cool_hardware52
Contributor
Mossym,
To determine how much wing lift you need two values must be found, the "in water" weight of your rig without you in it, and the amount of weight necessary to sink just your wetsuit.
The weight of your rig is pretty easy to estimate, the weight of the backplate + the tank + regs. (Tank weights can be found many places on the web) For a single tank rig this weight is seldom over 20lbs, often much less. Being able to float your rig at the surface without you in it has obvious advantages
The second value is the weight necessary to sink your wetsuit without you in it. This is not the amount of weight you may now be wearing, as it is likely your current BC is positive, may be quite a bit positive. Remember it is basically only your wetsuit that looses buoyancy as you descend, it is this loss of buoyancy that your buoyancy compensator has to "compensate" for.
Even large thick wetsuits seldom require more than 18-25lbs, often less. Wetsuits aren't fully compressed until you reach ~165 fsw, so at lesser depths the suit will remain somewhat positive.
Usually in cold water it will be the weight to sink the suit that is greater, in Tropical conditions it can be the weight of the rig.
All of the above assumes that you are properly weighted, i.e. neutral at the surface with no air in the wing.
Good luck,
Tobin
To determine how much wing lift you need two values must be found, the "in water" weight of your rig without you in it, and the amount of weight necessary to sink just your wetsuit.
The weight of your rig is pretty easy to estimate, the weight of the backplate + the tank + regs. (Tank weights can be found many places on the web) For a single tank rig this weight is seldom over 20lbs, often much less. Being able to float your rig at the surface without you in it has obvious advantages

The second value is the weight necessary to sink your wetsuit without you in it. This is not the amount of weight you may now be wearing, as it is likely your current BC is positive, may be quite a bit positive. Remember it is basically only your wetsuit that looses buoyancy as you descend, it is this loss of buoyancy that your buoyancy compensator has to "compensate" for.
Even large thick wetsuits seldom require more than 18-25lbs, often less. Wetsuits aren't fully compressed until you reach ~165 fsw, so at lesser depths the suit will remain somewhat positive.
Usually in cold water it will be the weight to sink the suit that is greater, in Tropical conditions it can be the weight of the rig.
All of the above assumes that you are properly weighted, i.e. neutral at the surface with no air in the wing.
Good luck,
Tobin