Mark Michaud SELAUSAR
Contributor
Look at the amount of exposed surface area for drag. Sidemount is notorious for more drag.
Been on nights for a few days and haven't had a chance to reply.
I have heard this. I have been diving s/m for a few years now and really don't remember if backmount was noticably cleaner as far as that goes. Does it really cause more "practical" drag? What I mean is if two bottles are on my back, or on my side (and squared away), they are still in the water column. I have my rig pretty squared away and in a low flow can get 50-60 fpm at a relaxed pace (although others say I move too fast). I walk that way too. I find what is a good pace for me can be faster than others so I have started asking before a dive so a good pace, for all, can be set if I am leading.
My answer, to DA, was based on what appeared to be a broad open ended statement concerning b/m and s/m. The fact that you have forgotten more than most of us that have posted (cave, b/m and s/m diving), have learned, I do take what you are saying as the experienced voice that I can indeed learn from.
I have found that if a s/m rig is "clean" that the difference between that and a b/m rig is negligible and probably depends more on the divers themselves. Bugman doesn't really need tanks, I think he just brings them to make us feel better. Dude doesn't breath.
I went to s/m because I am getting older and want something that I can break up the weight to and from the car, water, boat, etc. My secondary reason was so I can see different stuff on the same dive. What I have found is that riding on my bottles really feels balanced. For me it just makes sense and it was easy from the get go. It took a while to tweak my rig but the diving was very easy from the start in s/m.
Again, thanks for your input here because you have experience that we all can learn from. I try to only post here when I have real experience with a subject. I hope it can help others reading. When you have posted I have learned and do appreciate your input. Thanks.