Bubbletrubble
Contributor
I'll change your question to read: Compared to diving a 7mm wetsuit or drysuit, do you reduce/stay the same/increase the weight you have to carry in order to be properly weighted?Quick question: what requires more added weight: using a 7MM wetsuit or a drysuit
I'm thinking of taking a drysuit class and initially thought it might lower the weighting requirements from being less buoyancy than the wetsuit, but now I realize the whole suit is buoyant.
Compared to diving a 7MM wetsuit here in CA, when you use a drysuit, do you reduce/stay the same/increase the weight you have to carry to get neutrally buoyant?
It depends on a lot of factors: material/thickness of drysuit undergarment, inherent buoyancy of drysuit material, inherent buoyancy of 7mm wetsuit (older, well-used suits tend to be more compressed and have less inherent buoyancy than a comparable new suit), etc. This doesn't even consider the gear changes which may be required by transitioning to a drysuit (rockboots fitting fins with bigger foot pockets).
For most of us diving a shell drysuit with temperature-appropriate undergarments, we tend to require slightly more lead weight (vs. wearing a 7mm wetsuit) in order to be properly weighted on a dive.
Bottom line is that you need to do a proper weight check when you make a significant change such as transitioning from a 7mm wetsuit to a drysuit.