One Liter of air does not weigh 1Kg, it will displace 1 Kg of water
Sorry, under what circumstances will this happen, and what precisely do you mean by "one liter of air"? The reason I'm being picky is that i think you're mixing your units.
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One Liter of air does not weigh 1Kg, it will displace 1 Kg of water
Sorry, under what circumstances will this happen, and what precisely do you mean by "one liter of air"? The reason I'm being picky is that i think you're mixing your units.
Good point. I never considered it was an advantage until now, but the pool I trained in was unheated. We were used to full wetsuits and had our weight pretty close by our first ocean dive.
A submersible fish scale would be ideal because it would attach to the line near the diver who could read their plus or minus weight themselves. I wonder if such a scale exists?
Personally, I prefer neutral at the surface (empty BC, never used a drysuit and don't see the need to for the conditions I'm usually in). Like you mention later, 10-15 ft won't make that much of a difference, but the logistics of adding removing weight seems easier (at least if you're diving off a boat or in a pool).Here is my view on this often debated subject. It is always dangerous to make absolute statements, especially on Scubaboard, but I am in my flack jacket so fire away. :nailbiter:
A diver's submerged weight should be no less than neutrally buoyant
<snip the rest out>
- At the shallowest decompression or safety stop
- With a fully deflated BC (if you use one)
- With drysuit deflated to minimum without discomfort (if you use one)
- With nearly empty Tank(s), like 200-300 Lbs or 14-20 Bar
- With lungs comfortably inflated to your normal respiratory inhalation peak
The volume of fresh water displaced by a Liter air weighs 1 Kg
This is only true at standard surface conditions.
Archimedes of Syracuse
Any object wholly or partly immersed in a fluid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the fluid displaced by the object.
How about something like THIS
I've used them for other stuff and they are good enough, even when completely submerged. ...
Personally, I prefer neutral at the surface (empty BC, never used a drysuit and don't see the need to for the conditions I'm usually in). Like you mention later, 10-15 ft won't make that much of a difference, but the logistics of adding removing weight seems easier (at least if you're diving off a boat or in a pool)
Do they hold up OK in salt water? How is the accuracy? If good, that would be the ideal solution. Even if their calibration was not all that great, all you would have to do is use the same scale to weight out the weights you were adding or subtracting.
You could just tie the rope off to a small float or buoy for the tests. Very cool, thanks.