jeffsterinsf
Contributor
Uncle Pug once bubbled...
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Well... it has to do with the way you hold your body. The u/w world is dynamic and just trimming yourself with static weights will never really solve the ever changing problem of being trimmed out. But if you learn how to trim yourself using body *english* then you will be able to handle the environmental imbalances.
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Ok, I'm a bit puzzled by this one. Perhaps someone can elighten me on it. As I recall my physics, there are several possible forces in action here. Since I agree that the less energy expended wile diving to achieve a goal is the "best," we can eliminate forces generated by moving the hands, arms, fins, etc. Equally ignorible should be any contortions intended to change the position of the body within the constraints of conservation of angular momentum.
So that leaves two:
1) A downward force, effectively acting on the body's center of gravity (CG), and
2) An upward force, effectively acting on the body's center of bouyancy (CB).
So long as these two forces act in such a way as there is no moment generated (horizontal separation, i.e., CG in front of CB), the body should not rotate, but only rise or sink. If these forces are equal in magnitude, the body should not have a tendency to rise or sink. But as soon as they are not acting in a straight line, the body will tend to rotate. There are always two positions where there is no rotational moment, with the CG directly above or below the CB. Any other position will induce a moment that will need to be countered to prevent rotation (unless the CG is coincident with the CB). Other than those two points (probably close to upright or close to head straight down), if I can get my CG and CB to align at the same point, no matter what my position, head down, up, on my side, Buddah-oidal, I should not tend to rotate!
Now, when I swim, I know my feet sink. That tells me that my CB is closer to my head than my CG. If I can add weight or bouyancy in such a way as to bring the two together, I won't have a tendency to rotate in any direction. Since weight is a necessary evil (be it in lead or other scuba gear), and it is hard with even the fanciest bouyancy control device to pinpoint bouyancy to a specific location on my body, it makes sense to me to adjust my CG using "trim weights" (or moving my gear, as UP suggests) so that it aligns with my CB for a "nominal" amount of air in my tank and my BC device. By doing this, I should then only have the "environmental imbalances" (currents, eddies, etc.) to deal with.
Now that said, where the weights are placed is important. Remember that the CG is a point in three dimensions. If you place weights in a "bad" place, you can balance yourself in one direction, but make things worse in another. For example, a weight on the back of your tank might make you "balanced" while prone, but when you are upright, tend to tip you back. The "ideal" place would be on the line connecting your current CG and CB. Unfortunately, this usually runs through your body. I'm not much for surgical implants of lead into my sternum, which is about the perfect place. One option would be weights back and front -- so that the CG of the added weight is about the right place. I have not tried this in the water, but think about it when I select trim weight locations.
Then again, since your tank's CG and CB are about a foot behind your own line, and generally change about 5-6 pounds (depending on capacity), you'll need to pick the most appropriate air level to set your trim. Your BC device also sits behind you and changes during a dive. Physics doesn't help me picking that one, diving requirements do -- and I'm sure there is more than one thread covering when and why to have magically neutral bouyancy.
Now, if someone can get me a good airline ticket to some nice warm water, I'd be glad to perform some tests, video it all, and report back to the group
