How To Choose A BCD Full Video

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 14 มิ.ย. 2024
  • Almost everything you wanted to know about modern BCD's but were afraid to ask.
    Types available, Features, Options, a few tips n tricks thrown in as well.
    5 different sections combined here in 1 video. You may access each of the individual sections in our 5 part series. Great to forward to a friend looking to purchase a bcd.
    Timestamps
    00:00 Intro
    00:31 Selecting a BCD
    01:47 A harness and a bladder
    02:20 A safety device
    02:39 History of BCD
    Subscribe to our channel: th-cam.com/users/leviathanscuba...
    Visit our website: www.leviathanscuba.com

ความคิดเห็น • 23

  • @turgutvelettin6727
    @turgutvelettin6727 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    True Legend , thanks for your precious time Freddy

    • @LeviathanScuba
      @LeviathanScuba  5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      A true privilege to help in the hobby that is my true passion. Take care. Freddy

  • @Hectorsdad
    @Hectorsdad 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I’m a total newbie to this subject. Having just watched a handful of your videos so far, I’m completely in awe of your expertise and good advice. Thanks for posting such useful information.

    • @LeviathanScuba
      @LeviathanScuba  5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Don't rush it my friend. It is a great place of wonder to have all of it new to you. Go slow and enjoy the journey. Thanks for watching. More to come soon. Freddy

  • @mikkel4606
    @mikkel4606 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    could also mention with the backinflates. that if you lie back on the surface. its like lying on a bed. as it keeps you stable

    • @coralkeyscuba
      @coralkeyscuba 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Thanks for the comments. Makes it better for all of us. Freddy

  • @retireeslife4013
    @retireeslife4013 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I've been diving with the oceanic bio lite for 6 yrs now. If this breaks I will buy another. Its just that comfortable.

    • @coralkeyscuba
      @coralkeyscuba 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      It won't break. I have over 2000 dives on mine. Faded but still works great. If properly cleaned I can't imagine what would kill it for most people. Enjoy, Freddy

    • @retireeslife4013
      @retireeslife4013 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@coralkeyscuba I only have 200 on this one and treat it like it's brand new.

  • @theknightofni
    @theknightofni หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Hay freddy, first off thank you for being so ingormative and protective of other divers. I really appreciate your info. I have a question on wing bcd. How newbie friendly are they? Im willing to spend a little more for them becaude my end goal is to be able to dual tank and i dont want to buy a single tank bcd and then buy another dul tank bcd later on. Thanks again!

    • @LeviathanScuba
      @LeviathanScuba  25 วันที่ผ่านมา

      You are most welcome. So, tricky answer as you are a newbie. Which I love that you are thinking about adding to your skills in the future. First answer is if you truly add dual tank diving to your skill folder you most likely will have different sets of gear. Without knowing you, I will speak generally. Twin tanks sounds cool, however extremely rare. Why you may ask is that recreational trips, resorts, dive boats cater to the 99.99% crowd. I haven't seen anyone dive twin tanks for 12 years. If you are on the coast and doing it with your buddy on the weekends then great but almost no one today dives twins. That is a lot of time underwater without a break. Brings up more concerns with decompression sickness etc. Changing your gear over from single tank diving to double takes time and not the easiest transition if you are traveling. Example if you are on a dive trip, everyone else will be on singles. The divemasters won't just leave you down while everyone else surface intervals on the boat. Not to mention the expense. Special valves, manifold, regulator or two depending on how you do it. Weight and as you are wondering your bcd setup.
      The actual answer to your question is that it is a little tougher diving a twin back plate design. But once you are used to it, not a problem at all. Your greatest sacrifice will be convenience and expense.
      I hope this helps a bit. I will say most divers that get technical have more than one set of gear depending on what you plan on doing.

  • @cyklopPL
    @cyklopPL 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Supper interesting. Incredible lesson. Thank you for recording and sharing. Greetings from Hong Kong

    • @LeviathanScuba
      @LeviathanScuba  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Hope it helps. Thanks for watching, more to come soon. Freddy

  • @johnwilliamsscuba6487
    @johnwilliamsscuba6487 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Any good diver who is properly weighted will be just fine with any functional bcd.

