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FuktigTrasa
Registrace 30. 12. 2007
Video
Ice Dive, Vättern, Sweden
zhlédnutí 2,2KPřed 13 lety
2011-02-26 Ice dive in lake Vättern in Sweden. Awesome.
Turtle Spot. El Puertito, Tenerife
zhlédnutí 13KPřed 13 lety
Three green turtles playing around in El Puertito. Graceful animals. The visibility was not that good, but the turtles were awesome!
Canary Island, Lanzarote, Diving
zhlédnutí 143KPřed 13 lety
A movie based on four dives in Canary Island, Lanzarote.
Nitrogen Narcosis
zhlédnutí 3KPřed 14 lety
Night dive. Depth: approximately 40m. Visibility: 3m. Weather: Air -7°C. Water 2°C.
50m dive in Decompression chamber
zhlédnutí 45KPřed 14 lety
A trip to a Decompression chamber. Dive to 50m/164ft.
Where was that
nice editing and music! thanks!
what is this? what do they do?
Im going to go diving in lanzarote to soon :)
They are speaking minion language
You can’t even open the door there is too much pressured
Sehr schöne Bilder, aber diese Musik passt gar nicht. Ich wüsste auch nicht wo man die Musik verwenden könnte. Besser überlegen nächstes mal.
Buen trabajo!!!
Why? What is the purpose of this experience?
these things scare me to death ever since i watched licence to kill.....
What language are they speaking?
I do believe Swedish
Hundreds of dives , 50 hours in chamber . They are a bunch of morons risking there lifes for a joke . I never ever needed to hold my nose . Surface chambers in hospitals will not go past 1 atmosphere , thats 33 feet
Dude- you want beyond with the audio effects- great job!
Great video and music :)
0k
Like your action sound effects, brilliant!
yeah great video, super fun to watch!
What are the names of the dive spots
The Best Sound!!! Ficou muito bacana esta trilha. Lindo mergulho.
Kill the music. Better off with just boring bubble noises
bubble noises are never boring. this music ruins the video
Hey nice vid..but the music..ok thats your style ;) Have a look for my Lanzarote diving video. Just finished it a few weeks ago...thank you ;) Best greetz from Germany !
what camera was being used to film ?
Thanks for sharing this, loved it!
Schönes Video aber grauenvolle Musik kann man nicht zu Ende schauen schade😳
how can you ascend so quickly, it takes much longer in water?
Now that is a cool video!!! Very well done... Enjoyed pretty much. And thanks for this underwater impression on Lanzarote...
60 feet is the maximum for most humans w/o decompression.
Technically a diver could get decompression sickness the second they go under water. But the depth affects it greatly. I've actually had a five emergency while at 80ft. My weight fell out and I shot up to the surface. I tried grabbing a rock but it wasn't heavy enough. Luckily I didn't get bent.
well you can see that these specimen are not actually humans, for they are finns
What a quality video, the tune is perfect and now I'm going to watch again
Absolutely no boring moment when watching. Great video editing and sound effect. Do you mind telling me which software up you used to generate the interesting sound when the fish kisses the boat? :p and the helicopter sound for the squid, super fun to watch!
Beautiful, i wasnt so lucky to have a camera, sheer bliss our canarian waters!
cool movie
You'd think they'd stick a TV inside one of these so whoever's in them could watch a movie or something to pass the time.
i am planning on going to Lanzarote for my honeymoon! where was the dive with the most vibrant coral and fish? the boat is kind of creepy...
There isnt any coral at all too cold
@@ZeloticMemes what? Its always over 20 celcius!!
@@salfa3227 Yeah on the ground in the water there are cold currents and it is at the border of the tropic of cancer so technically it is subtropical.
These things scare me to death. The Byford Dolphin incident is so scary.
I've been diving in Egypt and seen turtles but never 3 in the same place! I'm jealous of how close they came to you! What a fantastic dive and video! :)
great....
Paradise for divers..!
