That's a suicidal dive, breaking all safety and good practice rules... Back gas barely made to the gas switch, another minute at depth and the gas switch depth wouldn't have been reached, so lucky that you didn't convulsed at depth with a 2.35ppO2... nor had a CO2 hit breathing air at 100m and swimming that fast, having reached 100% CNS right at the beginning of the ascent... As per the description along the video looks that the you had a only a twin-set and 1 stage only... No redundancy whatsoever... Not even to speak about the narcosis... Thankfully you finished the dive without issues, but please do not repeat this kind of dives without proper gases and redundancy, especially diving solo, this is, unless you have a death wish, and above all do not brag about this as this is a very bad example...
@@lordsneed9418 😆 nowadays those kind of stunts are just suicidal and do not mean that you are a better diver, quite the opposite, a good diver is conservative and has good judgement and diving to 100m on air with double 12s and a single S80 as deco does not qualify as such. I do go to 60m on air, not 100m yet, but will get there soon after trimix cert, but 100m on air is crazy batshit.
@@lordsneed9418 you're the one drawing comparisons... I don't know if I can go to 100m and back on air and I'm not planning to discover. Anyone can go there, at least once ehehe, returning would be another story. If your metric of how good diver you are is based on how big of a daredevil you are, I think you should rethink your metrics, but one thing is for sure, this is not a safe example and if people less knowledgeable are led to think that this kind of stunt is normal it will result in accidents. I hope you're happy hiding being a screen spreading hate and negativity, karma will eventually catch up... Be happy.
My friend as a fellow tech diver plse don’t pursue this path you have taken, pushing the body to the limits for no advantage/goal. This dive was more like a failed suicide attempt than a successful deep dive..
Divers did complete dives of this magnitude prior to the use of helium. Two decades ago, I did ~90m air dives because helium simply wasn't accessible outside of the USA and Europe. Needless to say, that would be an absurd and entirely avoidable risk nowadays. Progression to these depths was extremely self-selective and slow; over-reaching caused fatalities. Given the extreme risks, divers set personal limits based upon their proven physiological and psychological tolerances. Divers had to be exceptionally self-aware. Dunning-Kruger or simple arrogance led to catastrophic consequences. Luckily, the tech community was far better at self-regulating and responsibly mentoring divers back then. Today, it's more about instructors/agencies making money and enabling the worst aspects of diver self-entitlement, ease-seeking, and impatience. The primary issue isn't narcosis. Highly ingrained, unconscious, competencies are somewhat insulated by diminishing consciousness. However, the amount of practice and experience necessary to highly ingrain every operational and contingency competency to a truly unconscious level is staggering. The bigger issue is gas density, CO2 tolerance, and the physical/mental discipline necessary to avoid increasing respiratory demand. Divers didn't only have to deal with the dangerous unforseen; they had to do so with zero effort, exertion or stress. That's not a capability level that most modern tech diver are trained to, or routinely encounter, enough to understand. If a situation threatened to overcome a diver's respiratory discipline, then they'd have to prioritize their own survival. That could, for instance, mean not attempting rescue or assistance for a buddy in difficulty. In short, you can be too deep, at too great gas density, to save a life. Given these factors, deep air diving when helium is readily accessible is the worst kind of stupid. Tolerating maximal risk when the mitigations for those risks are easily applied is the absolute antithesis of technical diving.
@@lidongchen4698 Indeed. It's a mindset antithesis to technical diving. They could just content themselves with recreational diving, but self-entitlement and instant-gratification are too tempting.
It's stupid when you know...ignorant if you don't. IN 1976 I was an ignorant 17 year old during the Golden meadow tarpon spearfishing rodeo. Speared a jackfish at 100 foot. Didn't realize he took me down to 235 feet. Was lucky to make it back without injury that I knew of. We had one guy who would go down 200 feet to look for big fish & come right back up each site so he could get the big one. He ended up with a speech impediment. Dangerous stuff. I'm still diving at 66...
Wow… Very extreme…Explain more About configuration.. Tank size.. deco Gas size...More details about feeling during and after the dive… be happy that you survived.. i wouldnt trink so before
@@georgezarifis7409 Fortunately! You can't tempt your fate anymore. If you want to continue diving deeper, then dive safely with proper training, better gas planning and use Trimix.
