MichaelRyanSd
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I’ve got a Steel Plate, STA and tank bands. I’ve also got a canister light
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I have a question about detachable weight. What's the point of having it as detachable if the only weight I carry is about 4lbs. I'm tempted to see if I can go down to 2.
I guess my follow on at that point is, I'd rather put it as trim weight somewhere on the BP or the tank straps. Would I have any glaring safety issues if my only detachable weight is 4lbs
When I am instructing in a pool with a 3mm suit, I am usually 4-6 pounds over ideal weight. I do a demonstration on using lungs for buoyancy that should some may find illuminating.I have a question about detachable weight. What's the point of having it as detachable if the only weight I carry is about 4lbs. I'm tempted to see if I can go down to 2.
I guess my follow on at that point is, I'd rather put it as trim weight somewhere on the BP or the tank straps. Would I have any glaring safety issues if my only detachable weight is 4lbs
If I ever would need to ditch, I would ditch my whole rig. That would keep me afloat for sure, but things have gone awfully wrong by then. So much I might well have bigger issues then not being able to ditch weight.
Maybe it's just me, but I'd much rather experience an uncontrolled ascent than an uncontrolled descent. You can often fix bent, you can never fix drowned.In either case, as the question relates to ditchable weight, the problem is if ditching weight means all you're doing is replacing an uncontrolled descent with an uncontrolled ascent
Is with people thinking that this is about parachuting up from the bottom of the ocean? Ditching weights is about staying at the surface after the sh*t hits the fan. It’s about staying at the surface and waiting patiently for rescue or swimming to shore.Maybe it's just me, but I'd much rather experience an uncontrolled ascent than an uncontrolled descent. You can often fix bent, you can never fix drowned.
And you're completely missing - or ignoring - the fact that much of the discussion lately has been about ditching at the surface. Unless you're hoisted aboard a helicopter, it's a mite difficult to have an uncontrolled ascent from the surface...
Maybe it's just me, but I'd much rather experience an uncontrolled ascent than an uncontrolled descent. You can often fix bent, you can never fix drowned.
And you're completely missing - or ignoring - the fact that much of the discussion lately has been about ditching at the surface. Unless you're hoisted aboard a helicopter, it's a mite difficult to have an uncontrolled ascent from the surface...