ams511
Contributor
I think the point Tobin or others are trying to make is NOT to have the smallest wing, so that lift exactly = change in buoyance. But rather, an over size wing is NOT the answer to a over weighted rig. I do want a few lb of extra lift so that I can be more comfortable on surface, but I will never want to dive rig where if my wing fail, I will sink like a stone with empty tank
That is not the way it comes across and the number of questions from newbies concerning lift seems to agree with my interpretation. There are people on SB who promote using the smallest wing possible because of performance. This confuses newbies who worry about too big a wing hurting performance. On reasonable sized modern wings you don't have the tacoing problem like what happened in the past when people used doubles wings for singles.
If the diver wants to spend the money he can purchase a rig optimized for each diving condition. If not then he needs to pick something in the middle that is not optimal but will work all the diving conditions the diver will encounter.
As for being overweighted I agree but most of us will start the dive about 5 lbs heavy because of the weight of the air in a single tank.