I learned to dive in Greece and I am so much not surprised. 😂 First time I was below my max depth of 40m and had to decompress without visual reference in blue water was on my eleventh dive with a single 12l tank. Diving in greece is different. I surfaced with 20bar left. But I learned a lot from this dive. Today I use it as a warning for beginners. To be confused about the direction and to descend at 80m again...? It's just upwards. Main issue at 80m is - from my perspective - not to find the entry point, it's the entry surface. ;-) Did you forgot your compass for that dive? To do this with a (one!) Nitrox 40 stage. As a solo dive - which fortunately risks just half of the amount of lifes of a "standard" dive with a buddy. All that sounds so much like diving in Greece. I am impressed of your speed as well as I am not surprised of a diver who does rock climbing in greece after having the diving experience to own good equipment and to be brave enough to do 100m solo dive. I learned to dive 18 years ago. I would not be brave enough to do so and I am diving in way worse conditions. But not even close to that depth. That must be a joke. But it's the greek kind of humour. 🤣 Nice that you survived. But after seeing the video material... Is that mixture of rotting fishing nets and silk worth to possibly die for? As being German who lived in Greece for about a year I know the greek people also know to live a good life. Maybe your family would prefer if you focus on that instead of deep underwater rock climbing. ;-)
Hey! i've watched your video multiple times, and i swear i can hear the po2 alarm everywhere now. How did you feel after experiencing several narcosis?
The effects of Nitrogen narcosis don't diminish over time, however you get used to coping with them. It's mostly a matter of concentration and awareness of your surroundings.
The decision to do this is ultimately up to you but take in mind the following risks: - What he did was a dice throw - he could have easily died. Since he didn't, this dive normalized going out of his limits a bit more and potentially normalizes this for others watching this video. Push the limits and eventually, statistics might catch up to you. Are you prepared to pay the price? - At 102m (334ft) the partial pressure of oxygen (PPO) is 2.35. The conservative or recreational limit is believed to be 1.4. The technical diving or upper limit is believed to be 1.6. The risk is convulsions, spasms, dizziness, ear ringing, visual disturbance. If you are alone and experience oxygen toxicity you will almost certainly die - There's 2 types of people when it comes to nitrogen narcosis - those who know they experience it and act accordingly to reduce the risks associated with it and those who are lying, arrogant or uneducated about it. Some people have literally taken their mouthpiece out and thought its ok or started sinking while thinking they're moving up because of the effects of nitrogen narcosis. - EDIT: I'm wrong, he is using a twinset and a deco cylinder. Didn't understand if he has 1 deco or 2 deco tanks. At least that's good but I'm still going to leave my original point as it might be useful for someone --> I think he is using 1 cylinder. Since this is an extremely advanced technical dive, he has no redundancy in case of failure e.g. using a twinset, sidemount or rebreather allows you to have contingencies in case of failures. - EDIT: In case someone thinks that since he has a deco cylinder that gives him redundancy - yes, but only until the MOD (maximum operating depth) of the gas mixture. He has EAN40 and the MOD is 30m at a 1.6PPO. If he would choose to switch to it at a lower depth, he would have an even higher risk of oxygen toxicity. At 102m using 40% oxygen would leave him with a PPO of 4.48. Death is a certainty at that point. - Solo diving has a lot of risks associated with it but most importantly its related to the point above - if you run out of gas (which might happen easily at those depths with 1 cylinder and while being narced) you have nobody to help you. You will 100% die if you experience an out of gas issue at the deepest part of the dive because you have 2 choices - 1) swim up as fast as possible and 100% get an embolism and die from bends or 2) drown - If you dive in places that are popular diving spots or structures like wrecks (if penetrating, I suggest being wreck certified) or caves (you must be cave certified to do that), you are risking closing the diving spot for others e.g. divers who die in caves risk those caves being closed for diving afterwards Useful questions to ask yourself: - Why do you want to do this dive? - Why are you comfortable not following the guidelines? - How much is the decision driven by ego? - Why are you not satisfied with diving in spots that meet your certification limits? - Are you considering your loved ones? I love scuba diving and my personal approach is the following: - Dive within my certification limits even if I'm with a group that wants to exceed their limits - Focus on mastering skills instead of thinking that I can do whatever I am certified for (this is due to a lot of dive instructors being lacklustre or nonchalant when certifying) - Dive as often as I can - Ensure I try to research and apply best practices for how to dive, what configuration to have - Learning about diving physiology and how gases impact the diver (this is part of some courses but I'm curious to learn about this outside of courses, too)
Aye yo, can you please write a will ensuring that the next video like this will be uploaded by a relative? As you won't see many more uploads diving like this bud.
No offense meant to you but I question the validity of your depth. No way you got down there that quick, the amount of light you had down there seemed odd as well for that depth.
The water was quite clear that day so the light could reach well beyond 100m. The "daylight zone" is defined as the depth between 0-200m. However, very cloudy water can very quickly absorb all the sunlight. I have been to lakes where there is less light at a depth of 20m, than there is at 100m at a clean part of the sea.
There's no way this isnt a trimix dive. This is one of the rare instances where I really hope the description is a lie. Please never do this again. It's a high-tech suicide attempt.
another comment said it was a troll/lying video where he was using trimix setup and just also wearing an air computer to record what the beeps sound like at these depths. If you notice he never says anything it's because it would give away he was using helium
Stupid is as stupid does. If ya wanna commit suicide, just don’t bother the rest of the people around you with it. This was ludicrous. And insane. Video reported for being harmful content to those who can not know how dangerous this was.
another comment said it was a troll/lying video where he was using trimix setup and just also wearing an air computer to record what the beeps sound like at these depths. If you notice he never says anything it's because it would give away he was using helium. But as the video is marketed to appear suicidal, perhaps for views, perhaps for some other reason. But doing this on air isn't safe at all, that should be clear from the comment section.
