cool_hardware52
Contributor
Measuring the buoyancy of my wet or dry suit did nothing to get my weighting with doubles sorted out. Getting in the water fully geared up and checking to see what weight I needed did.
It would have if you understood the concept. A pretty miseriable day (by your own discription) could have been more productive had you arrived at the dive site better prepared. Dive days are precious, at least to me. I want to use them well.
I'd also note that Pretty much *every* respondent on you other thread noted you likely overweighted. How did they know?
"Go to a pool and figure out how much weight it takes to sink your wetsuit."
Okay, why not just gear up and get in then see how much weight it takes?
Why not arrive at the dive site already weighted damn close? In water weight checks can be reserved for fine tuning *IF* you know how buoyant your suit is.
Also, how much weight should one take to test the sinking of one's wetsuit? If you can give a ballpark for that, then doesn't that mean you can give a ball park for how much buoyancy the suit provides?
Really? How about *enough* to get the job done....
I meant to ask this before. Doing it that way or your earlier suggestion of putting it in a mesh bag and weighting that both leave me wondering how do you know you've gotten all the air out?
Use reasonable care. If you really can't get the air out test with suit unzipped, and unrolled. You will need a bigger bucket.
Why not put it on, get in the water, burp the suit to let any trapped air out, and see how much weight it takes to sink yourself with it on? Won't that then give you a better number because, one, you know you aren't sinking trapped air, and, two, your number implicitly factors in your personal buoyancy, too?
Apparently you still don't grasp what information is required for wing selection. What we want is the buoyancy of the suit, not the diver. Buoyancy compensators are used to compensate for things that change wrt to depth, and personal buoyancy does not change as long as we are breathing compressed gas.
Personal buoyancy will impact total weighting, but most people greatly over estimate the buoyancy impacts of being a few lbs over their "ideal" weight. "Ya I need 47 lbs of lead cuz I'm a floater" Em, probably not if you aren't Jaba the Hut.
And if you're getting in with the suit to check it, why not get fully geared up? At that point, like Tobin is fond of saying, it's simple arithmetic to work backwards into your suit's buoyancy if you want to. And you are not "estimating" the weight of your rig/pieces/parts.
I've *NEVER* said that. I have posted repeatedly that *once the exposure suit buoyancy is known* weighting is simple integer math.
Is it possible to estimate the buoyancy of a divers exposure suit based on their current configuration? Sure, I'm asked to do so 2-3 times every day.
Doing so has the potential to introduce many errors.
1) Does the diver actually know what cylinders they have been using? A surprising number have no idea, "er, uh you know the regular ones"
2) Was the diver properly weighted to begin with? Most newly minted divers are overweighted.
3) Was the ballast used accurately reported? I have divers that want me to believe they are using 8 lbs with a fluffy jacket, buoyant al 80 and a 7mm wetsuit. They either can't remember, don't know, or are to embarrassed to report they were using 28 lbs.
4) What is the inherent buoyancy of the Jacket / vest BC the diver is using? Can they fully vent it?
Testing the suit eliminates all these error sources, and it often clearly shows the diver that they were over weighted, often grossly over weighted. "So you are 5'10" and 185 lbs, sounds like you are neutral or close to it in your swim trunks. Why then when we wrap you in neoprene that we know to be 18 lbs positive do you think you need 48 lbs of ballast to go diving?" I can almost hear the light bulbs turning on over the phone.
Drysuits unfortunately cannot be tested without the diver, but a few questions about height and weight and fitness will provide a clue about whether you have an diver that may be something other than neutral. Most divers are pretty close to neutral given they make us out of salt water.....
I'd ask, how is the diver harmed by testing their suit and understanding how that impacts their gear choices?
Tobin