I see a wide cross section of divers covering the entire spectrum of experience levels. When I question someone about their weight belt under their crotch strap and they reply that they are aware of the implications, all is well and good, but when they stare back like a deer in the headlight, that's when I know they don't have a contingency plan.
Casey, as for the conclusion that you reached that the incident was "bordering on criminal" based on a readers digest accounting of the events, it is irresponsible and actually libelous. It's no big surprise that ScubaBoard is being sued with comments such as yours.
Bubbletrubble, the 36 lbs I used was from her setup, she was carrying 30lb of lead plus 4lb for the full tank and 2lb for the regs equals 36lb and I didn't include the pound or two for the actual BC weight saturated. As for your rig, if you jumped in the water with your zipper full open (seen that happen) or had a catastrophic seal failure on descent your 30lb wing would be undersized for the 33.5lbs of weight you listed, which doesn't include the now negative drysuit weight which could vary from a little for a trilam to a lot for a Viking. If the seal failure happened at the end of your dive, your wing would probably be sufficient as now your tank is 7lbs lighter and and your total weight is only 26.5lbs, again, not including the weight of your flooded dry suit.
When giving advice on a forum, one needs to assume that the person receiving said advice lacks
any experience or common sense whatsoever. True, you never suggested that she hide the weight belt under a cummerbund (since the ET doesn't have one to begin with), but my point is that no one explained the implications of using a weight belt a integrated BC, which is what she now owns. For example, if the person doesn't have (how should I say it) well defined hips to prevent the belt from slipping down, it can be difficult to find a location where it is secure, which usually results in the person hiking the belt up to cummerbund level if the only input they have received is advice from an online forum.
Even if you know the person on the other end is very experienced and chock full of common sense, the advice posted online is read by others who may not be so gifted and ultimately oblivious to the implications. They then have to fill in the blanks for them self and that is not always a good thing.
Your comments regarding weight belts and weight-integrated pouches seem to imply that it's dangerous to use a combination of the two. I agree that placing weights in various places on a rig can complicate things in a rescue scenario. However, the example that you describe resulted from the diver attaching too much weight to his person. It probably would have been better to place some of that ballast on his rig.
On a related note, please don't remove a diver's BCD until you are certain that the diver will be positively buoyant when separated from the BCD. You take an enormous risk by pulling out weight-integrated pockets, removing the diver's BCD, and expecting the diver to float.
The diver did not have too much weight attached, they had what they needed to maintain neutral buoyancy with an empty tank. How it was configured was just a little surprising. I don't strip gear off a diver that I don't have well under control, they weren't going anywhere. It's just another inconvenience when your ready to pull someone into the boat, to have to stop and strip off more gear that wasn't apparent during the first assessment. In reality, the time lost to the hidden weight belt was probably less than 5 seconds, but considering that it takes me less than 5 seconds to pull a divers weight pouches and strip them out of their rig with one hand while the other is holding their head out of the water, I consider the extra 5 seconds significant.
Just for the record you can order or configure Zeagle bc's with various bladders. I put a 44 lb on the product I use from them. It probably depends on who is buying, their knowledge of what they are buying at the time, and the person who is selling them the goods. But the main point is you have options.
That seems more realistic of Zeagle, The OP and video both said the 24 came on it standard so that is what I had to go on.
For those who think I sound like an old coot who thinks all divers are incompetent until proven otherwise, that's because I usually only share the horror stories. Like the AOW cert diver I had recently who got their hood, gloves and mask on and walked to the back of the boat with their fins ready to jump in until I asked them what they were planning on breathing, since they forgot to put on their rig. (serious, true story) Crew a dive boat for a while and you will encounter plenty of folks unknowingly trying to exercise their right to natural selection.
I rejoice, when I do get a group of experienced divers on the boat and I try to offer them dives commensurate with their experience level, like a drift dive down the entire length of Pinnacle of Tremendous Proportions or a two mile scooter/drift dive around Cypress point. When ever I offer a drift dive to experienced divers their first time on the boat, I usually get a double take back from them as they have never done an intentional drift dive here. That's something the bigger boats usually won't do since they have to provide sites to keep the weakest divers safe, not to mention trying to live boat 20 divers would be a PITA. I truly wish all divers were highly experienced, as that would sure make my job a lot more relaxing.
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