@@TheUnknownDutchman I've accepted that I'm not at the skill level where I could dive to 102 on air, maybe you should do the same buddy instead of whining and hating and peeing your pants like a baby. Take the L little guy
impressive, but tbh, its stupid... Going there alone its not a good sense. But w/e you did it anyway, you should not continue doing it ^^ Remember, there is one life, no checkpoint or save bro
i thought TH-cam had removed your video (which they should! to avoid people copying you) but apparently they didn't. Doing sometimes solo diving too, i hate seeing things like this. You make the already bad image of literally anyone of us to the outside world even much, much worse. What about trying to prevent incidents as much as possible rather showing how they might happen any time? Greetings from someone who desires to be long and deep under the water a lot, but contrary to you isn't fed up with his life..
I posted this video to show that it is possible to exceed the safe limits while diving with air, but also to warn about the dangers, hence the severe nitrogen narcosis. I have dove beyond 100m with air numerous times and this was the only time things went "wrong". The current world record for air diving is 158m and I am not planning on going that deep any time soon.
Going really deep for recreational diving isn’t fun at all- visibility is poorer and there’s not much to see deeper at the sea bed. I don’t understand why divers do it, unless it’s to fix an oil rig or some other purpose like that.
Lot's of 70+m dives when season starts, refreshing your brains ability to function in potato mode, good regulators, getting comfortable and familiar with the water and gear again. Then I could do 100m air dives with some bottom time and remember most of it. The gas is so dense you need to intentionally breathe deep and consistent. Only relaxed easy finning. Hypercapnia is the biggest danger and I had few experiences with that, it makes you nark out fast, tunnel/no vision, rapid heart rate producing more co2, hyperventilating thick gas achieving zero gas exchange, you're gonna die like lipski if your muddled brain doesn't catch it quick, stop moving and breathe properly for a bit and you will go back to normal nitrogen narc which is very obvious once you have experienced the difference. Oxygen is the lesser of the dangers, nitrogen and co2 have caused the vast majority of deep air deaths in my estimation, that should tell you enough shouldn't it, that 2.3+ po2 is the least of your worries. It's not worth it for me anymore but we all have our own risk tolerance. I have family that think I have a deathwish for diving at all xD
This. We used to do dives to 205' as training/acclimation dives then do deeper dives on mix. Everything you just said is spot on. If this guy truly did a bounce dive to 300' on air, it's one the dumbest dives I've watched.
just two things : 1) he is between 40m and 50m depth and posted this fake video just to get views, 2) going beyond 60m on air is extremely dangerous, it happens that even divers who dive every day do not come back, so please just don't do that, it is so stupid to post a video like this because people will try to emulate.
Your numbers don't add up. If you're going to lie about your dive, make it look believable. Hopefully the good lord Poseidon reclaims the soul before it passes on those genes.
Well done mate. Not kidding. Did you force anyone to come along? Don't think so, so that's fine. Very risky but it's your choice. Never been that deep on air, nor on helium for that matter. My deepest on air was -82, deepest on TX -80😅 Now I'm semi retired but I used to dive in the range of -60/-70+ on air. Was normal stuff.
Haha that is extremely stupid, nothing to be proud of, well Darwin would be proud. I would be ashamed of posting publicly that. It does not even have any merit, everyone has a chance of survive that, it is just unnecessarily stupid to try.
@@Γ.Ζαρίφης φίλε μου σαν συμπατριώτης σου και δύτης, θέλω να σε παρακαλέσω κάτι. Δεν σε ξέρω προσωπικά. Πιθανόν έχεις άριστη φυσική κατάσταση (καλύτερη από την δική μου), θεωρείς τον εαυτό σου ατρόμητο (και δικαιολογημένα ίσως) αλλά το να κάνεις μια τέτοια βουτιά χωρίς την απαραίτητη εκπαίδευση και τον εξοπλισμό δεν είναι γενναίο ούτε αποδεικνύει κάτι. Έγινες γνωστός σε ένα (μικρό) κομμάτι της καταδυτικής κοινότητας που μπαίνει στο youtube για τους λάθος λόγους. Όταν βγάλεις τα λεφτά που θέλεις και έχεις τον χρόνο (στο εύχομαι ολόψυχα) τότε πήγαινε για trimix. Ούτε και γω έχω λεφτά και χρόνο για trimix ή για rebreather, αλλά κανένα μέρος του βυθού δεν αξίζει το ενδεχόμενο η γυναίκα και τα παιδιά μου να κλαίνε πάνω από τον άδειο τάφο μου... Μπορείς να πας σε τόσα υπέροχα μέρη εντός Ελλάδος, που ελάχιστοι τα έχουν δει, χωρίς να πεθάνεις (το Πατρίς στην Κέα, το Avantis, το αντιτορπιλλικό Βασίλισσα Όλγα, ίσως ακόμη και το υποβρύχιο HMS Perseus στην Κεφαλλονιά, αν έχεις πιστοποίηση για εκείνα τα βάθη). Εύχομαι να σε ξαναδώ κάποια στιγμή να ανεβάσεις βίντεο από βουτιές σου αλλά αυτή την φορά με τον σωστό εξοπλισμό και εκπαίδευση. Καλές αναδύσεις!
