I guess I left out that I want to get used to diving doubles before I take the courses next winter. I will upgrade my equipment when it becomes a necessity but until that point I want to try and figure out what is what. The side benefit is when we come down for our trip we want to hit the Oriskany or the Spiegel Grove or both. And with those being deeper dives we get more bottom time (I realize it's minimal due to deco stops) but non the less it is more. But until I need to upgrade I just wondered if it was practical to use my AL80s.
As you've noted, everyone has an opinion and will keep posting them long after the ground has already been covered.
There are also differneces of opinion that you will encounter so you need to consider what you find on the internet very carefully, and if in doubt, take the most conservative approach.
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What you suggest you want to do makes sense. If all you are doing is getting comfy in doubles, AL80s will work ok until a good deal comes along, but while you can re-use the manifold the bands are probably a lost cause so don't get too carried away with really expensive bands.
I agree that you do not want to show up for an class in doubles until you are very comfortable in them and have the kinks worked out of your configuration. An intro to tech/doubles class may help but it is not required if you can find a competent technical diver who can help you out. But be careful not to get too far from a standard Hog/DIR configuration. That configuration will serve you well as it will be acceptable to nearly any instructor. Once you get your configuration squared away, practice until you have perfect stability and buiyancy, then sign up for a Cavern class, or take Cavern and Intro to Cave/Basic Cave together. Then take a year or so to dive at the Intro level before taking Full Cave to gain real world experience.
Deco goes hand in hand with Full Cave in most cases, so it also helps to get Advanced Nitrox and Deco Procedures out of the way. A good alternative is to take Advanced nitrox pre-full cave and then take Deco Procedures post full cave from one of the few instructors that teach it in a full cave environment.
Sidemount is still all over the road in terms of anything that could be interpreted as a standard configuration, so my best advice is find someone who actually knows their stuff regarding sidemount in a cave environment and work with them. A couple sessions up front will save you
months of diving on your own to try to sort it out.
If you are just getting into sidemount, consider a Nomad. You'll probably pull off all the pads and floaty crap, maybe a couple D-rings and then probably swap locations between the inflator hose and dump valve, but what results is very workable and very flexible and is suitable for a wide range of sidemount applications, tank sizes multiple stages, etc. If you do decide to go sidemount the same cautions apply - get the configuration sorted out and get very good in it before you show up for a class.