ginti
Contributor
I don't think the shift itself is crucial since it depends on the gas inside the bottle. It's just that it goes from slightly negative to slightly positive -> so they are almost neutral, and no additional weights are necessary. Or not?The Al tanks typically go from slightly negative to slightly positive, but that is not perceptible in the water, only on land where you have to add ballast to account for it. Steel just has that ballast built in.
However, I don't understand very much why so many of my friends diving side mount like aluminium tanks. When I said "I believe it is for their buoyancy properties" I meant that, in case one needs to disconnect the tank for whatever reason, the diver's buoyancy would not be affected that much. But it's just a guess... do you have any idea?