I am a scuba diver and no chance on this planet does a 100m decent go that quick. Unless you have 100lbs of weight on you. I am guessing that was 100ft not a 100metres.
In total my height was 3.3kg from the backplate plus 2kg lead v-weights. That gives me about -7.5kg buoyancy with full cylinders and about neutral buoyancy with empty cylinders. Thus I can descend at a rate of 25m/min with a fully deflated wing.
@@georgezarifis7409 That really did not looklike you descended 100metres that quick. Descending quick is as dangerous as ascending quick I was taught. I use 12 kilo plus 3kgs for my fins plus around 8kgs for my drysuit and other accessories and I don't descend that quickly. Personally I am no experienced expert but you descend way too quickly and I think it coukd be detrimental for your health. I am not having a go I am just concerned for your safety.
why do people give him shit, and nobody give any shit to the climbers that free solo and wing suit jumpers that die all the time. The guy is looking for extreme, his life, what's it to you all.
@@NonOfYourBizWax67 I've definitely seen a lot of people giving shit to climbers who try to climb Everest without any oxygen supply, so just because you haven't seen something, doesn't mean it hasn't happen 🙄
what are you even talking about? everyone will point out stupidity and flirting with death in any situation. all those ppl are morons - plain and simple. billions of other ppl in the world agree with me. facts
Daamn this is video kept me on my feet 🤿 this is not recomended but you done something noone will ever do. Question noone ever asked here, where did you attach your camera? 🤣
I knew a few guys who dove to 300+ ft on air in the 1990's. Yes, it's very dangerous but some people have the physiology to do it. The problem is that is some will have serious issues with oxygen toxicity and severe narcosis. And even people who "never have problems" can suddenly have an issue.
That's a suicidal dive, breaking all safety and good practice rules... Back gas barely made to the gas switch, another minute at depth and the gas switch depth wouldn't have been reached, so lucky that you didn't convulsed at depth with a 2.35ppO2... nor had a CO2 hit breathing air at 100m and swimming that fast, having reached 100% CNS right at the beginning of the ascent...
As per the description along the video looks that the you had a only a twin-set and 1 stage only... No redundancy whatsoever... Not even to speak about the narcosis...
Thankfully you finished the dive without issues, but please do not repeat this kind of dives without proper gases and redundancy, especially diving solo, this is, unless you have a death wish, and above all do not brag about this as this is a very bad example...
I think his name is Dunning Kruger.
You're just jealous that he's a better diver than youo. You wish you could dive that deep.
@@lordsneed9418 😆 nowadays those kind of stunts are just suicidal and do not mean that you are a better diver, quite the opposite, a good diver is conservative and has good judgement and diving to 100m on air with double 12s and a single S80 as deco does not qualify as such. I do go to 60m on air, not 100m yet, but will get there soon after trimix cert, but 100m on air is crazy batshit.
@@tiagor3272 sure thing little guy, he isn't better than you, he can just do something you'd never be able to do
@@lordsneed9418 you're the one drawing comparisons... I don't know if I can go to 100m and back on air and I'm not planning to discover. Anyone can go there, at least once ehehe, returning would be another story. If your metric of how good diver you are is based on how big of a daredevil you are, I think you should rethink your metrics, but one thing is for sure, this is not a safe example and if people less knowledgeable are led to think that this kind of stunt is normal it will result in accidents. I hope you're happy hiding being a screen spreading hate and negativity, karma will eventually catch up...
Be happy.
My friend as a fellow tech diver plse don’t pursue this path you have taken, pushing the body to the limits for no advantage/goal. This dive was more like a failed suicide attempt than a successful deep dive..
This is not a fellow tech diver. This is an idiot with scubagear strapped to his back.
you're just a jealous hater you don't like seeing others exceed you and do things you aren't able to. sour grapes.
well said :)
Welcome to Dive Talk!
Came here from the video lmao
Why even have a PO2 alarm if you are planning on doing a 100m suicide dive on Air? Might as well enjoy the dive in silence at this point.
I totally agree but you can't turn it off on the Suunto d5
I guess they thought who in their right mind would want to disable it and making that functionality would cause people to die.
@@georgezarifis7409 need a shearwater
visual alarms are easier ignore
Russian Roulette with only one chamber empty......
Divers did complete dives of this magnitude prior to the use of helium. Two decades ago, I did ~90m air dives because helium simply wasn't accessible outside of the USA and Europe. Needless to say, that would be an absurd and entirely avoidable risk nowadays.
