Bubblesong
Contributor
The Chairman , ("Airtist" formerly known as NetDoc) says he put a dehumidifier in his vehicle to dry out his gear and it was powder dry in the morning.
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neoprene uses a closed cell construction (as opposed to open cell like a synthetic sponge) so water can not "get in" the neoprene. it can only coat the surface. as the neoprene ages it will crack and some of the cells become open cells - and lose their inslation and bouyancy properties.I guess my thought is the wetsuit's pores are full of water--that maybe this does something to the integrity of the neoprene --freezing the water then thawing it.
You need one of these...works wonders to dry the inside of my drysuit when it's gotten wet.
Underwater Kinetics HangAir | Dive Right In Scuba - Plainfield, IL - Dive Right in Scuba
Mine will (it's a Saab!) Agreed that yours may not start. But it will not fall apart. And it will work just fine once things warm up a bit, with no degradation in performance.True, but at minus 30-40 your car won't work if not plugged in.