elmer fudd
Contributor
halemanō;5405800:elmer fudd, If we look at my exact wording both in this thread and in the Discovery forum thread, the question is which "well designed" BC is more streamlined; a well designed Vest, a well designed BI or a well designed BP/W?
The reason for wanting answers to this question is that in every Vest vs BP/W thread, some BP/W proponents claim BP/W's are more streamlined than Vest's, yet they can not prove it so then when asked for proof they say "I don't need proof, I know what I feel."
That is a really weak argument and I would like to eliminate it all together, replacing it with fact.
Arguing about it here is not getting us anywhere, as usual. Not helping me get MythBusters to look at this subject means we will continue to argue to nowhere every time the subject comes up. I thought we could evolve, but I am probably wrong. :depressed:
This is way too much of an inside baseball issue for Mythbusters to take it up. Not that it couldn't be tested, it just wouldn't appeal to a broad enough audience for them to do it.
To get back to the streamlining question however, I doubt there is any inherent streamlining advantage to wing design over vest design whatsoever. I think the main issue is that wings were favored by die hard tech divers while vests were favored by vacation divers. The tech diver crowd was more knowledgeable and experienced and willing to spend money and their gear reflected that. Some of those old vest BC's were real monstrosities. I'm looking at an old Sherwood vest that I dug out of my pile of old gear and it's got more padding and bulk to it than some actual life vests. Compared to a backplate with a one piece harness it is indeed a very buoyant and unstreamlined POS.
An old Mae West in it's deflated state however is a front inflate that's about as streamlined as you can get.
About the only thing that I see that would make a back inflate wing more inherently hydrodynamic would be the fact that it partially fills the triangular gaps on the sides of the tank, but of course the buoyancy of air is going to make it migrate away from those spots anyway.