Progression to these depths was extremely self-selective and slow; over-reaching caused fatalities. Given the extreme risks, divers set personal limits based upon their proven physiological and psychological tolerances.
Divers had to be exceptionally self-aware. Dunning-Kruger or simple arrogance led to catastrophic consequences.
Luckily, the tech community was far better at self-regulating and responsibly mentoring divers back then. Today, it's more about instructors/agencies making money and enabling the worst aspects of diver self-entitlement, ease-seeking, and impatience.
The primary issue isn't narcosis. Highly ingrained, unconscious, competencies are somewhat insulated by diminishing consciousness. However, the amount of practice and experience necessary to highly ingrain every operational and contingency competency to a truly unconscious level is staggering.
The bigger issue is gas density, CO2 tolerance, and the physical/mental discipline necessary to avoid increasing respiratory demand. Divers didn't only have to deal with the dangerous unforseen; they had to do so with zero effort, exertion or stress. That's not a capability level that most modern tech diver are trained to, or routinely encounter, enough to understand.
If a situation threatened to overcome a diver's respiratory discipline, then they'd have to prioritize their own survival. That could, for instance, mean not attempting rescue or assistance for a buddy in difficulty. In short, you can be too deep, at too great gas density, to save a life.
Given these factors, deep air diving when helium is readily accessible is the worst kind of stupid. Tolerating maximal risk when the mitigations for those risks are easily applied is the absolute antithesis of technical diving.
Second that been threre done that will not repeat
Tone down the word salads, i feel like im reading a poem 🤣🤣🤣
@@b.h.8421 your reading difficulties aren't my concern. Have you considered remedial education?
people do that to save money on helium and trimix courses maybe.
@@lidongchen4698 Indeed. It's a mindset antithesis to technical diving. They could just content themselves with recreational diving, but self-entitlement and instant-gratification are too tempting.
Play stupid games, win stupid prizes...
Best you go buy a lotto ticket bud. After a dive like this you are certainly the luckiest person (alive)
Was that a suicide attempt?
It's stupid when you know...ignorant if you don't. IN 1976 I was an ignorant 17 year old during the Golden meadow tarpon spearfishing rodeo. Speared a jackfish at 100 foot. Didn't realize he took me down to 235 feet. Was lucky to make it back without injury that I knew of. We had one guy who would go down 200 feet to look for big fish & come right back up each site so he could get the big one. He ended up with a speech impediment. Dangerous stuff. I'm still diving at 66...
Wow… Very extreme…Explain more About configuration.. Tank size.. deco Gas size...More details about feeling during and after the dive… be happy that you survived.. i wouldnt trink so before
2x12L steel twinset (air), 11.1L aluminum deco stage (NX40)
@@georgezarifis7409 based
Was there anything down there worth dying for?
Well, no, but I didn't die.
@@georgezarifis7409 Fortunately! You can't tempt your fate anymore. If you want to continue diving deeper, then dive safely with proper training, better gas planning and use Trimix.
@@georgezarifis7409 too bad, you'll get it next buddy. we all have faith in you 👍
I am very skeptical of the portrayal of this dive. It doesn’t add up!
I learned to dive in Greece and I am so much not surprised. 😂
First time I was below my max depth of 40m and had to decompress without visual reference in blue water was on my eleventh dive with a single 12l tank. Diving in greece is different. I surfaced with 20bar left. But I learned a lot from this dive. Today I use it as a warning for beginners.
To be confused about the direction and to descend at 80m again...? It's just upwards. Main issue at 80m is - from my perspective - not to find the entry point, it's the entry surface. ;-) Did you forgot your compass for that dive? To do this with a (one!) Nitrox 40 stage. As a solo dive - which fortunately risks just half of the amount of lifes of a "standard" dive with a buddy. All that sounds so much like diving in Greece. I am impressed of your speed as well as I am not surprised of a diver who does rock climbing in greece after having the diving experience to own good equipment and to be brave enough to do 100m solo dive. I learned to dive 18 years ago. I would not be brave enough to do so and I am diving in way worse conditions. But not even close to that depth.
That must be a joke. But it's the greek kind of humour. 🤣
Nice that you survived. But after seeing the video material... Is that mixture of rotting fishing nets and silk worth to possibly die for? As being German who lived in Greece for about a year I know the greek people also know to live a good life. Maybe your family would prefer if you focus on that instead of deep underwater rock climbing. ;-)
I appreciate your concern. I am tech certified and I understand the safety limitations. This however is a risk I am willing to take.
Can you post your computer dive profile please?
yeah, I smell BS too!, most of that looks no more than 20 mtrs to me
He can't show the computer on camera but he bother editing all the video with numbers
@@moonshroom13you couldn't see the bottom at the beginning, and he went down several walls, that was no 20 meters whatsoever
um why ? what's the point of bounce diving to a 100m on air ?
Hey! i've watched your video multiple times, and i swear i can hear the po2 alarm everywhere now. How did you feel after experiencing several narcosis?
