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  #31  
Old 06-15-2004, 09:28 AM
de Valois
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Cold water wet suit recommendations?

You want to be as warm as possible, so get a 7mm. The water temps may support a
5mm (barely), but the combination of cooler winds and the occasional upwelling
of colder water makes the 7mm the suit of choice up here.

PJ left this mess on Sat, 12 Jun 2004 19:48:35 GMT for The Way to clean up:
>
>I've been diving in the Bahamas but plan to take my boat further up north to
>New England. I'm interested in getting a 5+mm wet suit for the cold water
>up there (as low as 50 degrees F) - mainly for diving on my boat if
>something is snagged, etc. I've also seen some 7.5mm suits...
>
>Any recommendations? Brand or thickness...
>
>Any help would be appreciated!
>
>Cheers!
>
>


Tao te Carl
"It takes a village to have an idiot." - Carl (c) 2003

(Kudos to Cap'n Jim Wyatt for this link) BEFORE you ask a dumb-ass question
here...http://www.speakeasy.org/~neilco/bart.gif

Reply With Quote
  #32  
Old 06-15-2004, 09:28 AM
de Valois
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Cold water wet suit recommendations?

You want to be as warm as possible, so get a 7mm. The water temps may support a
5mm (barely), but the combination of cooler winds and the occasional upwelling
of colder water makes the 7mm the suit of choice up here.

PJ left this mess on Sat, 12 Jun 2004 19:48:35 GMT for The Way to clean up:
>
>I've been diving in the Bahamas but plan to take my boat further up north to
>New England. I'm interested in getting a 5+mm wet suit for the cold water
>up there (as low as 50 degrees F) - mainly for diving on my boat if
>something is snagged, etc. I've also seen some 7.5mm suits...
>
>Any recommendations? Brand or thickness...
>
>Any help would be appreciated!
>
>Cheers!
>
>


Tao te Carl
"It takes a village to have an idiot." - Carl (c) 2003

(Kudos to Cap'n Jim Wyatt for this link) BEFORE you ask a dumb-ass question
here...http://www.speakeasy.org/~neilco/bart.gif

Reply With Quote
  #33  
Old 06-15-2004, 09:28 AM
de Valois
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Cold water wet suit recommendations?

You want to be as warm as possible, so get a 7mm. The water temps may support a
5mm (barely), but the combination of cooler winds and the occasional upwelling
of colder water makes the 7mm the suit of choice up here.

PJ left this mess on Sat, 12 Jun 2004 19:48:35 GMT for The Way to clean up:
>
>I've been diving in the Bahamas but plan to take my boat further up north to
>New England. I'm interested in getting a 5+mm wet suit for the cold water
>up there (as low as 50 degrees F) - mainly for diving on my boat if
>something is snagged, etc. I've also seen some 7.5mm suits...
>
>Any recommendations? Brand or thickness...
>
>Any help would be appreciated!
>
>Cheers!
>
>


Tao te Carl
"It takes a village to have an idiot." - Carl (c) 2003

(Kudos to Cap'n Jim Wyatt for this link) BEFORE you ask a dumb-ass question
here...http://www.speakeasy.org/~neilco/bart.gif

Reply With Quote
  #34  
Old 06-15-2004, 09:28 AM
de Valois
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Cold water wet suit recommendations?

You want to be as warm as possible, so get a 7mm. The water temps may support a
5mm (barely), but the combination of cooler winds and the occasional upwelling
of colder water makes the 7mm the suit of choice up here.

PJ left this mess on Sat, 12 Jun 2004 19:48:35 GMT for The Way to clean up:
>
>I've been diving in the Bahamas but plan to take my boat further up north to
>New England. I'm interested in getting a 5+mm wet suit for the cold water
>up there (as low as 50 degrees F) - mainly for diving on my boat if
>something is snagged, etc. I've also seen some 7.5mm suits...
>
>Any recommendations? Brand or thickness...
>
>Any help would be appreciated!
>
>Cheers!
>
>


Tao te Carl
"It takes a village to have an idiot." - Carl (c) 2003

(Kudos to Cap'n Jim Wyatt for this link) BEFORE you ask a dumb-ass question
here...http://www.speakeasy.org/~neilco/bart.gif

Reply With Quote
  #35  
Old 06-15-2004, 09:28 AM
de Valois
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Cold water wet suit recommendations?

You want to be as warm as possible, so get a 7mm. The water temps may support a
5mm (barely), but the combination of cooler winds and the occasional upwelling
of colder water makes the 7mm the suit of choice up here.

PJ left this mess on Sat, 12 Jun 2004 19:48:35 GMT for The Way to clean up:
>
>I've been diving in the Bahamas but plan to take my boat further up north to
>New England. I'm interested in getting a 5+mm wet suit for the cold water
>up there (as low as 50 degrees F) - mainly for diving on my boat if
>something is snagged, etc. I've also seen some 7.5mm suits...
>
>Any recommendations? Brand or thickness...
>
>Any help would be appreciated!
>
>Cheers!
>
>


Tao te Carl
"It takes a village to have an idiot." - Carl (c) 2003

(Kudos to Cap'n Jim Wyatt for this link) BEFORE you ask a dumb-ass question
here...http://www.speakeasy.org/~neilco/bart.gif

Reply With Quote
  #36  
Old 06-15-2004, 09:28 AM
de Valois
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Cold water wet suit recommendations?

You want to be as warm as possible, so get a 7mm. The water temps may support a
5mm (barely), but the combination of cooler winds and the occasional upwelling
of colder water makes the 7mm the suit of choice up here.

