The big question is, how many of them ended up buying a jacket BCD after the course?
Approximately zero. :d
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The big question is, how many of them ended up buying a jacket BCD after the course?
Well. I opted to go for a reg first.....Bought an Atomic Z3. The fiance has a B2, but I couldn't justify more dollars for just a swivel 1st stage. Should arrive in a week or so!! I want to thank every one of you for all the help in looking at BCs. I looked into some DSS BP/W combos and might look closer at them once I get a better idea what type of diving I will do.....which is pretty much just goign to be warm tropical waters.
I see used knighthawk and rangers in that price...will save a ton of cash if you by lightly used
Well. I opted to go for a reg first.....Bought an Atomic Z3. The fiance has a B2, but I couldn't justify more dollars for just a swivel 1st stage. Should arrive in a week or so!! I want to thank every one of you for all the help in looking at BCs. I looked into some DSS BP/W combos and might look closer at them once I get a better idea what type of diving I will do.....which is pretty much just goign to be warm tropical waters.
Given your location & the type of diving you do, I believe using BP/W makes sense. However, the OP is a warm water diver. Also he is a travellingWe put all our open water students in BP/W - never had anyone have a problem.
Given your location & the type of diving you do, I believe using BP/W makes sense. However, the OP is a warm water diver. Also he is a travelling
warm water diver. He is typical of diver that we train. BP/W don't work for many of our Open Water (OW) students because they do not need any weight.
Also, many warm water divers don't need any weight especially if they are using steel tanks.
How many of your OW students continue on to Rec/Tek or Tech diving?
Where do you do your OW dives?
BP/W can definitely be used for warm water and travel. Aluminum plates weigh 2 pounds. Soft plates weigh 9 ounces.
For warm water diving, steel tanks are not the norm.
I'm not saying anyone has to use a BP/W, but they work great for warm water and pack smaller & lighter than traditional BCD's.
It's good to have choices. Jacket, back inflate, BP/W. Although I have my own preference, each of the styles will work fine for warm water.
I would say a BP/ with an aluminum or Kyvek plate and 17-24 pound lift would be the ideal travel set-up for tropical water. Much more compact than the average jacket BC, much lighter weight for airline travel. How does this cause the diver to need or not need weight?Given your location & the type of diving you do, I believe using BP/W makes sense. However, the OP is a warm water diver. Also he is a travelling
warm water diver. He is typical of diver that we train. BP/W don't work for many of our Open Water (OW) students because they do not need any weight.
Also, many warm water divers don't need any weight especially if they are using steel tanks.
How many of your OW students continue on to Rec/Tek or Tech diving?
Where do you do your OW dives?
Given your location & the type of diving you do, I believe using BP/W makes sense. However, the OP is a warm water diver. Also he is a travelling
warm water diver. He is typical of diver that we train. BP/W don't work for many of our Open Water (OW) students because they do not need any weight.
Also, many warm water divers don't need any weight especially if they are using steel tanks.
How many of your OW students continue on to Rec/Tek or Tech diving?
Where do you do your OW dives?