Wanna stay warm and toasty on a dive? Then dive dry. Yes! Unlike a wetsuit, a dry suit seals you off from the outside water and that keeps you warm! Even in surprisingly cold water.
Dry suits let you dive more challenging dive sites, and extend your dive season. When you have the right cold water scuba diving attire, you can stand up to the elements and take advantage of the generally better visibility offered by winter months—especially at inland dive sites such as quarries, lakes, sinkholes and caves etc. As a dry suit diver, you’re equipped to scuba dive some of the world’s incredible dive sites in the world’s cooler regions that are best enjoyed in a dry suit even in their warmer months.
Gain the knowledge and skills to safely put on, dive with, take off and store a dry-suit. Get introduced to the different types of suits so you can make a very informed decision if considering purchasing a dry suit. You learn:
Practical skills you’ll master in this course:
For all your learning materials and equipment, contact DIVE AND DIVE.
You'll hone your skills by completing three adventure dives that introduce you to:
To enroll in the PADI Drysuit Diver course in Melbourne, you must have the Drysuit, and it is highly recommended to have all your scuba diving equipements, but for any reason you do not meet all the requirment Dive and Dive will provide you with Regulator, DCD's, Tanks, and weights,
Scuba diving with a dry suit is useful when diving many types of dive sites. A dry suit is necessary when ice diving and sometimes while altitude diving. Many technical divers wear dry suits on almost every dive due to the length of the time spent underwater. The longer the diver is in the water, the more thermal protection is required. If technical diving is something that interests you, check out the Discover Tec Diving experience.
For more information about this or other PADI courses have a chat with one of the DIVE AND DIVE Team members.