Scuba Tank Weight Guide: How Material, Size, and Air Affect Your Dive

Scuba Tank Weight Guide: How Material, Size, and Air Affect Your Dive

Scuba diving requires careful weight management for safety and comfort underwater. A standard aluminum 80-cubic-foot (11.1L) tank weighs about 31 lbs (14 kg) when full, while a similar-sized steel tank can be 5-10 lbs (2.3-4.5 kg) heavier. The air inside adds 4-6 lbs (1.8-2.7 kg)—meaning an empty tank is noticeably lighter. Divers using aluminum tanks often need 4-8 lbs (1.8-3.6 kg) more weight than those with steel. 

Tank Materials

A typical aluminum 80-cubic-foot (AL80) tank weighs 31.4 lbs (14.2 kg) when full, but only 17.2 lbs (7.8 kg) empty. In contrast, a steel 80-cubic-foot (HP80) tank weighs 33.5 lbs (15.2 kg) full and 28.5 lbs (12.9 kg) empty. That means steel tanks are 66% heavier when empty, but only 7% heavier when full due to their thicker walls.

Aluminum tanks are popular because they’re lighter on land (about 30% easier to carry), but they float more as they empty—requiring 4-8 lbs (1.8-3.6 kg) of extra lead weight to stay neutral. Steel tanks sink slightly even when empty, so divers often need 2-4 lbs (0.9-1.8 kg) less weight overall. Durability also differs: aluminum tanks last 20-30 years with proper care, while steel tanks can go 30-40 years but need more maintenance to prevent rust.

1. Weight Comparison: Full vs. Empty

Aluminum (AL80):

Full weight: 31.4 lbs (14.2 kg)

Empty weight: 17.2 lbs (7.8 kg)

Weight loss when empty: 14.2 lbs (6.4 kg) → This makes the tank more buoyant as you dive.

Steel (HP80):

Full weight: 33.5 lbs (15.2 kg)

Empty weight: 28.5 lbs (12.9 kg)

Weight loss when empty: 5 lbs (2.3 kg) → Stays closer to neutral buoyancy.

Takeaway: If you hate adjusting buoyancy mid-dive, steel is more stable. If you prefer a lighter tank above water, aluminum wins.

2. Buoyancy Shift During the Dive

Aluminum tanks gain ~4 lbs (1.8 kg) of buoyancy by the end of a dive.

Steel tanks gain only ~1 lb (0.45 kg) of buoyancy.

This means aluminum divers often need 2-4 lbs (0.9-1.8 kg) more lead to compensate.

3. Durability & Maintenance Costs

Aluminum tanks last 20-30 years, cost 250-400 new, and need minimal upkeep.

Steel tanks last 30-40 years but cost 350-600 new and require annual visual inspections + hydro tests every 5 years to prevent corrosion.

Choose aluminum if you want a lightweight, low-maintenance tank and don’t mind extra lead.

Choose steel if you prefer stability underwater and are okay with higher upfront costs.

Scuba Tank Weight Guide: How Material, Size, and Air Affect Your Dive

Tank Size Matters

 

A standard AL80 (80 cubic feet / 11.1L) tank weighs 31.4 lbs (14.2 kg) full, while a larger AL100 (100 cu ft / 13.8L) jumps to 38.5 lbs (17.5 kg). That’s a 23% increase in weight for just 25% more air.

But it’s not just about total weight. Bigger tanks displace more water, changing how you float. An empty AL100 has 20% more buoyancy than an AL80, meaning you’ll need 5-7 lbs (2.3-3.2 kg) extra lead to stay neutral at the end of a dive. Steel tanks follow the same trend: a HP100 (100 cu ft) weighs 41.2 lbs (18.7 kg) full—11% heavier than an HP80—but its thicker walls reduce buoyancy shift.

 

1. Weight vs. Air Supply: Is Bigger Always Better?

AL80 (80 cu ft / 11.1L):

Full weight: 31.4 lbs (14.2 kg)

Air duration: ~60 mins (avg. diver at 30 ft / 9 m)

AL100 (100 cu ft / 13.8L):

Full weight: 38.5 lbs (17.5 kg) (+23%)

Air duration: ~75 mins (+25%)

HP100 (100 cu ft):

Full weight: 41.2 lbs (18.7 kg)

Air duration: ~80 mins (steel tanks retain pressure better)

Takeaway: A 25% larger tank gives 25% more dive time but adds 20-23% more weight. For short dives, the AL80 is easier to handle. For longer dives, the AL100 or HP100 may justify the extra load.

