Blackwood
Contributor
You read the whole thing? Yeeeesh
I read most of it, and it seemed like more of a discourse about buoyancy than trim (which I think of as position in the water).
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You read the whole thing? Yeeeesh
a trim tropical weather diver might have great trim with his BC set up when diving with swim trunk, and yet have terrible trim with the same BC and 25 lbs of weight with a dry or thick wetsuit (which compresses at depth, forcing the diver to add air to his BC to make up for the lost of buoyancy). So when an instructor tells me on SB that it is better for a new student to be overweighted, I just shudder at the illogical thinking. It is better for he/she to struggle with perfect weighting and learn to manage a small BC bubble, than to struggle with overweighting and the drastic volume change of a large BC bubble.
I'm going to guess you stopped about halfway through (around the second interstice). The second half is where the concepts of the first half are applied to trim. (Hehe, next time skim or skip the first half, instead. :biggrinI read most of it, and it seemed like more of a discourse about buoyancy than trim (which I think of as position in the water).
I'm going to guess you stopped about halfway through (around the second interstice). The second half is where the concepts of the first half are applied to trim. (Hehe, next time skim or skip the first half, instead. :biggrin
haha... will do.
Too bad we don't have a good chapter on this matter. Any aerospace/submarine engineers out there?
My belief is that trim is a combination of static forces and dynamic issues. Center of gravity is changed every time you add air to the BC, and depends on the shape of the BC, and where your weight is suspended.
As close as we can get to this is a heavy steel backplate under a back inflate BC.
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Going back to students, giving them 2-4 lbs more weight than the amount currently needed for them to dive IS going to look like overweighting in hindsight when the diver has a few dives under his belt, but it is pretty arrogant for a non-instructor with less than 200 dives to make blanket judgments with limited sand to stand on.![]()
Interesting stuff. Especially since I've just started diving doubles and have to "retune" all over again to some degree. I'll have to print it out and read it all. Maybe I'll pickip a tip on something. Other than that I'm just going to keep diving and changing one little thing at a time while experimenting with shifting weight around. Maybe switch back from my AL plate to steel. Tweak the band location, wing location etc.
You just answered your own question. Anyone not diving a SS bp and wing is a lizard.
I use an aluminum plate with my steel doubles, and a steel backplate with my aluminum doubles.