Been reading a lot lately and not really finding what I'm looking for. I got certified about 20 years ago and just getting back into it after a long break so trying to get all of my equipment and weighting squared away.
I've had a handful of dives lately in both salt and fresh water using both Al and steel tanks. So far, I've haven't had the opportunity to explore my neutral buoyancy on a near empty tank. The waves have either been way too big in salt water or I haven't drained a tank down far enough in fresh water to do the eye level float. My latest dives were in the FL springs and my buoyancy felt pretty good with 11 lbs of lead, a 5mm suit, and an AL80. Everything felt good and I could control my buoyancy with just my lungs and maybe a little in the BCD at the start of the dive between 5ft and 30ft and had between 2800 and 1000 psi in the tank. Deeper dives used more weight as I was experimenting but obviously could've had less weight.
Where I have some concerns is with a steel HP80 tank I have. I was playing with it for my wife who is pretty short and also want an HP100 for myself....probably. I started off with 6lbs on the HP80 and felt way overweighted. I was struggling with buoyancy control at all depths. I lowered this to 3lbs and still felt heavy. Finally at the end of the dive, I had 1800psi in the tank and dropped like a rock with no lead. I am strong enough to swim up from 30-40 ft with no air in my BCD but it is alarming how fast I dropped if I let all air out of the BCD since I don't really have much else I can get rid of. I carry some trauma shears, a small dive light, and a DSMB but those aren't exactly heavy.
Do you consider this unsafe to dive with the steel tank with no lead and a 5mm suit? Should I stick to aluminum tanks? Eventually, I will get to deeper dives where I feel like this might be a bigger concern if I had a BCD failure. Just trying to decide if steel tanks are even right for me. If I went to warmer fresh water, I'd be even less buoyant with a 3mm full suit or a shorty suit and I wouldn't have anymore weight to shed with a steel tank. I've been playing with the OptimalBuoyancy spreadsheet and the numbers seem to be in the ballpark at least.
I've had a handful of dives lately in both salt and fresh water using both Al and steel tanks. So far, I've haven't had the opportunity to explore my neutral buoyancy on a near empty tank. The waves have either been way too big in salt water or I haven't drained a tank down far enough in fresh water to do the eye level float. My latest dives were in the FL springs and my buoyancy felt pretty good with 11 lbs of lead, a 5mm suit, and an AL80. Everything felt good and I could control my buoyancy with just my lungs and maybe a little in the BCD at the start of the dive between 5ft and 30ft and had between 2800 and 1000 psi in the tank. Deeper dives used more weight as I was experimenting but obviously could've had less weight.
Where I have some concerns is with a steel HP80 tank I have. I was playing with it for my wife who is pretty short and also want an HP100 for myself....probably. I started off with 6lbs on the HP80 and felt way overweighted. I was struggling with buoyancy control at all depths. I lowered this to 3lbs and still felt heavy. Finally at the end of the dive, I had 1800psi in the tank and dropped like a rock with no lead. I am strong enough to swim up from 30-40 ft with no air in my BCD but it is alarming how fast I dropped if I let all air out of the BCD since I don't really have much else I can get rid of. I carry some trauma shears, a small dive light, and a DSMB but those aren't exactly heavy.
Do you consider this unsafe to dive with the steel tank with no lead and a 5mm suit? Should I stick to aluminum tanks? Eventually, I will get to deeper dives where I feel like this might be a bigger concern if I had a BCD failure. Just trying to decide if steel tanks are even right for me. If I went to warmer fresh water, I'd be even less buoyant with a 3mm full suit or a shorty suit and I wouldn't have anymore weight to shed with a steel tank. I've been playing with the OptimalBuoyancy spreadsheet and the numbers seem to be in the ballpark at least.