Dipper
Well-Known Member
I bought a Cosalt two piece floatation suit from the Crewsaver shop a couple of years ago (Cosalt is/was Crewsaver's parent company). The jacket and salopettes have 50N buoyancy each making a total of 100N before you add a life jacket.
They are not very bulky and replaced the old leaky waterproofs I used to have. They are very warm and even in quite cool conditions, I only need a T-shirt underneath. The down side is that in sunny weather, there is a danger that you can overheat without realising it but if it is sunny I don't normally need to wear waterproofs. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
They are well worth having and weren't any more expensive that a standard jacket and salopettes. With the addition of a lifejacket you have 250N buoyancy and the added benefit of additional heat insulation if you did happen to end up in the water.
Don't wear the salopettes on their own or your legs will float higher than your body! /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif
Unfortunately, Cosalt don't seem to make this suit anymore.
They are not very bulky and replaced the old leaky waterproofs I used to have. They are very warm and even in quite cool conditions, I only need a T-shirt underneath. The down side is that in sunny weather, there is a danger that you can overheat without realising it but if it is sunny I don't normally need to wear waterproofs. /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
They are well worth having and weren't any more expensive that a standard jacket and salopettes. With the addition of a lifejacket you have 250N buoyancy and the added benefit of additional heat insulation if you did happen to end up in the water.
Don't wear the salopettes on their own or your legs will float higher than your body! /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif
Unfortunately, Cosalt don't seem to make this suit anymore.