Less than 10 metres depth has no decompression time. Compressed air is fine for 30metres depth. The most important thing to remember is to exhale while resurfacing.
Do you want nitrogen bubbles in your blood? Messing around with breathing gasses underwater can turn deadly really quick, there is a reason why scuba certifications exist (for diving and filling bottles).
You’re unlikely to exceed the dive tables unless you had a bunch of those. They would be good for retrieving dropped items slightly beyond one’s freediving depth.
Less than 10 metres depth has no decompression time.
Compressed air is fine for 30metres depth.
The most important thing to remember is to exhale while resurfacing.
Good vid thanks
Can you specify the vevor compressor you used?
Do you want nitrogen bubbles in your blood? Messing around with breathing gasses underwater can turn deadly really quick, there is a reason why scuba certifications exist (for diving and filling bottles).
You’re unlikely to exceed the dive tables unless you had a bunch of those. They would be good for retrieving dropped items slightly beyond one’s freediving depth.
@@brianoswald1067 exactly, or boat owners who just want a quick visual inspection of their rudder/propeller.