The effects of Nitrogen narcosis don't diminish over time, however you get used to coping with them. It's mostly a matter of concentration and awareness of your surroundings.
@@georgezarifis7409 Ok, thank you sir!
The decision to do this is ultimately up to you but take in mind the following risks:
- What he did was a dice throw - he could have easily died. Since he didn't, this dive normalized going out of his limits a bit more and potentially normalizes this for others watching this video. Push the limits and eventually, statistics might catch up to you. Are you prepared to pay the price?
- At 102m (334ft) the partial pressure of oxygen (PPO) is 2.35. The conservative or recreational limit is believed to be 1.4. The technical diving or upper limit is believed to be 1.6. The risk is convulsions, spasms, dizziness, ear ringing, visual disturbance. If you are alone and experience oxygen toxicity you will almost certainly die
- There's 2 types of people when it comes to nitrogen narcosis - those who know they experience it and act accordingly to reduce the risks associated with it and those who are lying, arrogant or uneducated about it. Some people have literally taken their mouthpiece out and thought its ok or started sinking while thinking they're moving up because of the effects of nitrogen narcosis.
- EDIT: I'm wrong, he is using a twinset and a deco cylinder. Didn't understand if he has 1 deco or 2 deco tanks. At least that's good but I'm still going to leave my original point as it might be useful for someone --> I think he is using 1 cylinder. Since this is an extremely advanced technical dive, he has no redundancy in case of failure e.g. using a twinset, sidemount or rebreather allows you to have contingencies in case of failures.
- EDIT: In case someone thinks that since he has a deco cylinder that gives him redundancy - yes, but only until the MOD (maximum operating depth) of the gas mixture. He has EAN40 and the MOD is 30m at a 1.6PPO. If he would choose to switch to it at a lower depth, he would have an even higher risk of oxygen toxicity. At 102m using 40% oxygen would leave him with a PPO of 4.48. Death is a certainty at that point.
- Solo diving has a lot of risks associated with it but most importantly its related to the point above - if you run out of gas (which might happen easily at those depths with 1 cylinder and while being narced) you have nobody to help you. You will 100% die if you experience an out of gas issue at the deepest part of the dive because you have 2 choices - 1) swim up as fast as possible and 100% get an embolism and die from bends or 2) drown
- If you dive in places that are popular diving spots or structures like wrecks (if penetrating, I suggest being wreck certified) or caves (you must be cave certified to do that), you are risking closing the diving spot for others e.g. divers who die in caves risk those caves being closed for diving afterwards
Useful questions to ask yourself:
- Why do you want to do this dive?
- Why are you comfortable not following the guidelines?
- How much is the decision driven by ego?
- Why are you not satisfied with diving in spots that meet your certification limits?
- Are you considering your loved ones?
I love scuba diving and my personal approach is the following:
- Dive within my certification limits even if I'm with a group that wants to exceed their limits
- Focus on mastering skills instead of thinking that I can do whatever I am certified for (this is due to a lot of dive instructors being lacklustre or nonchalant when certifying)
- Dive as often as I can
- Ensure I try to research and apply best practices for how to dive, what configuration to have
- Learning about diving physiology and how gases impact the diver (this is part of some courses but I'm curious to learn about this outside of courses, too)
you're just a jealous hater , you wish you were a good enough diver to dive like this with no problems.
Aye yo, can you please write a will ensuring that the next video like this will be uploaded by a relative? As you won't see many more uploads diving like this bud.
Fake, post dive log to prove it otherwise
1 year since this and no new videos. Bro are you alive ?. 👀
Yes, I am alive. New videos coming soon.
@@georgezarifis7409 😎
no way you actually went that deep
No offense meant to you but I question the validity of your depth. No way you got down there that quick, the amount of light you had down there seemed odd as well for that depth.
The water was quite clear that day so the light could reach well beyond 100m. The "daylight zone" is defined as the depth between 0-200m. However, very cloudy water can very quickly absorb all the sunlight. I have been to lakes where there is less light at a depth of 20m, than there is at 100m at a clean part of the sea.
You man are fkn crazy. You need to get interviewed by Dive talk. Would love to hear it!
There's no way this isnt a trimix dive. This is one of the rare instances where I really hope the description is a lie. Please never do this again. It's a high-tech suicide attempt.
1 year later, have you learned just how lucky you are to have survived this dive yet? Or were you not actually that deep after all?
You couldn't see the bottom at the beginning, and he went down several walls, he was definitely that deep
Doing this dives nowadays with all the knowledge and technology available is just plain stupid
another comment said it was a troll/lying video where he was using trimix setup and just also wearing an air computer to record what the beeps sound like at these depths. If you notice he never says anything it's because it would give away he was using helium
did you ever tested your po2 max before this dive?
He said his back gas was air, is he breathing trimix below 60m?
No, just air.
Paging @divetalk ...
Stupid is as stupid does.
If ya wanna commit suicide, just don’t bother the rest of the people around you with it.
