ScubaSteve
Wow.....what a DB
i dgaf bout bouyancy, i spent my first few dives literally upside down, fins in the air... or water rather. you get the point
:headscratch:

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i dgaf bout bouyancy, i spent my first few dives literally upside down, fins in the air... or water rather. you get the point
I, too, am an engineer and I don't have any problem with the diving terms. You see, diving is a different discipline than mechanical engineering. It is not uncommon for different disciplines to use the same words to mean different things. Even when the concepts are similar.Okay, rant over. I hope I educated at least one of you. Begin the ridicule!
Both painters and musicians refer to "color", but strictly speaking, the musical term means something completely different than what the painter uses the term for. Staying on the musical theme, in music "tone" refers to specific sound of a specific frequency. In audio engineering, tone refers to whether a circuit favors higher or lower frequencies.
Okay, rant over. I hope I educated at least one of you. Begin the ridicule!Tom
AAAAAAUUUUUGGGGGGHHHHHHHH!!!!!
My brain, my brain.... oooooo shiny thing, lookie!
Thanks Tom for the um, education. I must say, I much prefer saying I am floating, hovering or sinking when describing my own boyancy position in the water.
Tom,
With your proposed alternatives, you risk mixing up mass and weight. :crazyeye: My mass doesn't change (except for use of air) during a dive, so to say that at times I am heavy (sinking) and sometimes I am not seems confusing in itself. I think earlier suggestions about using the term 'net buoyancy' have merit, and to keep your sanity, just assume the word 'net' is implied.
...There are pretty much two forces at play while we are diving that contribute to what we refer to as 'buoyancy': Gravity, and Buoyancy. For simplicity, we will define Gravity as the 'downward' magnetic pull of the Earth on any object with Mass (ie, how much something weighs). Buoyancy we will define as the 'upward' force imparted by water to a submerged object....