Ayisha
Contributor
Being overweighted beyond the lift capacity of a BC could make things very challenging at any depth, but especially depths like those or virtually bottomless dives. You'd be freefalling. Ascending may require dropping weights. Your ears had better equalize really fast too.
Just to descend or break the barrier beyond the first 10 feet or so, we already have more weight than we need for any depth, assuming compression of exposure protection. The only reason we wear whatever amount of weight we wear is to start the descent and maintain the safety stop.
It makes no sense to me to overweight oneself to descend faster. It makes more sense to me and it is safer to be correctly weighted and use efficient breathing and streamlining to descend as fast as you want, even like a rock. For any depth, just exhale deeply and sloooooowly; inhale short and shallow, then repeat. Look down, point the fin tips down, be completely vertical, raise the deflator as high as possible and deflate completely or dump, raise both hands if wanted, be as streamlined as possible. That is, if you must be vertical.
Just to descend or break the barrier beyond the first 10 feet or so, we already have more weight than we need for any depth, assuming compression of exposure protection. The only reason we wear whatever amount of weight we wear is to start the descent and maintain the safety stop.
It makes no sense to me to overweight oneself to descend faster. It makes more sense to me and it is safer to be correctly weighted and use efficient breathing and streamlining to descend as fast as you want, even like a rock. For any depth, just exhale deeply and sloooooowly; inhale short and shallow, then repeat. Look down, point the fin tips down, be completely vertical, raise the deflator as high as possible and deflate completely or dump, raise both hands if wanted, be as streamlined as possible. That is, if you must be vertical.