mrjake
Registered
I mad my first dives with a new 7mm semi-dry full suit/hooded sleeveless jacket combo this weekend and had difficulty with bouyancy control. I weigh 260# and carried 30# of weight in my BC, 10 lbs in the back and 20 in the integrated weight pockets. I could not descend until I was below 15 ft. I had to pull myself down a rope that was anchored to a training platfom below in the quarry where we were diving.
Once below 15 ft the suit compressed enough that I could control bouyancy, but it almost seemed as though I had too much weight at 60 or 70 feet having to nearly fully inflate my BC to stay off the bottom. On the first dive I had problems keeping my feet from rising requiring me to arch my back to keep them down. On the second dive I raised my tank in the BC thinking that its bouyancy would help keep my more in control, but the problem seemed worse. Should I have lowered the tank instead?
I definately need more weight because when ascending, once I get to 15ft I can no longer keep myself down. I thought about the posiblility of using some ankle weights as I have seen some drysuit divers do to keep my feet down. Is that a good idea? I'm new to cold water diving with thick suits so I need advise.
Thanks,
Bob Jacobs
Once below 15 ft the suit compressed enough that I could control bouyancy, but it almost seemed as though I had too much weight at 60 or 70 feet having to nearly fully inflate my BC to stay off the bottom. On the first dive I had problems keeping my feet from rising requiring me to arch my back to keep them down. On the second dive I raised my tank in the BC thinking that its bouyancy would help keep my more in control, but the problem seemed worse. Should I have lowered the tank instead?
I definately need more weight because when ascending, once I get to 15ft I can no longer keep myself down. I thought about the posiblility of using some ankle weights as I have seen some drysuit divers do to keep my feet down. Is that a good idea? I'm new to cold water diving with thick suits so I need advise.
Thanks,
Bob Jacobs