zen_man
Contributor
hutterw:RoatanMan points out a very interesting buoyancy compensation problem with the Glock. So youre tooling around popping caps in whale sharks, leatherback turtles, Ganges River dolphins (for the fresh water diving enthusiasts) or that annoying little SOB who forced the dive boat to have a late start your are continuously dropping weight. An lets face it, who can stop at only one or two clips?
So being new to the sport, can the more advanced divers answer how much weight should I add to so I am not positively buoyant at the 15-foot safety stop?
This brings me back to the combat tomahawk. With this nice little tool the weight remains constant as you slice your way through the endangered species list. There is no tricky under water clip exchanges that the less experienced diver has difficulty performing. Lets face the facts, PADI specialty course Underwater Combat Handgun Techniques leaves a lot to be desired.
In addition, the combat tomahawk allows you to add the coral species to the target list. Sure you can bounce 9 mm rounds off the coral head but the level on damage is increased several times over by the use of the combat tomahawk.
I am just say, pound for pound (2.2 kilo for 2.2kilo) the combat tomahawk is my dive knife of choice.
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well done hutterw!