No, you want to be neutrally buoyant at your safety stop with about 500 psi in your cylinder and no gas in your BC.
How do you access that that last 500 psi in case you need it, without ascending?
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No, you want to be neutrally buoyant at your safety stop with about 500 psi in your cylinder and no gas in your BC.
This works well in my experience IF evaluated at the end of a normal exhale and carrying 80ish cuft of air.
Yes, I get it. The additional weight compensates for what you'll lose during the dive. My point was that your post did not specify how much air to have in the lungs, which is actually quite important. I was trying to agree with you while adding that missing bit of information.But if you do it at the beginning and then add 5-6lbs it's the same as doing it at the end. Get it?
Exhale a little bit. That 500 PSI weighs 1 lb in an AL80 tank.How do you access that that last 500 psi in case you need it, without ascending?
How do you access that that last 500 psi in case you need it, without ascending?
Exhale a little bit. That 500 PSI weighs 1 lb in an AL80 tank.
While all of you have been arguing about theoretical buoyancy, and buoyant aluminum vs empty steel, no one's paying attention to what the OP has really asked! He already knows the "top of the head or eye level in the ocean" trick, so he's either tried that with an empty tank or tried it with a full tank and added 5#. But he "finds it lacking". Why? Because there's a factor that has been ignored amidst all the usual ScubaBoard squabbling.What is a good quick practical way to make sure I am perfectly weighted? I've struggled a bit with this particularly because we sometimes rent BCs or wetsuits on vacation. I've done the bob in the ocean level with eyes/top of head, and found it lacking. Calculators don't work because I don't have access to inherent buoyancy specs for rental gear. I try to be within 1 lbs over weighted because it's easier to mitigate than being slightly under weighted in an emergency.
In theory I aim to be neutrally buoyant with 0.00 psi in the tank at 15-20 ft, BC empty. In practice it's kind of difficult to achieve because, up to this point, I always end dives with at least 500 psi, usually closer to 1,000 psi. What is the typical inherent buoyancy of an AL80 at 0.00 psi and 1,000 psi?
Thank you for the explanation of buoyancy.It's not about weight at the surface; it's about weight in the water. In other words, buoyancy. Buoyancy is all about displacement. A full 80 cf aluminum tank weighs about 35 lbs on land and about 3.6 lbs in the water. A full 80 cf steel tank weighs about 32.5 lbs on land and about 13 lbs in the water. So it is lighter on land but more negative in the water because steel is denser than aluminum, and because a steel tank of the same volume is smaller than an aluminum one (and thus displaces less water, thereby making it less buoyant). Subtract the amount of air breathed during a dive and the aluminum tank will be positively buoyant at the end of the dive while the steel tank will still be negative.
So yes, weight is weight. But we are really interested in buoyancy, not just weight. Concrete weighs a lot, and a concrete block will immediately sink. But turn that concrete into a boat hull and it will float.
Thank you for the explanation of buoyancy.
Now, before I bow out of this altogether, take a look back and see how many damn times I explained what buoyancy is before I got this lecture.