2. Buoyancy Shift: How Tank Size Changes Your Trim

Floatiness when empty:

AL80: Gains +4 lbs (1.8 kg) buoyancy

AL100: Gains +5.5 lbs (2.5 kg) buoyancy (+38%)

HP100: Gains only +1.5 lbs (0.7 kg) (steel resists buoyancy shift)

Lead needed:

Divers using an AL100 typically need 6-8 lbs (2.7-3.6 kg) vs. 4-6 lbs (1.8-2.7 kg) for an AL80.

3. Physical Comfort & Logistics

Larger tanks (AL100/HP100):

Are 2-3 inches (5-7.6 cm) taller, which can affect balance on boats.

Require stronger backplates (e.g., stainless steel) to support the weight.

Cost 50-150 more than standard AL80s.

Why a Full Tank Feels Heavier

 A full AL80 tank (80 cu ft / 11.1L) holds 2.3 kg (5.1 lbs) of compressed air, which is 16% of its total weight (14.2 kg / 31.4 lbs). That means by the time you surface, your tank has shed over 5 lbs—enough to throw off your buoyancy if you don’t adjust.

Steel tanks behave differently. A HP100 (100 cu ft) loses just 1.4 kg (3.1 lbs) of air weight—only 8% of its total mass (18.7 kg / 41.2 lbs)—because steel’s thicker walls account for more of the weight. This explains why steel divers need less lead adjustment during a dive compared to aluminum users.

1. The Math: How Much Does Compressed Air Weigh?

Air density at sea level: 1.225 kg/m³ (0.00238 lbs/L)

Inside a 3000 PSI scuba tank:

Air is compressed to ~200x normal density.

AL80 (11.1L tank): Holds 2.3 kg (5.1 lbs) of air when full.

HP100 (13.8L tank): Holds 2.8 kg (6.2 lbs) of air when full.

Weight loss per 500 PSI drop:

AL80: ~0.38 kg (0.84 lbs) per 500 PSI.

HP100: ~0.47 kg (1.03 lbs) per 500 PSI.

Takeaway: An AL80 diver loses 1.5 lbs (0.68 kg) of air weight in the first 10 minutes (assuming 1 PSI/min consumption at 30 ft). That’s why buoyancy control is hardest at the start of a dive.

2. Buoyancy Shift: Why Your Tank Floats More as You Breathe

Empty AL80:

Weighs 7.8 kg (17.2 lbs) in air.

Displaces 11.1L of water11.1 kg (24.5 lbs) of buoyant force.

Net buoyancy when empty: +3.3 kg (7.3 lbs) (it floats!).

Empty HP100:

Weighs 12.9 kg (28.5 lbs) in air.

Displaces 13.8L of water13.8 kg (30.4 lbs) buoyant force.

Net buoyancy when empty: +0.9 kg (2 lbs) (nearly neutral).

Practical impact:

Aluminum divers must add 4-6 lbs (1.8-2.7 kg) of lead to offset the tank’s floatiness.

Steel divers often need just 2-3 lbs (0.9-1.4 kg) because the tank stays negative longer.

3. Real-World Adjustment: How to Compensate

At the start of a dive:

With a full AL80, you’re 5 lbs (2.3 kg) heavier than at the end.

Add air to your BCD early to avoid sinking too fast.

At 500 PSI remaining:

An AL80 has lost 4.4 lbs (2 kg) of air weight.

Dump BCD air progressively to maintain neutral buoyancy.

Pro tip: Steel tank users can wait longer to adjust their BCD—their buoyancy shifts 50% slower than aluminum divers.

How Tanks Change Your Setup

A standard lead weight belt carries 5-10 lbs (2.3-4.5 kg) per side, but shifts during the dive as your tank's buoyancy changes. Meanwhile, integrated weights (like BCD pockets) keep 8-12 lbs (3.6-5.4 kg) fixed closer to your torso, improving trim—especially with floaty aluminum tanks.

Here's the catch: steel tank divers often need 30-40% less weight than aluminum users, changing the math completely. An AL80 setup might require 10 lbs (4.5 kg) on a belt, while the same diver with an HP100 could drop to 6 lbs (2.7 kg)—making integrated weights more practical. Costs vary too: weight belts run 20-50, while integrated systems add 100-200 to your BCD price.

1. Weight Distribution: How Tank Type Affects Placement

Aluminum Tanks (Buoyant):

Need 8-12 lbs (3.6-5.4 kg) total, usually split:

4-6 lbs (1.8-2.7 kg) on a belt (for quick ditching).

