Just don't get too caught up in finding a way to make this come out the way you think it ought to. I say that gently.
Eh? I only created this topic because I'm confused why my BC (and most other manufacturers) have gone out of their way to make the weights quick releasable, as if dropping the weights is something that we would want to commonly do in an emergency. So far, I have only been able to think of extremely unusual pathological scenarios where dropping weights would make sense, and nobody here has come up with any better examples that I can really tell. This still leaves me confused as to why my BC has quick releasable weights as if it's a good thing. It seems more like a safety hazard to me that increases the chances of me losing my weights at depth and creating an uncontrolled ascent.
First, my 3500psi HP100's are only 0.6 lb negative at 500 psi, so they're no different from a pair of aluminum tanks for which I'm wearing lead to counteract their positive buoyancy when empty.
They ARE different, because the DELTA in bouyancy between an empty and a full tank is different from AL80 vs HP100. An AL80 tank goes from -1.4 to 4.4 when empty, so it's delta is 5.8, meaning that if you weighted yourself to be neutral on an empty tank at your safety stop, then you would be starting your dive 5.8 lbs heavy. An HP100 tank has a bouyancy delta of 7.8 lbs, which means that you'd have to start your dive being 7.8 lbs heavy, and a HP117 tank would mean you start out being 9.28 lbs heavy. Therefore, if your BC isn't working, you'd have a harder time treading water at the surface at the beginning of your dive if you were running an HP tank than an AL tank, and therefore it would be more plausible that you find the need to drop weights. That's all I was saying