the pool would speed up the breakdown of the seals.
Will the pool hurt my fusion drysuit?
ahh ya hadnt really thought of that, the place i trained had a saline pool so its was essentially salt water i would ask the shop the kind of pool they have and then see how they feel about it you rinse the suit off either way though, always
keep watchin the thread someone will say somethin
Just as another point of view - having owned many drysuits over the years - I've found the opposite; the soft outer skin of the Fusion has (because it's two layers) been more durable than a typical trilam. Or even a CF200.While it's more or less disgusting, some freshwater pools are pretty salty just from the sweat and various fluids released by their occupants.
Some pools use lots of chemicals, and others don't use enough.
In any case, rinsing well is a good idea, since it gets off chemicals if they're used, human excretions in case the water isn't changed very often, salt if it's a salt water pool, and various growing things in case the pool isn't properly maintained.
A rinse after the pool is always a good idea, but now an hour in the pool won't hurt your suit.
Oddly enough, what will hurt it is the user. Oily skin will quickly degrade latex seals, so keeping clean and talc-ing the seals after use helps a lot. A clean, lightly lubricated zipper will also last a lot longer than one that you ignore.
Sharp stuff and abrasives are also hard on drysuits, especially the fusion which has a softer outer skin than many tri-lam suits, and a little care with what you sit on and bump into will go a long way towards making the suit last.
flots.