I don't dive much - maybe about 20-40 cold water dives (primarily shore dives) in the Northwest here in a dry suit, and then another 10-20 dives in warm water locations each year. Right now up diving a single LP 104 tank up here in the northwest and of course usually have to use al AL 80 from the warm water dive shops. I anticipate the near future (probably in a year or so) I'll start start doing some light technical diving more often and will probably start diving the LP 104 with a deco bottle, and then eventually dive doubles, either LP 80 or LP 85's most likely, also with a deco bottle. Not doing any cave diving so I won't have gobs of other equipment hanging from me. I'm diving a BP/W setup with a 6# SS BP with 5.5# STA in cold water and bring a lighter 2# STA in warm water.
I know the whole arguement about two wings for two applications is better than the swiss army knife. Just wondering what people would recommend as the best one wing solution and the best two wing solution?
I'm leaning towards a Dive Rite Trek Wing for the best compromise wing since I'm diving in a dry suit and won't be using very large tanks when I go doubles. Would this be a better choice than the Rec Wing considering I'd be diving LP 80 or LP 85's for doubles?
My optimal solution would be do go for an Oxycheck 30# or something similar, now since it is more suited for singles, a bit smaller to pack for travel, yada yada, and I don't have a doubles setup yet. When I devide to go doubles and spend the money on the tanks I figure I should be able to spend the money on a Dive Rite Classic Wing. Plus I can actually borrow a buddies Classic Wing and Twin Tanks to get my feet wet diving doubles before spending the money.
Any insights are greatly appreciated. I'm about to pull the trigger on a purchase. I explained my situation to one dive shop and they recommended the Trek. However to be honest, when you are dumping between $1.5K-$2K on dive equipment, it seems a little odd that people like myself, would even consider getting a 'compromise' wing as an extra $300 is an extra $300 to buy a wing specifically suited for doubles, but it seems by the time you are serious enough about diving to be diving doubles - $300 is really just a drop in the bucket to have the best setup?
I my main concern is if I'm pushing it with a 30# wing with dry suit, LP 104, and deco bottle - I think that leaves very little safety margin but packing a 45# wing for tropical dives seems like such overkill.
I know the whole arguement about two wings for two applications is better than the swiss army knife. Just wondering what people would recommend as the best one wing solution and the best two wing solution?
I'm leaning towards a Dive Rite Trek Wing for the best compromise wing since I'm diving in a dry suit and won't be using very large tanks when I go doubles. Would this be a better choice than the Rec Wing considering I'd be diving LP 80 or LP 85's for doubles?
My optimal solution would be do go for an Oxycheck 30# or something similar, now since it is more suited for singles, a bit smaller to pack for travel, yada yada, and I don't have a doubles setup yet. When I devide to go doubles and spend the money on the tanks I figure I should be able to spend the money on a Dive Rite Classic Wing. Plus I can actually borrow a buddies Classic Wing and Twin Tanks to get my feet wet diving doubles before spending the money.
Any insights are greatly appreciated. I'm about to pull the trigger on a purchase. I explained my situation to one dive shop and they recommended the Trek. However to be honest, when you are dumping between $1.5K-$2K on dive equipment, it seems a little odd that people like myself, would even consider getting a 'compromise' wing as an extra $300 is an extra $300 to buy a wing specifically suited for doubles, but it seems by the time you are serious enough about diving to be diving doubles - $300 is really just a drop in the bucket to have the best setup?
I my main concern is if I'm pushing it with a 30# wing with dry suit, LP 104, and deco bottle - I think that leaves very little safety margin but packing a 45# wing for tropical dives seems like such overkill.