I've used rubber NATOs in the past if its over a dry suit.
Just a wetsuit I've never had a problem with a standard strap - do it up a bit tighter :)
Afternoon all,
Recently returned from a diving trip and found using a nylon NATO rather frustrating due to the way it becomes less snug against the suit's wrist when compressed at depth.
I use bungees on my dive computer but can't see a way to do this on my watch (a Seiko solar diver) without using very very thin bungee, sub 1mm. Are there specific straps that can remain snug at depth or is it just a case of really really overtightening the NATO at the surface? Ideally they also have the security of a NATO in that one spring bar failure won't lose the watch.
Any advice greatly appreciated.
Hugh
Last edited by hughtrimble; 19th July 2023 at 15:52.
I've used rubber NATOs in the past if its over a dry suit.
Just a wetsuit I've never had a problem with a standard strap - do it up a bit tighter :)
My dive watches have a ribbed rubber strap that you stretch when putting on at the surface.
You haven't said to what depth you were diving or whether it was wet or dry suit. However, a 5mm neoprene wet suit will compress to 2.5mm at 10m and down to 1.7mm at 20m. I usually wear my watch against my wrist and under the wetsuit sleeve, either on or below the thinner sleeve seal. Even if worn over the sleeve (for photographing) it's not been a problem I've noticed and I've never found the need to really really overtighten a strap prior to a dive, but then I'm not overly concerned about tightness on the wrist.
R
Last edited by ralphy; 19th July 2023 at 16:48.
Ignorance breeds Fear. Fear breeds Hatred. Hatred breeds Ignorance. Break the chain.
As Ralphy says, depends on what type of suit you're wearing, but I dive with mine over the silicone seals on my drysuit without any adjustment.
Lovely photo Ralphy!
Definite issue with my 5 mm wetsuit, going to max 20 m. At 10 m it's noticeably loose too, as expected.
I did try it direct on my skin after the cuff, but soon noticed the reason for watches with a crown at anywhere other than 3 o'clock!
Drysuit mostly limited by the length of my NATOs, but Gunner's suggestion of an EO has got me thinking I can easily modify that to be more secure for both dry and wet suit diving.
Why would you want to wear a watch on the side of your divecomputer? The divepc tells time. But more importantly a watch is another thing that can be of nuisence.
Always handy for a backup/bottom/swim timer.
And the coolness factor cant be ignored. Which is the most important.
Dive watch always handy for wearing on the boat if not diving. Timing when other divers start / finish, slack water, can we make it home before the pub closes etc.
I either dive with the OEM rubber strap or the OEM bracelet, never had a problem and they're comfortable. Mind you, I only ever wear a 2.5mm shortie whether diving in the UK, Sweden or anywhere else (although I only dive to a maximum of 40m) .. anything else is just way too warm ..
/vince ..
You’d hate my heated undersuit then 🤣
Impressive tolerance! Recent trip with 12 of us, all in 5mm SCUBA wetsuits, 17°C water at 20 m, most could not tolerate it longer than 15 minutes before wanting to ascend to the warmer shallows. No gloves or hoods mind you, and no current to contend with so very little exertion.
Doing 2.5 mm in that climate, let alone UK waters...I cannot imagine ever even trying it!
I mostly certainly would! I'm not a fan of heating in any shape or form ..
I've ice dived in my 2.5mm, all my compatriots were in dry suites .. but there again, I only ever wear shorts and t-shirts on dry land, all year round. And I'm 1.85m and 82kg .. so not a big chap .. although, as my other half calls me - a big idiot :)
/vince ..
Much kudos to you on your underwater tolerance, I'm a shorts & t-shirt chap on land too but there's no way would I contemplate diving in anything less than a 5mm wetsuit nowadays. Although I don't wear gloves (operating cameras with them on is difficult I find) but I've usually got a hood on too!
R
Ignorance breeds Fear. Fear breeds Hatred. Hatred breeds Ignorance. Break the chain.
My Citizen has such a strap. Weblink to a page with a pic:
https://www.jomashop.com/media/catal...-bn000004h.jpg
I have also strapped on with a normal nato to the D ring on my BCD - it’s with me and I can set the elapsed time, but not on my wrist.
Dave
Ah yes, so that's what those 'crinkles' are for! Sensible move on the rig-clipped watch, that's a rather more pragmatic approach.
I've found a way with an elasticated strap for it to behave like a NATO in my wrist in terms of holding on even if one spring bar fails; thank you again to gunner for the suggestion.