    • @LeviathanScuba
      @LeviathanScuba  2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Any functional, properly sized, bcd. I agree. Or no bcd at all. Thats coming soon. Freddy

  • @danewood2309
    @danewood2309 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    an interesting informative video as always thank you. can I ask your thoughts on a BCD ? I haven't dived since the mid 80's, and I am way out of date with equipment, so I'm signing on with a Dive school here in the UK to do the Padi courses for Open Water Diver and Advanced Diver. I'm doing a "packages" course which includes buying all of my equipment , The BCD the Dive school supply is the Aqualung Rogue and the Regulator is a Apeks MTX RC regulators , Im 5ft 10", weigh in at approx 195lbs.... when Qualified , I Intend to be doing some UK Diving, but mostly travelling to the Mediteranean, Red Sea and Thailand to Dive....what are your thoughts on the Rogue BCD ?

    • @LeviathanScuba
      @LeviathanScuba  2 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      First of all let me apologize to you for the delay. I hope you have not purchased it all yet. I was in Fiji for the last 3 weeks. Rogue is a good BCD. I like it. For the UK however it might just be too lite weight. I say that because cold water requires thicker suits or dry suits. The Rogue doesn't hold enough weight for cold water diving. Of course, you can make anything work but is it optimal, no. If only warm water then it is a good bcd. The Apeks is quality but overkill for a newer recreational diver. More than twice what you need to spend to get a good quality regulator. I don't know your shop and I don't want to know but I am brutally honest on your behalf. Sounds like the gear they are recommending for a new diver is way way too much and very expensive. Brother, look around. I don't believe in going with the cheapest stuff but you can get quality for a lot less that will last a very long time. Look at some pricing for Oceanic Delta 5 regs, Tusa regs. Great, durable, affordable and last a long time. I try and answer questions here at least once a week but if I can't get to you quick enough, email me at Freddy@CKscuba.com. Happy to keep them honest for you. Freddy

    • @danewood2309
      @danewood2309 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @LeviathanScuba Thank you very much for the reply , I really appreciate it .
      I've not invested the money yet ....basically because I met a couple who have been diving as instructors for over 20 years , they've recomended I take an open water and advanced course with kit rental, and use the £2200 I save to buy my own kit at one of the Dive shops in London.

  • @harambeexpress
    @harambeexpress 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    The most important thing mentioned: crap is crap! Buy quality. There are way too many gimmicks for sure.
    I don't see a single advantage that jacket style BCDs have over a backplate and wing. Back-inflate options only have a single advantage over backplate and wing - but even then, only barely and they still have most of the downsides of the jacket BCDs!
    Here's why backplate and wing: they are (mostly) standardised which means that you can choose all all the best bits if you please (but simpler is better), the construction is very simple and tough - a lot less plasticity crap, two cam bands to hold a single cylinder more securely, you can easily replace any part that breaks rather than throw the whole thing out, you can keep it for your entire diving career and take it from recreational to technical (and back). You also don't get a lot of gimmicky crap on the vast majority of them (if you wear a wetsuit you don't need padding - save your cash!). You can buy a lot of the bits second hand because they wear so well, you can adjust and tune them almost infinitely and you can make them for anyone. You don't normally use a weight belt (although you can). You can easily use a hogarthian configuration and you can easily place D-rings where you need them, you can be more streamlined, you can be better trimmed. They don't squeeze you. They have a crotch-strap which keeps you more secure and allows you use use (a decent) DPV. Swap out wings to suit the type of diving you're doing... Plus more.
    Tech shorts or drysuit pockets are far superior to pouches on your BCD. You can access your stuff better and it's more streamlined. So it's an advantage that these don't come standard on a backplate and wing.
    And comparing a "technical" grade backplate and wing against a high end recreational jacket/back-inflate BCD you will find the backplate and wing cheaper initially but also cheaper over your entire diving career.

  • @maxheadrom3088
    @maxheadrom3088 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I knew fish had BCDs ... I use to play with them when I was a kid. I haven't fished in decades, now, though.
    Why the "Mae West", I wonder ...

    • @LeviathanScuba
      @LeviathanScuba  3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Nature perfects all things.

  • @johnwilliamsscuba6487
    @johnwilliamsscuba6487 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    I use a horse collar just to prove a point now and then

    • @LeviathanScuba
      @LeviathanScuba  2 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Keep watching brother. I am now filming diving with no bcd as well. Not even a horse collar. Before you comment wait and see. An inflatable life vest not inflated. Modern version that is similar to a thick strap 2 inches wide on either side of your neck. Made for boaters that really don't want to wear a life jacket. Securing it to a back plate with no ability to inflate unless an emergency. So I can still rescue or self rescue if the need arises. Keep proving that point. I love it. Thanks for watching, more to come soon. Freddy