all4scuba05
Contributor
3-Ring Octopus:Wait, wait, wait...if you realize your feet are too high, FORCE them a little? Or you could just slap on a pair of 1's or 1.5's and not have to fight an entire dive...I dunno...one sounds like the far simpler and freeing solution.
While one may never NEED ankle weights, depending on exposure suit/fin choice, they may be the far simpler/cheaper solution to "floaty feet". For instance, I have extremely positive feet and dead neutral fins when I dive my drysuit (it has been modified with non-stock attached boots, and I wear heavy foot undergarments (socks..)), so..my options are to find a NEW drysuit AND/OR NEW Fins...or wear 1.5 lb ankle weights. I think I'll take the latter solution, thanks!
And for all the lip service we pay to "trim", isn't trim all about getting horizontal in the water column and spreading weight around where each individual needs it? Some of us, again, due to equipment configuration/exposure suit require some lead on the ankles to keep horizontal in the water...no amount of tank shifting is going to change the fact that it's just my FEET that are positive...but adding a small amount of lead WILL.
Cheers,
Austin
I gotta side with this guy. He's addressing "floaty feet" while some others are only correcting horizontal trim issues. If a diver has 3 layers of insulation on his feet in a drysuit with positively buoyant shoes and ScubaPro Twin Jets(which are positively buoyant), no matter where you place that tank, he WILL still have floaty feet.