Looking for a BC??

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

Rovendiver

Guest
Messages
19
Reaction score
0
Location
Columbus, OH
I am still a newbie and looking to get a comfy BC. I have tried the Seaquest LX Diva and it is nice but....

In reading on other's I am wondering what some of you think about the Zeagle Zena?

Here is the thing, I understand I will buy another in time but as a grad student, with three munchins, we need something we can afford but that will not ride up on me (if you know what I mean). I do like some of the men's BC's but I cannot remember names of those. :) I have a long torso and well I bit top heavy.

Any help is appreciated! Thanks again for your help Scubatoys! Just in case you read this post.

Thanks Rovendiver! Spousal unit to KTRJC
 
research, research and ask advice from other divers. also what kind of diving will you be doing? when i first considered getting bc i was so confused. too many brands and styles to choose from. it also dint help going into a shop and letting the guys talk you into getting a bc which they distributed which made me more confused. not to mention the choice between a jacket style bc and a backplate/harness style bc.

in the end i eventually chose a backplate style bc for my very first. others will tel you its il adviced for a newbie but i beg to disagree. was the easiest thing to use and also the most simple. in the end you will ultimately have to make your own decision. good luck and choose wisely:)
 
First of all is that you need to figure what type of BC might be better for you. You have your jacket style which is used alot with training and rental, and you have your rear infalation, or wings (tek/backplates). As Spoon says, the wings were sometimes thought as for more experienced, but thats not necesaarily true anymore. The thing is, these are two very different BCs. The rear inflations will put you in a better horizontal diving posistion, but on the surface have more of a tendancy to push you over face down. The jacket style doesn't give you as good of a horizontal diving profile, but will keep you more vertical at the surface.

Two other considerations are going to be price and use. Are you going to be aa all around diver, where you will be diving at home and away, or are you a warm water diver who is only going to flu down south to dive. In that case, you want to try to get a BCD that doesn't take up too much suitcase space.

Go to you local dive shops (as many as possible to see variety) and look at what they carry. Try them on, look at their features, and do your own research on the web. If the dive shop has a pool, ask them if you can try it out. If they have a variety of different ones for rental, try different makes and models.

Like anything else, there are many makes and models, don't just buy the first one they put on you. You'll probably be sorry later on.

Good luck

Bill
 
"but on the surface have more of a tendancy to push you over face down"

Quite sorry to disagree...but I do. Im skinny and I have little body fat which means I am slightly negative, and wearing a 3mm with SS backplate and rec wing, I float perfectly on the surface. Fat floats, and 7mm wetsuits are more bouyant, so if either of these is you, then you can expect to be slightly reclined. I cannot see ever being pushed face first unless im naked without bouyancy towards the front of my entire diving body(from tank to whatever happens to be protruding from infront at that moment)...and my wing is ballooned.

The reason most people are pushed forward with a (!)BACKPLATE AND WING(!) is beacause they are overweighted towards the front or they have WAY TOO much air in their wing. I have experianced this push onto my face with a regular back inflation style bcd, and when I put too much air in my wing, I also felt the push.

You dont usually get this with a bp/w because your plate assuming it is stainless steel is actually ~6 lbs, and its right up against your main flotation...so they balance out. But with a weight integrated back inflation bcd, you have weights in the front and air in the back. Of COURSE its going to dunk your face.


Get a bp/w....you'll never go back. Thought Id miss the pockets that I originally wanted if I didnt get a regular bcd, but that was before I discovered D-rings. Theyre sweet.
My current bp is the first bcd Ive ever bought, but ive tried jacket styles, back inflation, and the bp/w.


-Matt
 
BUT BE VERY CAREFULL if you try out a bcd in their pool lol. I found out the hard way as per another of my posts.
 
mxracer19:
Get a bp/w....you'll never go back. Thought Id miss the pockets that I originally wanted if I didnt get a regular bcd, but that was before I discovered D-rings. Theyre sweet.
My current bp is the first bcd Ive ever bought, but ive tried jacket styles, back inflation, and the bp/w.


-Matt

i totally agree. nothing beats a minimalist bcd! ive donned a halcyon, my very first bcd, used in all my dives. never turned back:)
 
You should definitely try a Zena! I recently switched from a Diva to a Zena and wish I had known from the start and not wasted my time with the Diva in the first place. The Diva is an excellent BC that a lot of women like, but I found it rode up on my shoulders, it was bulky around the middle, and ultimately not very comfortable for me.

The Zena had modular panels that I can adjust as I get fit and lose more weight, it's minimalist and back-inflate, which keeps me from ever feeling squeezed (not that I've ever fully inflated a BC). And because of it's modular design, you can totally cusomize how it fits you by mixing and matching the panels, and for diving warm or cold by swapping out the wing.

Larry also has an excellent deal on last year's Zena for around $300...very reasonable price that I've already taken advantage of.
 
Wow!!

I am thin and also have little body fat. Well some fat in places we do not talk about :-) I remember the feeling of the DIVA riding up and making me uncomfortable. You guys have put me on a great path. Heading to do some quarry diving this weekend so I'll try the Zena if I can. If not I'll look today for a back inflate to rent and let you know what happens.

As far as the type of diving we are looking into, northern lakes, quarry, ocean and anywhere my spousal attempts to talk me into LOL. Taking it one step at a time and enjoying every moment.
 
