Wetsuit tips

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Gorgo
Gorgo
VIC
5126 posts
VIC, 5126 posts
19 Jun 2009 1:13pm
More wettie tips:

If your booties get stinky, fill them with water then add a splash of vinegar. Let it soak for 10-15 minutes then pour it out and dry as usual.

As Brendan says, if you're wearing your wetsuit every day there's no real need to wash it. It's only going to get wet again. Just dry it in the shade and only wash it if you're not going to use it for a few days.

To keep your wettie clean, take off your booties then stand on your board bag while you take off the suit.

Don't stomp on the legs to get it off.

Be very careful if you have long finger nails. Your nails will tear holes in your suit.

Never hang a wet wettie on a coat hanger. The ends of the hanger will push through the shoulders of your suit. Drape it over a balcony inside out to get it mostly dry. A length of plastic conduit over a clothes line or in your garage make a good wettie drying rack.

If you have velcro roof rack pads you can pop them on a strong plastic coat hanger to make a hanger that won't damage your suit.

Never let the hook end of velcro come in contact with your suit. It will chew a hole in the fabric. Always park the velcro on the loop end. Some new suits have a little patch of loop velcro next to the zip for exacvtly that purpose.
WindWarrior
WindWarrior
NSW
1019 posts
NSW, 1019 posts
19 Jun 2009 2:50pm
Great tips Gorgo,
Plastic style coat hangers used for formal suits are the go as they are super wide and have pre- shape built into them.

Be careful draping a suit across a balcony rail or the back of a chair if it has been in the sun (the rail or chair) and has heat stored inside it.
Depending on the construction of the suit the stored heat can melt the material (especially if it is inside out). It could also end up looking like it has been branded by whatever you have lent it across.

If your wetsuit/booties start to emit that dank wet wetsuit smell a quick soak in water from the washing machine will sort it.
Simply chuck the wetty into a buck or trough in the laundry and when the washing machine is running through its rinse cycle, instead of letting the water go down the drain set it to fill the bucket or trough.
The mild soapy run off from the washing machine will not damage the material and will have it smelling like freshly washed clothes.

WORD OF WARNING
Do not... I repeat DO NOT leave the washing machine unattended while it is running its cycle other wise the bucket and or trough (or both) will fill up and then over flow onto the floor and then through parts of the house.... this will NOT put you in good standing with the other members of the household, especially the leader of the opposition. Trust me on this one !

Try not to leave your suits folded or scrunched up for long periods of time.
When you put your steamer into summer hibernation hang it up somewhere out of the sun (not on on thin wire coat hanger as outlined above) and with a sprinkle of talc inside it if its on the nose. Wash before storing of course !
Gorgo
Gorgo
VIC
5126 posts
VIC, 5126 posts
19 Jun 2009 3:38pm
WindWarrior said...
....
Plastic style coat hangers used for formal suits are the go as they are super wide and have pre- shape built into them.
....


Even a wide shoulder plastic suit hanger will damage a modern super stretchy suit when it is wet. (Those are the hangers I use and I can show you a couple of old suits with clagged out shoulders.)

The suit stretches more when it is wet and the weight of the water adds to the weight of the suit. It never happened with the old, not-so-stretchy suits.

I am going to buy a foam swimming pool noodle and make a hanger for hanging my wet wettie on. In the meantime a prototype using roof rack pads is working ok.
Lobes
Lobes
885 posts
885 posts
19 Jun 2009 3:54pm
Thanks for the tips guys. This cold weather advice is a lifesaver (literally)

Is it Ok to dry your suit with something like a hairdryer or one of those restaurant hand dryers?
Gorgo
Gorgo
VIC
5126 posts
VIC, 5126 posts
19 Jun 2009 6:09pm
Hair dryers are too hot and too noisy. Most of us don't know what hair dryers are being old, bald, bastards.

You'd get a lot of funny looks standing around in the toilet in a pub with your wetsuit waving your hand under the sensor. I guess it depends on the pubs you go to.

