I have read what I could find by searching here. It seems like the norm for a person in a drysuit is to be carrying at least as much weight as they would in a 7mm wetsuit, and usually more. I saw numbers that were ranging from 20 to 40 pounds of ballast for people in a drysuit.
I just got my first drysuit and have done 2 pool sessions in it. The suit is a Bare XCS2 Tech Dry, which is 2mm crushed neoprene. With my drysuit on, Hollis F-1 fins, an HP100 tank, and a 6 # SS back plate, I am actually overweighted!
The first pool session, I had on 2 pairs of thick socks, shorts and a t-shirt. I ran the tank down to 400 psi and, from the surface, with an almost empty tank, I could still dump the air in my BC and drop right to the bottom.
The second session, I was wearing 2 pairs of heavyweight wool socks, thick polyester warm-up pants, and a t-shirt, and it was basically the same.
I'm going to the quarry (38 degrees at the bottom - though I don't think I'll be going to the bottom) this weekend. I expect to add expedition weight polypro long john pants and shirt and a Merino wool top. I have the impression that's all I'll need? If I need more, I think the most I would need to add is my North Face Polartec (300, I think?) fleece. Even if I add ALL of that, it doesn't seem like THAT much. Not enough to warrant adding even 20 pounds of ballast, much less 40.
Is it? Am I, as some of you suspect, really that dense? Or will adding some polypro long johns, a midweight sweater or a thicker fleece really add THAT much buoyancy? Will the difference between pool temps and quarry temps have me adding that much extra air to the suit? Adding that much extra air, to require 20 # of ballast, sounds like it would make swimming in the suit and preserving horizontal trim a real PITA!
Is it just that most of what I read about the weight people need is based on people using tri-lam suits and they really do take that much more weight? Gads!
Thanks for any insights!
I just got my first drysuit and have done 2 pool sessions in it. The suit is a Bare XCS2 Tech Dry, which is 2mm crushed neoprene. With my drysuit on, Hollis F-1 fins, an HP100 tank, and a 6 # SS back plate, I am actually overweighted!
The first pool session, I had on 2 pairs of thick socks, shorts and a t-shirt. I ran the tank down to 400 psi and, from the surface, with an almost empty tank, I could still dump the air in my BC and drop right to the bottom.
The second session, I was wearing 2 pairs of heavyweight wool socks, thick polyester warm-up pants, and a t-shirt, and it was basically the same.
I'm going to the quarry (38 degrees at the bottom - though I don't think I'll be going to the bottom) this weekend. I expect to add expedition weight polypro long john pants and shirt and a Merino wool top. I have the impression that's all I'll need? If I need more, I think the most I would need to add is my North Face Polartec (300, I think?) fleece. Even if I add ALL of that, it doesn't seem like THAT much. Not enough to warrant adding even 20 pounds of ballast, much less 40.
Is it? Am I, as some of you suspect, really that dense? Or will adding some polypro long johns, a midweight sweater or a thicker fleece really add THAT much buoyancy? Will the difference between pool temps and quarry temps have me adding that much extra air to the suit? Adding that much extra air, to require 20 # of ballast, sounds like it would make swimming in the suit and preserving horizontal trim a real PITA!
Is it just that most of what I read about the weight people need is based on people using tri-lam suits and they really do take that much more weight? Gads!
Thanks for any insights!