This was ludicrous. And insane.
Video reported for being harmful content to those who can not know how dangerous this was.
another comment said it was a troll/lying video where he was using trimix setup and just also wearing an air computer to record what the beeps sound like at these depths. If you notice he never says anything it's because it would give away he was using helium. But as the video is marketed to appear suicidal, perhaps for views, perhaps for some other reason. But doing this on air isn't safe at all, that should be clear from the comment section.
you're just jealous because you know yoou couold never dive like that, you don't have the ability
Hey. Look. An internet troll with the age of 15(?) telling a tech diver what’s safe and what not 😂
Enjoy the day. Do a dive to 102 meters on air.
@@TheUnknownDutchman I've accepted that I'm not at the skill level where I could dive to 102 on air, maybe you should do the same buddy instead of whining and hating and peeing your pants like a baby. Take the L little guy
He's probably lieing to us, I don't believe that, he used Trimix 100% and just had a another dive computer for a Trimix settings
Haha I wish I had enough money for trimix...
I would have say" ....he takes the piss out of us
!!😂
impressive, but tbh, its stupid... Going there alone its not a good sense. But w/e you did it anyway, you should not continue doing it ^^ Remember, there is one life, no checkpoint or save bro
It's SCUBA, not rock climbing. You're obviously way out of your league.
This guy might think he's good but actually he was lucky
lol telling him he's out of his league when he completed a dive you couldn't even dream of boy. get some self awareness
He is a legend for surviving this
He's a lucky idiot.
Legendary fool.
i thought TH-cam had removed your video (which they should! to avoid people copying you) but apparently they didn't.
Doing sometimes solo diving too, i hate seeing things like this. You make the already bad image of literally anyone of us to the outside world even much, much worse.
What about trying to prevent incidents as much as possible rather showing how they might happen any time?
Greetings from someone who desires to be long and deep under the water a lot, but contrary to you isn't fed up with his life..
I posted this video to show that it is possible to exceed the safe limits while diving with air, but also to warn about the dangers, hence the severe nitrogen narcosis. I have dove beyond 100m with air numerous times and this was the only time things went "wrong". The current world record for air diving is 158m and I am not planning on going that deep any time soon.
Claro ejemplo de donde puede llegar la estupidez humana,y de como no se deben hacer las cosas,la próxima vez quizás no salgas
Darwin award for you😂
Going really deep for recreational diving isn’t fun at all- visibility is poorer and there’s not much to see deeper at the sea bed. I don’t understand why divers do it, unless it’s to fix an oil rig or some other purpose like that.
That was stupid...
Lot's of 70+m dives when season starts, refreshing your brains ability to function in potato mode, good regulators, getting comfortable and familiar with the water and gear again. Then I could do 100m air dives with some bottom time and remember most of it. The gas is so dense you need to intentionally breathe deep and consistent. Only relaxed easy finning. Hypercapnia is the biggest danger and I had few experiences with that, it makes you nark out fast, tunnel/no vision, rapid heart rate producing more co2, hyperventilating thick gas achieving zero gas exchange, you're gonna die like lipski if your muddled brain doesn't catch it quick, stop moving and breathe properly for a bit and you will go back to normal nitrogen narc which is very obvious once you have experienced the difference. Oxygen is the lesser of the dangers, nitrogen and co2 have caused the vast majority of deep air deaths in my estimation, that should tell you enough shouldn't it, that 2.3+ po2 is the least of your worries. It's not worth it for me anymore but we all have our own risk tolerance. I have family that think I have a deathwish for diving at all xD
This. We used to do dives to 205' as training/acclimation dives then do deeper dives on mix. Everything you just said is spot on. If this guy truly did a bounce dive to 300' on air, it's one the dumbest dives I've watched.
@@Elparquito you're just jealous because you know you could never do a dive like that, you're not strong enough and lack the ability.
@@lordsneed9418 That is true - I do lack the ability to kill myself underwater. Darwin is not my dive partner.
@@Elparquito are you blind as well as dumb? does it look like this guy killed himself?
Safety third 👍
just two things : 1) he is between 40m and 50m depth and posted this fake video just to get views, 2) going beyond 60m on air is extremely dangerous, it happens that even divers who dive every day do not come back, so please just don't do that, it is so stupid to post a video like this because people will try to emulate.
lol you're just a jealous hater who can't accept that people are better than you so you have to deny it to preserve your ego
Your numbers don't add up. If you're going to lie about your dive, make it look believable. Hopefully the good lord Poseidon reclaims the soul before it passes on those genes.
But... why ? This should be done proper way .. not like this ..
Mate, I hope you realise that you almost died.
Well done mate. Not kidding. Did you force anyone to come along? Don't think so, so that's fine. Very risky but it's your choice. Never been that deep on air, nor on helium for that matter. My deepest on air was -82, deepest on TX -80😅 Now I'm semi retired but I used to dive in the range of -60/-70+ on air. Was normal stuff.
