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You should dry clean your suit everytime your going to use it , or if you rarely use it, dry clean it every six months.
First of all, you need a boat, preferably without any holes! You need to dress appropriately, i.e wet suit or possibly even a dry suit. Over that you'll need overalls to protect both your wet suit and yourself from the wind .Then you'll need to rig your boat... happy sailing.
The best way to clean a suit is to have it professionally dry-cleaned.
John C. Reilly
i don't really know but it might be that, in a dry-suit there is no water that you have to warm up like there is in a wetsuit and in a dry-suit there are trapped pockets of air which reduces convection, so you don't lose as much heat.
If your wearing a suit, sort of. If not, than obviously no.
The best thing to do is have it dry cleaned.
Assuming you are talking about a wet suit and not a dry suit, nearly nothing. Your suit will dispel the air as soon as you put it in the water. How fast depends on how deep you go (pressure) and how long you are there. Mainly it will be no different then when you put on your wet suit for your first dive of the day when the suit was dry. I do not understand why you would fill your wet suit with air other then possibly it being too loose. If that is the case get one that fits better.
If you are asking about a business suit take it to the dry cleaners.
You can practice in colder water. You an also wear a wet suit or dry suit.
Have it dry-cleaned.
They have their place if you are diving in a dry suit for an extended time. If you are diving in a wet suit they would not be needed for obvious reasons. Scuba diving can dehydrate you from breathing the dry air in the scuba cylinders, so hydration is a must.