| Home |
| Search |
| Today's Posts |
|
#11
|
|||
|
|||
|
Rick wrote:
"Michael Daly" wrote in message ble.rogers.com... On 1-Feb-2004, "Robert11" wrote: I'm confused on this point, as I guess I keep getting back to a skin divers neoprene, which is of course totally porous, and relies on body heat to warm the thin water layer that ends up next to the skin. Neoprene is not porous. It is a closed cell foam and is waterproof. If you want it to be porous, you poke holes in it. I've seen neoprene socks like that _once_. I guess that my wetsuit is a drysuit, then. Strange how that cold water that comes through the suit somehow. Neoprene is porous, but it does not allow the water trapped in the material to circulate. The air trapped in the foam and is warmed by the body, which provides insulation. It also stops water from circulating around the body, keeping fresh cold water from the body. From the following website: http://216.239.53.104/search?q=cache:Yk3bpqVxWZwJ:www.tdc-dive.co.uk/Factsheets/TDC%2520Tip%25205%2520(Dry%2520Suits%2520-%2520Using%2520and%2520Choosing).pdf+%2Bneoprene+% 2B%22wet+suit%22+%2B%22thermal+properties%22&hl=en &ie=UTF-8 "Wet suits let water into the suit which forms a layer in between the suit and the skin. 1. the neoprene that the suit is made of contains small bubbles of air which trap warmth in the suit. This can be affected by depth, as the suit compresses with increasing depth and the thermal protection the suit offers can be reduced 2. the water the suit lets in is trapped in the suit and the body warms the water up. It is important to get a well fitting wet suit to prevent the water from "flushing" in and out which then necessitates the body warming the water over and over again, and during which time the diver gets cold." Sounds porous to me. From personal experience, it feels it, too. None of that says the neoprene material is porous - it just says that a wetsuit isn't waterproof and given the lack of seals and a normal type of zipper that's not at all surprising. I have both a neoprene wetsuit and a pair of neoprene socks. Neither lets water through the material itself, but both have some leakage at seams and the wetsuit leaks at the zipper. Since they both lack seals they also let in water around my ankles (and arms/neck for the farmer john). The description above mentions air bubbles trapped in the material which would be a characteristic of closed-cell, non-porous material. |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | |||
| Canoe Paddle Length Suggestions & (Wet) Footwear Suggestion ? | General | |||
| rec.boats.paddle sea kayaking FAQ | General | |||
| rec.boats.paddle sea kayaking FAQ | General | |||