PorcuFin:That hurt.:sulkoff:
Thanks Ber. :lilbunny:
You're welcome. I wouldn't worry too much about Jeff, he just likes to stir the pot. (that or he's off his meds )
Ber :lilbunny:
Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.
Benefits of registering include
PorcuFin:That hurt.:sulkoff:
Thanks Ber. :lilbunny:
pants!:This is hilarious. The guy first states that it's the water that keeps you warm, not the neoprene. Then the story morphs and morphs til we get "Do you want that original layer of trapped water to stay in your wet suit or do you want new water to constantly flow in and out?"
Dude.
The water in the suit is BAD. Got it? BAD. But since drysuits are expensive, wetsuits are constructed to allow as little water movement as possible inside the suit. If we could keep it out we would (and hence we have neoprene drysuits, which are very warm by themselves).
The air in the neoprene is the insulation. The water inside the wetsuit STEALS your body heat.
I'm not sure if you don't get it or you're trying to rationalize some incorrect opinions.scubadobadoo:I get that the water is bad. I get that the air in the neoprene is the insulator. I have stated that many times. Still, the original layer of trapped water is playing a role in heat loss minimization otherwise we wouldn't want to KEEP IT IN THE WET SUIT. If it weren't important, then we would want a constant flow of new water!
SO, answer the question...
This is, in fact, totally incorrect. The neoprene is what keeps you warm and the water trapped between your body and the neoprene does NOT keep you from freezing to death. The neoprene is keeping that water warm just as it is keeping your body warm.The neoprene itself doesn't keep you warm. It's the water that is trapped between your body and the neoprene that is heated by YOU that keeps you from freezing to death
pants!:I guess that saying the warm-ish water already in the suit is "playing a role" in keeping out the colder water, but that's a really pointless way of looking at it that makes no sense.
Humuhumunukunukuapua'a:To answer your question - no, I wouldn't want the colder water entering the suit. I also wouldn't want hydrochloric acid entering the suit. By your logic, that means that the lack of hydrochloric acid in my suit is a part of what keeps me warm.
Why is winning this debate so important to you?scubadobadoo:CONCEDE.
JeffG:Why is winning this debate so important to you?