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My current suit has a plastic zip. I was pretty sceptical, but apparently those horror stories were caused by childhood diseases and that those have been overcome now. I'm still withholding judgment until I have at least a few dozen dives on the suit, though.
Not sure what you are trying to say with that story, seeing as how there actually are near unbreakable cups today (relatively speaking, a bulldozer will break most things) where as a zipper won't ever be anywhere near unbreakable.
I hope those early horror stories didn’t come from people trying to prove you could smash them new fangled zippers with a hammer and they would be fine.
Allegory time, many years ago (not dive related) a friend and I both transferred to the hills at about the same time and from the same prior workplace, one morning while having coffee he showed me his coffee cup, it was a type used at a popular restaurant in the old town, he declared I stole this cup from xxxx because it’s completely unbreakable! He proceeded to drop it on the concrete floor to demonstrate... it took a long time to find all of the pieces.
The moral of the story can be whatever you like from don’t steal to don’t tempt fate.
I'm kinda partial to "don't tempt fate". Or, rather, "don't challenge what's known"The moral of the story can be whatever you like from don’t steal to don’t tempt fate
There are some things in the scuba industry that should never have been invented and when they are invented, we need to quickly "un-invent" them so that life my continue as usual. One such invention is the plastic zipper on drysuits. I have no idea, what motivated such an idiotic invention but the first failure I had on my drysuit was the plastic zipper.
I remember watching the promotional video by Santi where a sales rep was stepping on the plastic zipper wearing Nike shoes to demonstrate how durable the contraption was.
I was thinking in my mind "really? So you will place the zipper on a carpet so that there is cushion on the other side and step on it with a rubber sole sneaker? Why don't you place it on a concrete floor and drop a steel tank on it instead?" I can break a metal zipper and I can break a plastic zipper but the former would require more work. What problem are we trying to solve with a plastic zipper?
A few days ago, I spoke to a guy who repairs loads after load of dry-suits. "Stay away from plastic zippers. Steel is your friend and plastic is your enemy. I spend more time treating plastic zipper casualties than steel ones."
It was a bad idea that was surrounded by some serious marketing hype with sales people jumping on it etc. A lot of people fell for it but the fun is over now. To drysuit manufacturers, can we please end this highly nonsensical plastic zipper fad and return to the age of steel? I for one am not spending a penny on any suit that comes with a plastic zipper no matter how "high-end" they market themselves to be. Plastic is plastic and it is one of the greatest problems of our times.
My front opening fusion has a brass zip. I was told you can’t put a plastic one on it, the plastic is not able to bend enough to make the necessary U shape.
So which one is stronger and bends more?