I actually was part of a select few, (when I say select I mean that not everyone passes the physical exam for this or aren't mentally able to perform the work ie: chicken) on a construction project boaring a tunnel 6 miles long. We only went to 3.5 bar, which is shy of 100', but we went through everything you saw in video more or less. We would compress to depth in approx. 3-4 min. we'd exit out the chamber to the working chamber which is at the front of the TBM or tunnel boaring machine. We'd perform whatever task and duties needed in our allotted time, which was 2 hrs no more then 2.5 before we'd enter the hyperbaric again for decompression. Approx same as work time. 1:1 so another 2 hrs. O2 was pumped into the chamber and then we were told to put on our face masked and pumped directly with O2 takie it off On O2 off on O2 off for how long the lock tender would say. Just sitting there with my two partners. reading, playing cards, joking around. We were pretty whooped after only 2 hrs of work. When you work under pressure everything is so much more exaggerated, heavier, bruising from bumping into piping or pinched fingers more pronounced once on surface level again. Your blood vessels open up again and what didn't seem like a big deal while working could possibly screw up your afternoon. Sometimes just enough nitrogen is still in your system to give you "skin bends", which make your body itch like crazy from settling under the layers of skin tissue not in the joints where the bends occur. But it goes away shortly. I absolutely loved it. Totally amazing to go to front of the machine to see earth not yet mined, soil that hasn't seen the light of day in thousands of years, touching dirt and rocks that possibly came to be there from the Missoula flood. I loved it. Not to mention I had the 2nd most amount of dives for the job, trailing one of my partners and the only female laborer in the united states with the company to perform that work. Woo Hoo. The Lake Mead tunnel, now that was some deep dives. I didn't work that job. :}
Monica Gauthier I never realized that TBM operators could also experience nitrogen narcosis as I assumed that the air pressure would be similar at any point in the tunnel as it was connected to atmospheric pressure at one end? It's certainly an interesting effect and having been able to do two 'dry dives' myself as a SCUBA diver, it's certainly something worth experiencing!
Where did you dive exactly?
30m narcosis kicks in. So is it safe to assume they are only pumping in air (21% O2)? Could they use a higher percentage of O2 to reduce narcosis and the amount of time required in the chamber?
pathfinderLXXIV A higher percentage of O2 could be used to reduce the effects of nitrogen narcosis but then you start to get dangerous levels of O2 causing Oxygen toxicity. BSAC recommends a maximum partial pressure of O2 of 1.4bar which equates to 56.6m when breathing normal air (21% O2). The idea of a dry dive like this is to experience nitrogen narcosis, in order that if you ever experience it whilst actually diving you can identify the signs and reduce your depth slightly to ensure a safe dive. To dive deeper a mix called trimix or heliair is used and this is where helium is added, this ensures that nitrogen levels are reduced. Other diving gases include various Nitrox mixes which are just air with a higher mix of O2, this is used to reduce the possibility of DCI (decompression illness) but does reduce the MOD (maximum operating depth) of the gas.
Edward Holmes So normally do they pump in whatever gas is appropriate and safest for the depth their dry-diving them to?
pathfinderLXXIV As far as I am aware they only usually dry dive to 50m maximum, therefore normal air is ok and they just pump that into the chamber. When treating DCI (decompression illness) and administering HBOT (Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy) they will use an O2 mask to deliver higher percentages of O2 to the patient. This does sometimes mean a higher PPO2 (partial pressure oxygen) than 1.4bar, but you are carefully monitored by the chamber technician who is in the chamber with you and can remove the mask if you are showing any signs of oxygen toxicity. To ensure that there isn't a buildup of O2 in the chamber, the masks have an on demand feed in and out and also, periodically the chamber technician on the outside who is controlling everything will 'flush' the air in the chamber, replacing it with new air. If you're interested in the work of the chambers and would like to know more about dry dives and HBOT etc. www.midlandsdivingchamber.co.uk have a wealth of information on their website.
Edward Holmes very informative thank you very much
Hello dude! The video is pretty good :) Whats a camera do you use ?
What if someone panic and opened the door too?
How would they open the door?
Theres a handle behind that guy
deaftodd . To get initial seal on door, not to open or close once under pressure
daniel pienaar Der, me the handle is inside. Yes, there is no way.
deaftodd The door opens inwards ensuring that a seal is created when the chamber is pressurized, therefore making it impossible to open. I assume too that they have gone into the chamber with a member of chamber staff too, who is medically trained to deal with such situations.
Did someone farted?
Lanzarote underwater is very beautifully portrait. Congrat from a local.
Bautiful Island!
sehr geil gemacht!
nunca hice diving, llego a tenerife en octubre y quisiera intentar, como me pongo en contacto? saludos
actually nothing would explode. they would just have to be rushed to another chamber because they would get decompression sickness from nitrogen rushing to there blood stream. Because there is no air pockets in tissue, or eyes nothing would happen. Nice try though.
The music is hilarious! Well done! :)
i'd like to see someone fart in that chamber and all the other people forced to sit there and breathe it in
Aaron _ and if they tried to leave they would kill themselves and and there co workers