Diving Dry Suit

            Diving dry suits are for diving in cold water settings and they come in a kind of style: full length arms and legs. The only difference between different brands of dry suits on the market are used in materials to the combination and placement of the slide to create.
            Dry suits keep the heat around the diver with a layer of warm air trapped in the clothing worn under the dry suit. As the diver Descends in water, the air is compressed in the costume, but the pressure may be offset by the use of a low-pressure hose to the air supply for divers.
As the diver ascends, the air was added to the mix are now broken down by the use of a deflation valve.
            The material used to make dry suits can either neoprene, crushed neoprene or some other type of lightweight fabric that is reinforced with a waterproof material such as vulcanized rubber.
 
Diving dry suits are the only way to go if you are in cold water (50 degrees or less).
  Their disadvantages are:

       * You are a maintenance problem
       * They are more cumbersome
       * Dry diving suits are expensive
       * There is a learning process for them
 
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