diverrex
Contributor
Isn't there a difference in buoyancy between a live diver breathing with air in their lungs (even just after exhaling) than there is to a deceased diver presumably with no air in their lungs?
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Isn't there a difference in buoyancy between a live diver breathing with air in their lungs (even just after exhaling) than there is to a deceased diver presumably with no air in their lungs?
Some folks I know did an experiment with a 7 mil wetsuit. They took it to 100 feet, to measure how much buoyancy it lost, and they came up with 23 lbs. I don't know what size suit it was or how new, but that was what they got. That's one of the reasons some folks recommend that people doing deep dives in cold water either dive dry, or have some redundant source of buoyancy.
Can you share how you found that information? Is this available to the public?
Merxlin, Staci's weight belt had 8 pounds on it.
Her tank, at Empty, was reported as being slightly buoyant.
The only thing we're left with, then, is the crushing of her (well-worn, perhaps?) wetsuits neoprene cells to a degree I'd not fully considered possible prior to this accident... and her low body fat percentage.
Bill