Thanks, but I'm not sure how and where this is mounted.Please please please score yourself one of these
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from somewhere
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Thanks, but I'm not sure how and where this is mounted.Please please please score yourself one of these
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from somewhere
Over the years, I have had various brackets, both homemade of metal or PVC, and commercial; but I moved to a dirt-simple pin-free Zeagle pony attachment a few years back, with two, light nylon straps with buckles and velcro closures -- around sixty bucks nowadays; and I've never looked back.
Easily removed; secure, and stowable in a boat bag; the tank free in seconds; travel-friendly -- and will fit across any number of BC brands . . .
Why wouldn’t an LP50 twinset be the most practical solution?
Buy a spare cam band and attach it to your tank up higher. No need to use your BC since it is quite low. You could also put the pony mount higher on the bottle, near the neck, to raise it up for mounting upside down. Lots of simple solutions to a very simple problem.That looks very nice - Issue I'm having is I'm not sure how well it will work with my Apeks Black Ice BC - it only has one tank band, which is quite low on the rig. I don't like GripLock tank bands so replaced mine with a standard tank band.
I have 2 large dumpable Zeagle weight pockets on the band, and the clip sits in the middle, so not sure how I could mount the basemount on the tank band efficiently unless I remove the weight pockets, which I've been using for years now (yes, I like weight on my back).
Also I a little worried about the center of gravity on such a low rig - it would have to be mounted valve up, given the tank band position, but I'm a little worried that the pony will wobble aroud with a single low attachement
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True - I hadn't thought of that... I actually had 2 spare cam bands but left them in Bali for luggage space as we were movingBuy a spare cam band and attach it to your tank up higher. No need to use your BC since it is quite low. You could also put the pony mount higher on the bottle, near the neck, to raise it up for mounting upside down. Lots of simple solutions to a very simple problem.
Thanks. You're very convincing and convinced, but practically I don't see it.No, you only think it does.
I backmounted a 19cf bottle for years, over hundreds of dives. I carry a camera with video lights on all dives.
I finally decided to try slinging it under/behind my left arm, and now I feel like a freaking idiot for not doing it sooner. The main advantage for me was that slinging eliminated the problem whereby the bottle would not allow full inflation of the bladder on that side, and I'd need offsetting weights to compensate for the negative buoyancy of the bottle, those two things made it impossible to get my trim exactly right, and also sometimes I wouldn't need weight at all with large steel tanks yet I'd have to add 2-3 lbs to offset the bottle.
You should at least try slinging it. The needed hardware is minimal, you can probably do it with what you've already got available. Don't waste 2 decades like I did only to say "Damn I should have done it this way in the first place".
Dudes, what's with the requirement for extra unnecessary cam bands unnecessarily
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You've been looking at a single low attachment boss, I also use these with other single low tank band BCs
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and the part of the bracket that sits against the tank just slips behind the tank band as you're assembling
The Auxilliary bottle can be moved around and non rigid with some give is just how I like it without issue
having smashed them around for a couple of decades at least and I have seen no one smash more than I