ScubaRon
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Since you're getting the answer piecemeal, here's the complete calculation for recreational diving:
Following is the formula to calculate the lift capacity of your BC for recreational diving:
weight of the air in the largest tank you'll dive with at max. pressure minus 500 psi [A]
+ buoyancy of the thickest wetsuit you'll dive with x 0.7
+ buoyancy of any articles you may be carrying or picking up UW [C]
+ safety margin [D] )
x 1.1 [E]
= BC lift capacity needed.
[A] At the start of your dive this is how much "overweight" you are; your BC needs to compensate for this. E.g. 80 cu. ft. of air at 2500 psi (=3000-500) weights 4.8 lbs. 120 cu. ft. at 2500 psi weights 7.2 lbs.
At 132 ft. your wetsuit will lose approx. 70% of its buoyancy. If you know how much weight you need wearing this wetsuit in the ocean and how much weight you need wearing just swimming trunks in freshwater (e.g. in a pool), your wetsuit buoyancy is the difference. At 132 ft. your wetsuit will loose about 70% of it's buoyancy due to compression. Your BC needs to compensate for this.
[C] Camera's, reels, lights etc.
[D] A safety margin of at least a few lbs is recommended, just in case you need to help your buddy carry something, go a little deeper or whatever.
[E] BC's typically have a 10% tolerance in their lift capacity. So a BC advertised with a 40 lb. capacity, may in reality give you anywhere from 36 to 44 lbs. To be on the safe side we assume the worst.
So a diver with a wetsuit with 20 lbs buoyancy, diving 120 cu. ft. tanks with a max. pressure of 3000 psi, carrying a 1 lbs camera and using a 5 lbs safety margin will need ( 7.2 + (20 x 0.7) + 1 + 5 ) x 1.1 = 30 lbs of buoyancy.
ScubaRon
Following is the formula to calculate the lift capacity of your BC for recreational diving:
weight of the air in the largest tank you'll dive with at max. pressure minus 500 psi [A]
+ buoyancy of the thickest wetsuit you'll dive with x 0.7
+ buoyancy of any articles you may be carrying or picking up UW [C]
+ safety margin [D] )
x 1.1 [E]
= BC lift capacity needed.
[A] At the start of your dive this is how much "overweight" you are; your BC needs to compensate for this. E.g. 80 cu. ft. of air at 2500 psi (=3000-500) weights 4.8 lbs. 120 cu. ft. at 2500 psi weights 7.2 lbs.
At 132 ft. your wetsuit will lose approx. 70% of its buoyancy. If you know how much weight you need wearing this wetsuit in the ocean and how much weight you need wearing just swimming trunks in freshwater (e.g. in a pool), your wetsuit buoyancy is the difference. At 132 ft. your wetsuit will loose about 70% of it's buoyancy due to compression. Your BC needs to compensate for this.
[C] Camera's, reels, lights etc.
[D] A safety margin of at least a few lbs is recommended, just in case you need to help your buddy carry something, go a little deeper or whatever.
[E] BC's typically have a 10% tolerance in their lift capacity. So a BC advertised with a 40 lb. capacity, may in reality give you anywhere from 36 to 44 lbs. To be on the safe side we assume the worst.
So a diver with a wetsuit with 20 lbs buoyancy, diving 120 cu. ft. tanks with a max. pressure of 3000 psi, carrying a 1 lbs camera and using a 5 lbs safety margin will need ( 7.2 + (20 x 0.7) + 1 + 5 ) x 1.1 = 30 lbs of buoyancy.
