I was hoping to take one last open-water dance before the snow fell, but I live in Winnipeg, Manitoba up in the Great White North, and by the time we got back home at the end of October the lake was only 4 degrees Celsius. There's no wetsuit warm enough to get me swimming in that.
I finally put the wetsuit on today, here are my first thoughts (WARNING: I'm totally biased because the generosity of the Roka guys have created a loyal enthusiast).
Well styled. The legs and centre chest strip are thick to raise legs and make rotation easier. Sides are a "middle thickness" and shoulders are very thin to allow for mobility. The panels are seamed together and Roka has used the various thicknesses for function and the fashionable styling.
The arm and shoulder panels are quite thin so I was nervous to pull the arms on with much force. Roka recommends pulling the suit up by grabbing the inside, or by grabbing the forearm panels (picture below) which also serve to help "feel" a proper catch.
Forearm panel
The fit is quite tight to make sure that the suit doesn't act as a parachute and "grab" extra water which weighs you down. That said, I found that I had to pinch the bottom of the zipper to help get the zipper started.
Time for some arm circles to see just how flexible this suit actually is. I was really impressed; the suit fit very snugly to the body but I had a lot of mobility in the shoulders. The only point that I felt any shoulder tension was at the very back of an arm circle, but in the recovery phase of the stroke my arm really shouldn't be moving back that far anyway. All in all, very stretchy and comfortable.
AUTHOR'S NOTE: By "comfortable" I mean: as comfortable as you can be while draped in rubber, having just got off an indoor bike trainer session and sweating profusely.
The suit has some interesting features that should be noted:
This centre panel is the thickest of all and promotes proper body alignment.
Legs are slightly longer than a typical suit to promote extra buoyancy in the legs.
The line on the shoulder should be lined up with the boney part (super technical term) of the top of your shoulder.
I haven't counted but my guess is that "ROKA" is plastered on my body eleventy times!
This guy likes the fit of his Roka Maverick Pro Fullsuit!!!
Thanks guys!