Also with what Tobin said, you have to take accound for diameter of the tanks. You don't want wings wrapping up around your bottles, it's bad for balance.
This is completely untrue.
The center to center distance on doubles is set by the manifold, and modern manifolds are 215mm or about 8.46 inches.
Doesn't matter if you are doubling up 6.9" diameter 72's or 8" lp 120's the tanks will still be 8.46" center to center.
That means all these tanks will contact the divers back plate just about 4.23" inches from the center line on each side, regardless of tank diameter.
It then follows that the center panels (the part that does not inflate) of doubles wings needs to be 9~9.5" wide to avoid having the tanks trap the bladder.
Only the portion of the wing *OUTBOARD* of the point where the tanks contact the back plate is capable of "wrapping"
The issue with tank wrap is how high is the top edge of the wrapped wing with respect to the top of the cylinder.
Each side of the wing will contact one "quardrant" or about 1/4 the circumference of the cylinder, from the point where the tanks contact the plate, and the wing is free to rise vertically alongside the cylinder.
A 6.9" diameter tank is 6.9" x pi or 21.7" in circumference. 21.7/4 =~ 5.4
A 8.0" diameter tank is 8" x pi or 25.1" in circumference. 25.1 / 4 = ~ 6.3
The same wing used on 6.9" tanks will result in
less than one inch more tank wrap then it would if it was used with 8" diameter cylinders.
Wings need to be sized based on:
1) The weight of the divers backgas and the buoyancy of their suit
2) Overall trim considerations where the shape of the wing may help or impede horizontal trim.
Cylinder dia is simply not an issue.
Tobin