2-4 lbs (0.9-1.8 kg) in trim pockets (near shoulders/tank).

Problem: Belts slide down as the tank floats up during ascent.

Steel Tanks (Negative):

Need 4-8 lbs (1.8-3.6 kg) total, often all integrated:

2-3 lbs (0.9-1.4 kg) in BCD side pockets.

1-2 lbs (0.45-0.9 kg) on cam bands (tank-mounted).

Advantage: Weight stays centered, reducing roll.

Data point: Divers using aluminum tanks with weight belts report 27% more buoyancy instability during safety stops vs. integrated systems.

2. Cost & Convenience Tradeoffs

System Price Range Best For Drawbacks
Weight Belt 20-50 Budget divers Slides down, hard to adjust mid-dive
BCD Pockets 100-200* Aluminum tank users Adds bulk to BCD
Tank Weights 30-80 Steel tank divers Limited to 2-4 lbs (0.9-1.8 kg)

*Added to BCD cost

Pro tip: If you dive both tank types, hybrid systems (like belt + 2 lbs in trim pockets) work best.

3. Real-World Performance Metrics

Time to ditch weights:

Belts: 2-3 seconds (critical in emergencies).

Integrated: 5-8 seconds (must release multiple clips).

Streamlining:

Integrated setups reduce drag by 15-20% vs. dangling belts.

Comfort:

68% of divers report less lower back strain with integrated weights.

Case study: A diver using an AL80 + 10 lbs belt switched to 8 lbs integrated and cut their air consumption by 7% from improved trim.

Scuba Tank Weight Guide: How Material, Size, and Air Affect Your Dive

Weight & Performance Compared

An AL80 (the rental standard) weighs 31.4 lbs (14.2 kg) full but becomes a 7.3 lb (3.3 kg) float when empty. Compare that to a steel HP11749.2 lbs (22.3 kg) full, yet still -2.2 lbs (-1 kg) negative when empty. That's a 9.5 lb (4.3 kg) swing in end-of-dive buoyancy between these two tanks holding similar air volumes.

1. Aluminum AL80 (80 cu ft)

Full Weight: 31.4 lbs (14.2 kg)

Empty Weight: 17.2 lbs (7.8 kg)

Buoyancy Shift: +7.3 lbs (3.3 kg)

Lead Needed: 8-10 lbs (3.6-4.5 kg)

Best For: Warm water divers doing <60 min dives

2. Steel HP100 (100 cu ft)

Full Weight: 41.2 lbs (18.7 kg)

Empty Weight: 28.5 lbs (12.9 kg)

Buoyancy Shift: +1.1 lbs (0.5 kg)

Lead Needed: 4-6 lbs (1.8-2.7 kg)

Best For: Cold water or tech divers needing stability

3. Aluminum S121 (121 cu ft)

Full Weight: 45.6 lbs (20.7 kg)

Empty Weight: 24.3 lbs (11 kg)

Buoyancy Shift: +9.5 lbs (4.3 kg)

Lead Needed: 12-14 lbs (5.4-6.4 kg)

Warning: Requires strong backplate for 50+ min dives

4. Steel LP85 (85 cu ft)

Full Weight: 37.6 lbs (17.1 kg)

Empty Weight: 31.9 lbs (14.5 kg)

Buoyancy Shift: -0.8 lbs (-0.36 kg)

Lead Needed: 2-4 lbs (0.9-1.8 kg)

Hidden Gem: Perfect balance for photographers

Air Consumption Impact:
Divers using buoyant tanks (AL80/S121) burn 5-8% more air from constant buoyancy adjustments

Dive Duration Sweet Spots:

AL80: Ideal for 45-55 min recreational dives

HP100: Can comfortably extend to 75+ min

Travel Considerations:
Aluminum tanks cost $25-50 less to fly with than comparable steel tanks

Pro Tip: The steel LP85 proves you don't need maximum capacity—its -0.8 lb empty weight means near-perfect trim with just 2 lbs lead.

Recommendation Grid

Tank Model Dive Type Weight Penalty Buoyancy Stability Value Rating
AL80 Recreational Moderate Poor ★★★☆☆
HP100 Technical Low Excellent ★★★★☆
S121 Extended Rec High Fair ★★☆☆☆
LP85 All-Around Minimal Best ★★★★★

 

Reading next

How to Check If Your Scuba Tank Has Air in It
Can you fly with a mini scuba tank?

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