Soft Weights

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

2.50 a pound is quite steep to this shotgun reloader. I pay ~$13 for 25 pound of PREMIUM lead shot. You should be able to get crappy reclaimed shot from local trap fields or local gun stores much cheaper.
 
av8er23:
Where do you get that? Have you ever tried to make your own pouches?

Here's a couple of links for you:
Homemade Soft Weights
Nylon Weight Pouch Fabric??

The local gun range didn't have #8 shot or larger around so I picked up some lead bullets (9mm). A little lumpy, but I'm in Texas so this seemed acceptable.

For the material I used (a mesh nylon fabric), I didn't need an industrial sewing machine.

In retrospect, I should have just bought some hard lead weights (I don't need much for where I dive locally), but it was a fun project.
 
careful on those 9mm bullets, if they are FMJ or other self-defense rounds, they may have sharp points which could rip thru weight pockets, BCs, wings, skin, etc.
 
ae3753:
Here's a couple of links for you:
Homemade Soft Weights
Nylon Weight Pouch Fabric??

The local gun range didn't have #8 shot or larger around so I picked up some lead bullets (9mm). A little lumpy, but I'm in Texas so this seemed acceptable.

For the material I used (a mesh nylon fabric), I didn't need an industrial sewing machine.

In retrospect, I should have just bought some hard lead weights (I don't need much for where I dive locally), but it was a fun project.



No 0 or 00 buck for reloads in Texas? No #6, #4 or #2?

What's up in Texas? :D

Tobin
 
I made a bunch of homemade 1lb mini's. They're about 2 or 3 inces square. I simply used some cordura nylon I had laying around, made little "envelopes", and filled them with #5 shot I had around the house. I heated up a pin and poked a few holes in them so they wouldn't hold air and to drain. For thread, I used upholstry thread. To figure out what sized pouch I needed to hold the given weight, I measured out the shot and poured it into a small paper bag and folded it to hold the shot in one corner and built off those measurements. I think the whole project took me an hour. I guess they may have cost me roughly $0.80 each to make. Great for trimming.
 
av8er23:
I have a question reguarding shoft weights. I think they are also refered to as shot weights. The bags that they come in are sold of ebay for a fair price. The ones shipped from the dive store are expensive to ship because they are already filled and heavy. I was wondering what you put in those because I could get the bags and fill them once I got them home. Is it something like BB's?
they cost $2.25 a pound in the stores,how cheap is cheap for you? :06:
 
Gee, isn't sand simply small pebbles smaller? :eyebrow: Weight under water is a function of specific gravity i.e. a specific gravity of 1 means the item is equal in weight to the water it is displacing. The more density an item has, the higher the specific gravity. I can't recall of the top of my head, but I think lead is somewhere around 11.5 and gold, really dense, around 19.5. Small pebbles wouldn't work well because they would have a specific gravity in the 1.5 to 3.5 range, meaning you would need to hang alot of socks around your waist.
Stop being cheap and buy the weights!
 
Then try going to a tire shop. They usually have tire weights that they pulled off rims prior to rebalancing a tire (new tire, that is). Those you could stuff in a sock if you really wanted to go that route.
 

Back
Top Bottom