The Zena should work well for you, as it is can be sized differently in the key areas to give you the fit of a "custom" BC. As others have said, however, your best bet is to try as many as you can and then pick the one that feels the best to you and does what YOU personally are looking for. You are on the right path with "taking it one step at a time and enjoying it", and just remember to please dive safe!!!

Best,

Scott
 
mxracer19:
"but on the surface have more of a tendancy to push you over face down"

Quite sorry to disagree...but I do.

Sorry Matt, I'm going to have to 'disagree with your disagreement' here.

The simple facts of the matter is that if you're trying to rest vertically on the surface, having your source of lift located behind your spine will always rotate you face-down if your center of mass is located in front of it, even if you're not overinflated.

In engineering terms, this is because of a Moment force (think "torque"), and the only way to reduce it is to either get rid of the BC & weights (not possible), or to decrease the distance ("Moment Arm") between the two by moving the two forces closer together.

The common techniques to minimize this Moment Arm with a Wing include:
- use the heavier SS backplate
- add a lead keel weight
- use steel tanks
- & with a STA (since this displaces your St tank rearward another inch or so)
- add a lead weight onto your BC's tank strap
- locate your weightbelt weights along the small of your back instead of in front.

What you'll notice is that all of these remedies involve moving weight backwards. This is because you can't move the BC bladder forwards without the BC...by literal definition...ceasing to be a Wing and becoming a Jacket BCD. Yup, that's the other way to skin this cat :-)

The reason most people are pushed forward with a (!)BACKPLATE AND WING(!) is beacause they are overweighted towards the front or they have WAY TOO much air in their wing.

Not necessarily.

First, surface conditions can sometimes dictate "over" inflation as the appropriate thing to do. For example, a windy day in a chop can often cause breaking seas (especially near a depth change), so if you want to get your chin up out of the water to prevent drinking the entire ocean, since your head physically weighs roughly 8lbs, you're going to need an extra 8lbs of lift in your BC. FYI, if you try the "just roll onto your back" advice in this sea state, you're may get even more water in your face, as well as burn a lot more energy to try to remain in this position...hardly what any sensible person would consider to be a good idea from a "drownproofing" perspective.

Next, there can things other than just your BC/suit/etc that influence your overall trim, both on the dive and on the surface. For example, a Nikonos UW camera is going to be held in front of you because that's where your hands are :-) And with a good set of strobes, such a camera can easily be 3-4lbs negatively buoyant. Since the average human's roughly 10" thick and the camera's a couple of inches, you have -4lbs on a one foot long Moment Arm that's going to be hard to counteract. Similarly, if you're doing NJ wreck diving, bringing up a catch bag with a bunch of scallops will weigh you down as well, so your BC's going to have to be inflated more than otherwise.

You dont usually get this with a bp/w because your plate assuming it is stainless steel is actually ~6 lbs, and its right up against your main flotation...so they balance out.

Yes, you've balanced out one rig. But since your 3mm suit is a tropical suit, so from NJ, you're going to be getting on an airplane to go someplace warmer, and the airlines have cut their baggage weight limits from 70bs per bag to 55lbs/bag, so if you switch to an Aluminum backplate to pack light enough to avoid the rediculous overweight fees, you've lost that ~6lbs that balanced your rig, so this revised configuration's going to have you face-dunking.

Get a bp/w....you'll never go back.

I'm ready to go back to a jacket. I've been diving in my tropical setup with a wing for the past two seasons (with a Nikonos) and saying this on Scubaboard tends to tick people off when they realize that I'm not a newbie diver.

Thought Id miss the pockets that I originally wanted if I didnt get a regular bcd, but that was before I discovered D-rings. Theyre sweet.

Putting a couple of small items tucked into a pocket results in slightly better streamlining than hanging everything in the world off of D-rings.

Sure, they're more easily accessible on a D-ring...until you clutter things up with six hundred different items hanging off a pretty small piece of real estate. From a work taskloading perspective, having infrequently needed items stowed away so that there's only a couple of important & frequently used items on the D's is IMO a superior approach. Fortunately, you can fiture out ways to add pockets to many wing systems.

My current bp is the first bcd Ive ever bought, but ive tried jacket styles, back inflation, and the bp/w.

There's a difference between 'trying' something and really diving with it for awhile.

In my experience and opinion, you need at least a dozen real dives on any new piece of gear to get settled in on the equipment change and to then tune it up to be well dialed in exactly how it responds in order to get a good feel on its performance, from which one can then generate a reasonably informed opinion.

And this assumes that there aren't other learning curves interacting to disguise one factor for another...in general, the wrong time to try A-vs-B comparisons is when there's change present from other factors, such as still being a learning novice (of course), encountering a significantly new diving environment, and lastly, at the beginning of a new diving season when you're a bit rusty and are just shaking out the cobwebs. For example of the last one, I got wet last month after a ~6 month layoff and my surace equivalent air consumption (SAC) was a disappointing 0.6 ft^3/minute on the first dive, but was a more respectable 0.5 on the second. Had I had made a gear change between these two dives, I could have easily erroniously attributed the "17% improvement" in air consumption to the gear instead of to myself being out of practice.


-hh
 

Back
Top Bottom