Yoyoguy
Contributor
Sorry guys, my point was to stay on topic, and replying to an ot repsonse leads to more ot discussion and then I get less information on what I wanted to know.. not being snippy or rude I'm actually here to make friends. I duly note that there are some differences in common practices with my wing combo. Everything has been helpful thus far, even with yoyo lacking a response to my question and reinforcing the practices of balance. . I'll be sure to post up if I ever find out I need more wing and what the limit was of my current config. And even how the balance calculator works out.
I did respond to your original question. See my second post. I think you going to a bungee necklace is wise. Whether you choose 40in, 5ft, or 7ft for your primary hose length will depend on you and what your future intentions might be. If simply sticking recreational open water, go with 40in. If going towards tech....go with 5ft or 7ft, if going towards cavern diving...it will be 7ft only. Anyways, about your lift. I was not saying you are wrong I am right...yadayadayada. I was stating you may not have gone deep enough ti get yourself in trouble with the wing and a 7mm wetsuit. Like I said, at 60ft, you really start to need to inflate your wing to compensate for suit compression. At 80ft, it becomes even more noticeable, Your wetsuit will lose all buoyancy between 100ft and 120ft and your wing will likely not work. If you are always diving shallower than 60ft, then you are good, but if you intend on going deeper...I strongly suggest you do more reading and speaking with some tech divers (not even all instructors are right about this BUT most tech divers have great advice). Just one more example and I will stop pushing you. Lets say you make a dive to 75ft on the top of a wreck but the bottom of the wreck is in 120ft of water. something happens and you start going below 100ft and now your suit lost all buoyancy and your wing is not strong enough. Now you sink to the 120ft mark. You either need to kick your way up to where your buoyancy of your suit kicks in OR you need to drop weight. Now if you drop your weights, and you go above 60ft...you will have an uncontrolled ascent to the surface unless you are constantly swimming down or have a line to hold onto. If I was you, I would start saving for the correct wing (30lbs lift would be ideal) and keep all dives less than 60ft. Just my last two cents.