Filos gia stile mia to log apo to computer na dw kati!!
Stupid is, Stupid does...
Haha that is extremely stupid, nothing to be proud of, well Darwin would be proud. I would be ashamed of posting publicly that. It does not even have any merit, everyone has a chance of survive that, it is just unnecessarily stupid to try.
Follow the bubbles
This is one of the dumbest things I've seen in recent years
Looks more like crawling than swimming tbh…
😳
А потом дощечки в Дахабе вот из таких
100% fake. helium or tirmix.
Do you know anything about buoyancy control? Apparently not.
Good luck controlling your buoyancy with severe nitrogen narcosis... I couldn't tell which way was up .
@@Γ.Ζαρίφης φίλε μου σαν συμπατριώτης σου και δύτης, θέλω να σε παρακαλέσω κάτι. Δεν σε ξέρω προσωπικά. Πιθανόν έχεις άριστη φυσική κατάσταση (καλύτερη από την δική μου), θεωρείς τον εαυτό σου ατρόμητο (και δικαιολογημένα ίσως) αλλά το να κάνεις μια τέτοια βουτιά χωρίς την απαραίτητη εκπαίδευση και τον εξοπλισμό δεν είναι γενναίο ούτε αποδεικνύει κάτι. Έγινες γνωστός σε ένα (μικρό) κομμάτι της καταδυτικής κοινότητας που μπαίνει στο youtube για τους λάθος λόγους. Όταν βγάλεις τα λεφτά που θέλεις και έχεις τον χρόνο (στο εύχομαι ολόψυχα) τότε πήγαινε για trimix. Ούτε και γω έχω λεφτά και χρόνο για trimix ή για rebreather, αλλά κανένα μέρος του βυθού δεν αξίζει το ενδεχόμενο η γυναίκα και τα παιδιά μου να κλαίνε πάνω από τον άδειο τάφο μου... Μπορείς να πας σε τόσα υπέροχα μέρη εντός Ελλάδος, που ελάχιστοι τα έχουν δει, χωρίς να πεθάνεις (το Πατρίς στην Κέα, το Avantis, το αντιτορπιλλικό Βασίλισσα Όλγα, ίσως ακόμη και το υποβρύχιο HMS Perseus στην Κεφαλλονιά, αν έχεις πιστοποίηση για εκείνα τα βάθη). Εύχομαι να σε ξαναδώ κάποια στιγμή να ανεβάσεις βίντεο από βουτιές σου αλλά αυτή την φορά με τον σωστό εξοπλισμό και εκπαίδευση. Καλές αναδύσεις!
Wild and brave solo dive there! Would be good to hear the feeling of narcosis at nearly 100 meters?
I am a scuba diver and no chance on this planet does a 100m decent go that quick. Unless you have 100lbs of weight on you. I am guessing that was 100ft not a 100metres.
In total my height was 3.3kg from the backplate plus 2kg lead v-weights. That gives me about -7.5kg buoyancy with full cylinders and about neutral buoyancy with empty cylinders. Thus I can descend at a rate of 25m/min with a fully deflated wing.
@@georgezarifis7409 That really did not looklike you descended 100metres that quick. Descending quick is as dangerous as ascending quick I was taught. I use 12 kilo plus 3kgs for my fins plus around 8kgs for my drysuit and other accessories and I don't descend that quickly. Personally I am no experienced expert but you descend way too quickly and I think it coukd be detrimental for your health. I am not having a go I am just concerned for your safety.
That was, I think, depths in foots, like the ata he measured in bars )
The depth is in meters and the pressure in Bar.
10 to 11 times the normal atmospheric pressure at the bottom
why do people give him shit, and nobody give any shit to the climbers that free solo and wing suit jumpers that die all the time.
The guy is looking for extreme, his life, what's it to you all.
On paper this was legit suicide. Not "extreme"....suicide...that is why. Pure luck and genetics are all that saved him most likely.
@@NonOfYourBizWax67 I've definitely seen a lot of people giving shit to climbers who try to climb Everest without any oxygen supply, so just because you haven't seen something, doesn't mean it hasn't happen 🙄
what are you even talking about? everyone will point out stupidity and flirting with death in any situation. all those ppl are morons - plain and simple. billions of other ppl in the world agree with me. facts
Daamn this is video kept me on my feet 🤿 this is not recomended but you done something noone will ever do.
Question noone ever asked here, where did you attach your camera?
🤣
I knew a few guys who dove to 300+ ft on air in the 1990's. Yes, it's very dangerous but some people have the physiology to do it. The problem is that is some will have serious issues with oxygen toxicity and severe narcosis. And even people who "never have problems" can suddenly have an issue.
saw your video from divetalk . You're the greatest diver in the world. No one else could do this. Stay strong, champion.
great dive, please could you make a video respomnding to the haters and telling them why they're wrong and simply aren't on your level?
Hahaha, obvious trolling
@@jimstroomberg8019 yuo're just a hater
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Was there anything down there worth dying for?