Stoo
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Be aware that I wear a drysuit if it's colder than 75, and at 70 I just don't get in the water. Can you cut your wrist seal so that it provides a torturous path for water rather than a dry seal like I would use? That way if you toast a glove, you may weep, but you won't suffer a catastrophic flood like going without a wrist seal altogether.
See this is why you are a Captain... you're smart! ;-)
Just after I started this thread, I ended up tearing a chunk out of a seal. It's still in the suit, but very loose. If I tore a glove, that seal would certainly slow down water passage... so this might be the best compromise.
---------- Post added July 28th, 2015 at 10:19 AM ----------
Most fails are relatively small, pinholes leaks. And I can't remember a leak that didn't. make itself immediately known, then you have time to switch to a wetglove, add 50g of duct tape or use a different dry glove if you have an extra.
I do like having seals so I can use the drysuit in warmer water, or the pool, or enjoy thin wetgloves when the weather is warm (if I happen to dive that 1 or 2 days when it was warm /-)
All true as well... With these cuffs, I can stick seals in if required. As a photographer, I rarely touch anything in the water, and I don't recall ever tearing a glove. The blue Smurf gloves are pretty tough regardless...