3D diver
Contributor
My Viking drysuit leaked during two dives last weekend. The problem seemed to be near my right shoulder---the right arm got pretty wet & I had over a pint of water in the suit after two dives. My undies did their job so I didn't get cold, but it was annoying having the water sloshing about. There are no obvious visual holes or damage to the zipper so I'm hoping it was a matter of the zipper not being closed fully, or my undies in the zipper or wrist seal. Just to be sure I did some Googling on drysuit pressure testing and found an old SB thread about using a shop vacuum so thought I'd give it a try.
Summary of test:
I used two 16 oz soda bottles to plug the wrist seals. I put a 2 liter soda bottle through the neck seal, duct taped it to the vacuum hose, and cut two holes in the bottle to allow air into the suit. I put a gate valve in the hose, filled the suit with air, closed the valve and shut off the vacuum. With the suit thus inflated I applied soapy water to the zipper and other suspect areas looking for telltale bubbles.
I've been diving Vikings since '89 and have experienced a few leaks over the years. Last weeks leak was larger than I'd experienced before so I was expecting a substantial response if there really is a hole or damage to the zipper. In the event, I did not detect any leaks. This suggests either my test method is flawed, the leak was temporary (i.e. undies related), or I'm looking in the wrong place.
Details:
block wrist seals with soda bottles:


Cut holes in 2Liter bottle, insert in neck and duct tape to hose:



Setup, ready to inflate:

Unedited video of pressurization and test:
If anyone has further suggestions, I'm listening & have time to try a few more things tomorrow.
Otherwise, my plan is to take it diving again, see if the leak recurs, and have my buddy do a video survey of my suit looking for bubbles.
Summary of test:
I used two 16 oz soda bottles to plug the wrist seals. I put a 2 liter soda bottle through the neck seal, duct taped it to the vacuum hose, and cut two holes in the bottle to allow air into the suit. I put a gate valve in the hose, filled the suit with air, closed the valve and shut off the vacuum. With the suit thus inflated I applied soapy water to the zipper and other suspect areas looking for telltale bubbles.
I've been diving Vikings since '89 and have experienced a few leaks over the years. Last weeks leak was larger than I'd experienced before so I was expecting a substantial response if there really is a hole or damage to the zipper. In the event, I did not detect any leaks. This suggests either my test method is flawed, the leak was temporary (i.e. undies related), or I'm looking in the wrong place.
Details:
block wrist seals with soda bottles:


Cut holes in 2Liter bottle, insert in neck and duct tape to hose:



Setup, ready to inflate:

Unedited video of pressurization and test:
If anyone has further suggestions, I'm listening & have time to try a few more things tomorrow.
Otherwise, my plan is to take it diving again, see if the leak recurs, and have my buddy do a video survey of my suit looking for bubbles.