Nomaster
Guest
When you mentioned experience, a light popped on.Walter:Yes, and you can also move so the lower dump valves are in the highest position, but frankly most divers are not experienced enough to do either and will simply add more weight.
When I was doing my training dives, two months ago, I had problems emptying the bag I was wearing, not a Zeagle.
It took me only a few minutes to learn to orient myself to take care of the problem, and then I could move on to other problems.
I don't think it's skills so much as feeling comfortable in the water, as soon as a beginner realizes that for the first time in their lives (unless thy're astronauts, a very small club) they are really in a three dimensional world, they'll be fine.
Also, as GDI said, the fit goes a long way toward correcting any major problem, my bag was old and wasn't very sleek, but I figured it out, I had a couple rentals which had the tendancy to want to hold air too, also not Zeagle, one was fit, the other was ancient design, easily compensated for both by using the three dimensional water world I was in.
So, for me it boils down to, are the beginning students comfortable in the water? How much time have they really been in it, have they always been back yard pool swimmers? No put down, but swimming pools for most it seems are treated as two dimensional surfaces for very short lap swimming.
Tom