Ok, I had a chance to dive my new Halcyon rig for the first time yesterday...Lake Rawlings, VA - vis 20-30ft, 70 degrees at surface, 63 at the nice warm part, 50 or so past the thermocline...buddied up with herman and his crew from NC.
First the bad
1) had an inflator hose go on me...leaking right around where it snaps to the inflator. Luckily, I had a spare and we changed it...no problems with the new one.
2) The OPV/dump valve stuck open on me a couple of times...didn't notice at first, but when I went inverted I felt bubbles streaming down my legs and experimented around for a couple minutes until I figured out what it was. I tugged it again and it closed...will have to keep an eye on that to see if it happens again (Pioneer 27# Halcyon wing).
3) Surface inflation...when nearly fully inflated it throws me hard on my face. Took a little getting used to to keep my head out of the water without finning...on the second dive I moved my weights (standard weightbelt) more toward my rear and it improved. Anyone using trim weights? The halcyon ones are like $21, but I could just strap a 2# on myself...opinions?
4) Not really bad, but I need more practice working the bolt snaps underwater...especially after we passed that 45-50 foot thermocline!
Brrrr...
Now the good stuff
1) Underwater horizontal position was excellent...although dive 1 was more fraught with task loading, by dive 2 I was able to maintain buoyancy and negotiate swimthroughs with ease.
2) Rig was very comfortable underwater... I was using 10lb on my weightbelt (5 mm full with cap/hood, fresh water, AL80)...air consumption was right up there with the more experienced divers on the dive, but I am not sure if that was the rig or just my increasing comfort underwater. Very little effort needed to propel myself through the water...one frog kick would send me flying it seemed like...
3) Bungee backup was easy to deploy...although herman and I didn't do OOA drills (sorry, UP), I was switching back and forth between my primary and backup regularly and had no problems (Apeks ATX50 primary, TX50 backup).
That's about it...thanks to herman (and his wife, Tony, and Dave) for an enjoyable day and acting as my safety divers while I screwed around with my setup...
First the bad
1) had an inflator hose go on me...leaking right around where it snaps to the inflator. Luckily, I had a spare and we changed it...no problems with the new one.
2) The OPV/dump valve stuck open on me a couple of times...didn't notice at first, but when I went inverted I felt bubbles streaming down my legs and experimented around for a couple minutes until I figured out what it was. I tugged it again and it closed...will have to keep an eye on that to see if it happens again (Pioneer 27# Halcyon wing).
3) Surface inflation...when nearly fully inflated it throws me hard on my face. Took a little getting used to to keep my head out of the water without finning...on the second dive I moved my weights (standard weightbelt) more toward my rear and it improved. Anyone using trim weights? The halcyon ones are like $21, but I could just strap a 2# on myself...opinions?
4) Not really bad, but I need more practice working the bolt snaps underwater...especially after we passed that 45-50 foot thermocline!

Now the good stuff
1) Underwater horizontal position was excellent...although dive 1 was more fraught with task loading, by dive 2 I was able to maintain buoyancy and negotiate swimthroughs with ease.
2) Rig was very comfortable underwater... I was using 10lb on my weightbelt (5 mm full with cap/hood, fresh water, AL80)...air consumption was right up there with the more experienced divers on the dive, but I am not sure if that was the rig or just my increasing comfort underwater. Very little effort needed to propel myself through the water...one frog kick would send me flying it seemed like...
3) Bungee backup was easy to deploy...although herman and I didn't do OOA drills (sorry, UP), I was switching back and forth between my primary and backup regularly and had no problems (Apeks ATX50 primary, TX50 backup).
That's about it...thanks to herman (and his wife, Tony, and Dave) for an enjoyable day and acting as my safety divers while I screwed around with my setup...