jhelmuth
Contributor
Apology not required (no offense taken since I am amoung those who use little weight and do not need much lift). I just wanted to be clear that I am NOT for larger bladders. If anyone goes back to look at my initial response, I am really questioning the need for so much weight. I was fortunate enough to have listened to many who convinced me that I needed to minimize my weight to really get neutral in the water AND be in control. They were right and I'm an advocate for sheding lead. For my typical diving (warm waters and very litlle neoprene), I have very little weight requirement (I'm 6'1" and 212 lbs). If raposarose (6'2" and 185 lbs) really requires 32 lbs of lead, then I think he needs to seriously consider a BCD with a lift capacity of at least 40 lbs (but as small a profile as possible in terms of the "hole" created by it, to reduce the drag). I agree with your comment on having a minimally inflated bladder move air and potentially creating trim problems. The optimal is to have a bladder/wing which minimizes the "hole" size created in the water - low profile if you will (to reduce drag) - and to have it inflated enough that air movement does not create a trim issue. I don't really know for sure where that is, but I suspect that it is somewhere around a 1/2 inflated bladder. I can say that because that is my experience. For myself, I like having the extra lfit capacity for other reasons. These include: being able to add neoprene for warmth if needed; being able to help a fellow diver if they loose a weight belt (yes - it has happened and I did not mind getting it for them - but I did like having the extra lift so I could easily swim the belt up (had 18 lbs on it); just in case I do have to rescue a fellow diver who has lost their BCD lift at any significan depth (losing their weight belt here is a last ditch, life threatining only option, as they will now shoot us both to the surface as we ascend); and lastly - just incase I put on some fat (I'm getting older and lazier with age).
Anyway, I enjoyed our discussion and am still open-minded to reasons for not having excess lift (IE - why I should select a blader that requires me to infalte it to much more than half its capacity). I do agree that one must consider the air movement as it affects trim - and I do think that is a reasonable and highly desired trait worthy of careful consideration. So in the end... not so large that it affect your ability to maintain good trim in the water, but not close to maximum capacity either.
Anyway, I enjoyed our discussion and am still open-minded to reasons for not having excess lift (IE - why I should select a blader that requires me to infalte it to much more than half its capacity). I do agree that one must consider the air movement as it affects trim - and I do think that is a reasonable and highly desired trait worthy of careful consideration. So in the end... not so large that it affect your ability to maintain good trim in the water, but not close to maximum capacity either.