PJ left this mess on Sat, 12 Jun 2004 19:48:35 GMT for The Way to clean up:
>
>I've been diving in the Bahamas but plan to take my boat further up north to
>New England. I'm interested in getting a 5+mm wet suit for the cold water
>up there (as low as 50 degrees F) - mainly for diving on my boat if
>something is snagged, etc. I've also seen some 7.5mm suits...
>
>Any recommendations? Brand or thickness...
>
>Any help would be appreciated!
>
>Cheers!
>
>


Tao te Carl
"It takes a village to have an idiot." - Carl (c) 2003

(Kudos to Cap'n Jim Wyatt for this link) BEFORE you ask a dumb-ass question
here...http://www.speakeasy.org/~neilco/bart.gif

Reply With Quote
  #37  
Old 06-15-2004, 09:41 AM
TonyP
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Cold water wet suit recommendations?

Jason O'Rourke wrote:

> PJ <noname@nowhere.com> wrote:
>
>>I've been diving in the Bahamas but plan to take my boat further up north to
>>New England. I'm interested in getting a 5+mm wet suit for the cold water
>>up there (as low as 50 degrees F) - mainly for diving on my boat if
>>something is snagged, etc. I've also seen some 7.5mm suits...

>
>
> For limited use, I have to disagree with Chuck's suggestion to use a dry
> suit. Costs more and requires a bit more diving currency.
>
> 5mm is pretty inadequete for most at 50F - this is right at the threshold
> where people want to switch over to a drysuit from a double 6.5-7mm. A
> custom fitted suit increases your comfort temp range a lot. But if all
> you're doing is diving to free the anchor, maybe it doesn't matter so much
> as knowing how to deal with the low viz.


I agree with Jason here. I dove for about 5 years in the NY/LI area with
a 7mm Oneill wetsuit. It was good for 'me' to about 47degrees. But I was
younger then. Now, dry suit is the only way to go.

Reply With Quote
  #38  
Old 06-15-2004, 09:41 AM
TonyP
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Cold water wet suit recommendations?

Jason O'Rourke wrote:

> PJ <noname@nowhere.com> wrote:
>
>>I've been diving in the Bahamas but plan to take my boat further up north to
>>New England. I'm interested in getting a 5+mm wet suit for the cold water
>>up there (as low as 50 degrees F) - mainly for diving on my boat if
>>something is snagged, etc. I've also seen some 7.5mm suits...

>
>
> For limited use, I have to disagree with Chuck's suggestion to use a dry
> suit. Costs more and requires a bit more diving currency.
>
> 5mm is pretty inadequete for most at 50F - this is right at the threshold
> where people want to switch over to a drysuit from a double 6.5-7mm. A
> custom fitted suit increases your comfort temp range a lot. But if all
> you're doing is diving to free the anchor, maybe it doesn't matter so much
> as knowing how to deal with the low viz.


I agree with Jason here. I dove for about 5 years in the NY/LI area with
a 7mm Oneill wetsuit. It was good for 'me' to about 47degrees. But I was
younger then. Now, dry suit is the only way to go.

Reply With Quote
  #39  
Old 06-15-2004, 09:41 AM
TonyP
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Cold water wet suit recommendations?

Jason O'Rourke wrote:

> PJ <noname@nowhere.com> wrote:
>
>>I've been diving in the Bahamas but plan to take my boat further up north to
>>New England. I'm interested in getting a 5+mm wet suit for the cold water
>>up there (as low as 50 degrees F) - mainly for diving on my boat if
>>something is snagged, etc. I've also seen some 7.5mm suits...

>
>
> For limited use, I have to disagree with Chuck's suggestion to use a dry
> suit. Costs more and requires a bit more diving currency.
>
> 5mm is pretty inadequete for most at 50F - this is right at the threshold
> where people want to switch over to a drysuit from a double 6.5-7mm. A
> custom fitted suit increases your comfort temp range a lot. But if all
> you're doing is diving to free the anchor, maybe it doesn't matter so much
> as knowing how to deal with the low viz.


I agree with Jason here. I dove for about 5 years in the NY/LI area with
a 7mm Oneill wetsuit. It was good for 'me' to about 47degrees. But I was
younger then. Now, dry suit is the only way to go.

Reply With Quote
  #40  
Old 06-15-2004, 09:41 AM
TonyP
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Cold water wet suit recommendations?

Jason O'Rourke wrote:

> PJ <noname@nowhere.com> wrote:
>
>>I've been diving in the Bahamas but plan to take my boat further up north to
>>New England. I'm interested in getting a 5+mm wet suit for the cold water
>>up there (as low as 50 degrees F) - mainly for diving on my boat if
>>something is snagged, etc. I've also seen some 7.5mm suits...

>
>
> For limited use, I have to disagree with Chuck's suggestion to use a dry
> suit. Costs more and requires a bit more diving currency.
>
> 5mm is pretty inadequete for most at 50F - this is right at the threshold
> where people want to switch over to a drysuit from a double 6.5-7mm. A
> custom fitted suit increases your comfort temp range a lot. But if all
> you're doing is diving to free the anchor, maybe it doesn't matter so much
> as knowing how to deal with the low viz.


I agree with Jason here. I dove for about 5 years in the NY/LI area with
a 7mm Oneill wetsuit. It was good for 'me' to about 47degrees. But I was
younger then. Now, dry suit is the only way to go.

Reply With Quote
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