That’s usually a good time for viz and unless a storm is brewing it can be great diving.Ok, when works for you?
Early December is when I’ll have the most free time, although we could schedule for early November as well.
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That’s usually a good time for viz and unless a storm is brewing it can be great diving.Ok, when works for you?
Early December is when I’ll have the most free time, although we could schedule for early November as well.
Those diving drysuit, do you use it like a bcd or just adjust for squeeze and use bcd? Tried both ways myself. PADI try’s to tell you to use drysuit. Thankx in advance.
Those diving drysuit, do you use it like a bcd or just adjust for squeeze and use bcd? Tried both ways myself. PADI try’s to tell you to use drysuit. Thankx in advance.
In theory you should use your BCD for buoyancy control but in practice a correctly adjusted drysuit means you do not have to touch your bcd. At the surface fully deflate your bcd, you should not yet sink. Then fully open your drysuit shoulder valve and exhale, you should then sink slowly assuming you are correctly weighted. When submerged about 2 to 3 meters partially close your shoulder valve (usually about 3/8 or 1/2 torn on APEKS). At this point you should be neutrally buoyant and as a result have found your neutrally buoyant displacement. If not add a little air to the suit. You should be feeling a hint of suit squeeze but not uncomfortable. You should rise and fall as you breathe. As you descend add more air to your suit to keep the squeeze and displacement constant. At your chosen depth and with your left shoulder well above your feet open your shoulder valve until a few bubbles emerge then turn it back a click or two. Your buoyancy / displacement should now be correct, suit pinch minimal and your shoulder valve set so it will vent as you ascend, preventing excess ascend rate. You only need to re inflate your bcd at the surface. If you try to control buoyancy using both bcd and suit inflation whilst at same time as trying to control squeeze it is more complex and a mistake more likely to be made, particularly if you are trying to vent both suit and bcd at same time to control ascent.
I don't really understand this. Adding a little bit of gas provides the same amount of buoyancy either way. Due to their designs, tri-lams generally require more finesse, and neoprene suits generally dive more like a wetsuit. The squeeze in neoprene suits also isn't very bad; it's rarely painful and just feels "tight".Does also depend upon the type of drysuit; neoprene or membrane/trilaminate.
Trilaminate is way more sensitive and easier to use for fine buoyancy control than a neoprene drysuit which is stretchy. For neoprene it’s more about relieving squeeze than buoyancy.
When correctly weighted, you will be heavy at the start of the dive by the amount of air you haven't yet consumed. Even at 5 lbs of air for an AL80, I wouldn't say I'm sinking "slowly" (yes, even while still avoiding squeeze). Or to put it differently, it's typically too fast for the visibilities where I dive a drysuit.At the surface fully deflate your bcd, you should not yet sink. Then fully open your drysuit shoulder valve and exhale, you should then sink slowly assuming you are correctly weighted.
a drysuit should not be used as a primary source of buoyancy control. i am surprised padi would say otherwise.
A couple of the "big" schools were teaching this way until recently. SSI just switched last year.