You need to dry a thick winter suit in two steps. Get the excess water off so it doesn't make a mess in your house, then dry the suit.

You can get rid of excess water by:
- drip dry over a rail
- gently squeezing the ends of the legs and arms (don't wring)
- put it through the spin cycle in the washing machine (You need to be careful to balance the load. Definitely DO NOT put your wetsuit through a wash cycle.)

For drying at this time of year you need to hang the suit inside. Over a heating duct is ideal and results in a perfectly dry suit. You could use a small column heater or fan heater but be careful not to start a fire or electrocute yourself (If you do can I have your Glide?)

Just hanging it inside out in a unheated room or garage will get it dry enough to put on but the legs and sleeves will still be wet.

My old diving suits had warnings not to hang them on hangers inside out. I don't know exactly why but I still avoid doing that on my 4/3 suit.
OG SUP
OG SUP
VIC
3516 posts
VIC, 3516 posts
19 Jun 2009 8:07pm
Hi Guys,

If you have a really wet suit I suggest that you place it on top of a big beach towel and then roll it up and leave it for about 30 mins. most of the water will drain into the towel and significantly dry the suit out. do it a couple of times and your close to dry in an hour or so!

PS this was a Rod Hocker tip I learned when he an I had diner!

Phill
Bnaccas
Bnaccas
VIC
1722 posts
VIC, 1722 posts
19 Jun 2009 8:56pm
You can put your wetty through the wash cycle safely only if you have a front loader. Select delicates or wool though and cold/warm water. I would avoid detergents all together but fabric softener is ok, or vinegar which do the same thing to get rid of the smells. ** also make sure you do the zip and all velcro up, as said by Gorgo it will pill the inside of the suit.

My clothes dryer has an AIR setting (not warm or hot). Wonder if this would help dry it out. I'll give it a shot tonight.
---------
Here's another tip off topic, but everyone knows how new bath towels struggle to dry you /absorb water. To fix this wash them with Bic-carb soda in the wash cycle and then vinegar in the rinse cycle. The bicarb gets rid of the treatment they use to make them feel soft in the shop and the vinegar works just like fabric softner.
Bnaccas
Bnaccas
VIC
1722 posts
VIC, 1722 posts
19 Jun 2009 10:42pm
Sorry put this in the wrong thread....If you are really keen....

Another thing I haven't done since last winter is scotch guard my suit. It really helps limit wind chill dramatically when standing on a SUP in 8 degrees and 5 to 10knots in the middle of winter. We all know it can get cold.

I stopped doing it after my friend left Rays Outdoors. The Scotch Guard got too expensive.
Gorgo
Gorgo
VIC
5126 posts
VIC, 5126 posts
19 Jul 2009 7:52pm
I've been having some three day weekends and spending a fair amount of time in the extra thick wettie and I've perfected the winter drying method.

After a session I pop it in the washing machine and run it through the spin dry cycle once the right way round and once inside. Then hang it up inside out.

It's pretty much touch dry after the spin cycle and it's almost completely dry the next morning.

It also works for booties and speedos and whatever else you need to dry. You have to be careful to balance the load.
worrier
worrier
WA
726 posts
WA, 726 posts
19 Jul 2009 7:12pm
Toughen up Princesses!!
Nothing better than an early morning winter surf in a cold wet wetsuit and then havin a pi## to warm it all up.
Bloody hair dryers on a wet suit, craziest thing Ive heard all day.
Boardbumps must be gettin soft. He would never of done that in the old days over here.
W
Gorgo
Gorgo
VIC
5126 posts
VIC, 5126 posts
19 Jul 2009 9:39pm
worrier said...
...then havin a pi## to warm it all up.
...


Pissing in a seald seam wetsuit and wearing booties. You'd be nicely pickled in your own juice after a 3 hour SUP surf session. Do your friends call you stinky?
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