Crowell
Guest
I dove a friend of mine's Zeagle ranger the other day and it was the first time I'd ever seen that ripcord system.
My fiance was home playing with it while I was at work and inadvertantly pulled the ripcord while "testing" out the weight dump, and at this point I've still not laid eyes on the BC yet.
I get home and this thing has wires sticking all out the bottom of it laying around, and I was thinking something to the effect of "what have I gotten myself into"...
I look at it for a few minutes, and it seemed pretty intuitive to re-thread it, so no worries there, but I was still VERY concerned about this thing coming unthreaded in the water, so I put my hands inside the weight pockets and was trying to (vigorously) shake the weight compartments apart for a while - but (to my surprise), it held, so I dove with it.
The only problem I had on the dive was it seemed very difficult to get the BC to release air - either by the bottom exhaust dump, or the inflator hose dump. I had a devil of a time with that and ended up having to work very hard to stay at depth and was still somewhat positive.
I'm not sure if it was the Ranger or just that particular model. My friend said he'd dove with it once in 2003, and none in 2004, and I have no idea what care it's received, so I'm not about to claim this is "what Zeagles are"... and after reading everything here, I can see a TON of advantages to the rip-cord, even though I didn't like it to start with.
For starters, to dump weights, you've got one thing to grab instead of 2. One quick yank and you're done. I'm still somewhat concerned about it accidently coming unthreaded though, since the ends of cord just seem to stop without any fastener or knot or anything on the ends.
My fiance was home playing with it while I was at work and inadvertantly pulled the ripcord while "testing" out the weight dump, and at this point I've still not laid eyes on the BC yet.
I get home and this thing has wires sticking all out the bottom of it laying around, and I was thinking something to the effect of "what have I gotten myself into"...
I look at it for a few minutes, and it seemed pretty intuitive to re-thread it, so no worries there, but I was still VERY concerned about this thing coming unthreaded in the water, so I put my hands inside the weight pockets and was trying to (vigorously) shake the weight compartments apart for a while - but (to my surprise), it held, so I dove with it.
The only problem I had on the dive was it seemed very difficult to get the BC to release air - either by the bottom exhaust dump, or the inflator hose dump. I had a devil of a time with that and ended up having to work very hard to stay at depth and was still somewhat positive.
I'm not sure if it was the Ranger or just that particular model. My friend said he'd dove with it once in 2003, and none in 2004, and I have no idea what care it's received, so I'm not about to claim this is "what Zeagles are"... and after reading everything here, I can see a TON of advantages to the rip-cord, even though I didn't like it to start with.
For starters, to dump weights, you've got one thing to grab instead of 2. One quick yank and you're done. I'm still somewhat concerned about it accidently coming unthreaded though, since the ends of cord just seem to stop without any fastener or knot or anything on the ends.