While you could, it would be because of pre-exiting illness, or if you're sensitive to very dry air. The air in the tanks is extremely dry, so unless you have a faulty regulator second stage(hole in the diaphragm) it'll be sort of like breathing clean desert air.
@@OnlyKaerius I did have a couple of rental regs that dried my mouth out. Had one reg breathe wet on me, prompting me to get my own. I bought an A700 BT Carbon and Mk 25 Evo, and surprisingly no more dry mouth. Apparently it's designed to limit your mouth getting dry. It works. Been having a blast since certification. I just can't get enough diving.
It’s funny, there’s some things classes just can’t teach you… buoyancy, trim, and how to only use your fins for propulsion and not your hands… these things are only learned with practice and sometimes exercises, physical therapy or even surgery is needed to gain the range of motion, flexibility and muscle strength needed to do the different kicks and turns. Overall you guys did great. The more you dive, the better you get. Keep it up!
Any GUE, UTD, ISE Essentials/fundamentals class will teach you buoyancy, trim, kicks and turns. It is the primary focus of the class. You still needs some practice to be good at it
At least did u get some certification? Because every courses I’ve done from OW to DM teach how important is your trim and buoyancy. Once you start the teach course. Teach 40,45,50, GUE etc etc teach you in an advance way your trim, buoyancy and the importance of the frog kick. Of course is someone doesn’t dove or he does 2 dives every year won’t improve
@YZFoFittie sorry for the late reply, but there's several reasons. Number one, it's likely to kick up silt if you're not careful. Number 2, it's less efficient, therefore higher gas consumption. The third is a big one for tech divers. You need your hands free to accomplish tasks on the dive. Also, if you're holding a light and start swinging it around like crazy, that's the industry standard signal for, "I AM OUT OF AIR/I REQUIRE IMMEDIATE ASSISTANCE!"
For going into the wreck, though I don't think what they did counts as a real "penetration" dive, those cylinders would likely all be either stage tanks, or one travel gas tank and the rest stage tanks. Looks too bright to be deep enough to warrant travel gas though(as in, I don't think the depth warrants hypoxic trimix).
@--~ThatGamerGuy~-- Stage tanks are for different depths, for length of dive, and/or deco stops. I've done dives to 56 meters on a single tank of air(back gas), and a single 50% nitrox stage tank, which I switched to on the way up as I reached its MOD, and used for the rest of the dive, and for the deco stop. For deeper dives the back gas might not be enough to reach the MOD of a nitrox gas, so you might have hypoxic(less than normal oxygen) trimix back gas, maybe an air stage to switch to on the way down/up(travel gas), and then a nitrox or even pure oxygen tank for deco, (or both), etc. For very deep dives you might even need extra hypoxic trimix stage bottles to have enough gas at depth. For very long deco stops you might need multiple deco tanks, and you can't go nitrox or pure oxygen for too long, or you'll hit the pulonary oxygen toxicity limit(causing lung damage), so you might have one pure oxygen tank, and one or more regular air tanks for deco.
@--~ThatGamerGuy~-- I'm a recreational dive instructor(not currently working as such), rebreather diver, and I've only just dipped my toes into tech diving, but I'm going to go further into that on my next couple of dive vacations. I've only done 6 planned decompression dives, but soon I'll do the work to get certified on trimix, and hypoxic trimix, so I can dive down to 60+ meters(56 meters/183 feet is the 1.4 PPO2 MOD of air, below that you need hypoxic trimix to avoid CNS oxygen toxicity). Cave diving is much more dangerous, and requires a much higher level of training than recreational diving, and adherence to strict rules. Statistically about 3/10 cave divers eventually die on a cave dive. I certainly wouldn't recommend starting young(even 18 or 21), needs maturity.
Good to know coughing isn’t a problem. I’m sure I’ll probably cough and sneeze while diving myself. Cool video
While you could, it would be because of pre-exiting illness, or if you're sensitive to very dry air. The air in the tanks is extremely dry, so unless you have a faulty regulator second stage(hole in the diaphragm) it'll be sort of like breathing clean desert air.
@@OnlyKaerius I did have a couple of rental regs that dried my mouth out. Had one reg breathe wet on me, prompting me to get my own. I bought an A700 BT Carbon and Mk 25 Evo, and surprisingly no more dry mouth. Apparently it's designed to limit your mouth getting dry. It works. Been having a blast since certification. I just can't get enough diving.
@@TheSmileyTek good to know! Thanks!
I love the sea horse hand swimming rebreather technique
Them baby feet's just a fluttering!!
The wut?
Is that coughing I hear?
Great video, reminds me of my tech training 👍🏽 awesome viz great wreck 🤿👍🏽
I am going thru xr training now and getting my equipment put together.
Hi bro
Ааа!!! Офигенно!!! Буй через ус надуть!!!
Я не технарь, я - рекреационщик. Либо октопусом надувал, либо - через свисток.
It’s funny, there’s some things classes just can’t teach you… buoyancy, trim, and how to only use your fins for propulsion and not your hands… these things are only learned with practice and sometimes exercises, physical therapy or even surgery is needed to gain the range of motion, flexibility and muscle strength needed to do the different kicks and turns.
Overall you guys did great. The more you dive, the better you get. Keep it up!
Any GUE, UTD, ISE Essentials/fundamentals class will teach you buoyancy, trim, kicks and turns. It is the primary focus of the class. You still needs some practice to be good at it
Literally every beginner class I’ve ever seen teaches all that
Surgery? What are you even talking about
At least did u get some certification? Because every courses I’ve done from OW to DM teach how important is your trim and buoyancy. Once you start the teach course. Teach 40,45,50, GUE etc etc teach you in an advance way your trim, buoyancy and the importance of the frog kick. Of course is someone doesn’t dove or he does 2 dives every year won’t improve
Hand finning much?
Why is everyone so critical of using your hands in certain circumstances?
@YZFoFittie sorry for the late reply, but there's several reasons. Number one, it's likely to kick up silt if you're not careful. Number 2, it's less efficient, therefore higher gas consumption.
The third is a big one for tech divers. You need your hands free to accomplish tasks on the dive. Also, if you're holding a light and start swinging it around like crazy, that's the industry standard signal for, "I AM OUT OF AIR/I REQUIRE IMMEDIATE ASSISTANCE!"
he's ok when he's holding onto somthing, amazing thats the instructor, hand finning Mgee
Great👌👌
why removed the cylinders?
Easier to swim through tight spaces
For going into the wreck, though I don't think what they did counts as a real "penetration" dive, those cylinders would likely all be either stage tanks, or one travel gas tank and the rest stage tanks. Looks too bright to be deep enough to warrant travel gas though(as in, I don't think the depth warrants hypoxic trimix).
@@OnlyKaerius Probably just simulating at a shallower depth.
@--~ThatGamerGuy~-- Stage tanks are for different depths, for length of dive, and/or deco stops.
I've done dives to 56 meters on a single tank of air(back gas), and a single 50% nitrox stage tank, which I switched to on the way up as I reached its MOD, and used for the rest of the dive, and for the deco stop.
For deeper dives the back gas might not be enough to reach the MOD of a nitrox gas, so you might have hypoxic(less than normal oxygen) trimix back gas, maybe an air stage to switch to on the way down/up(travel gas), and then a nitrox or even pure oxygen tank for deco, (or both), etc. For very deep dives you might even need extra hypoxic trimix stage bottles to have enough gas at depth.
For very long deco stops you might need multiple deco tanks, and you can't go nitrox or pure oxygen for too long, or you'll hit the pulonary oxygen toxicity limit(causing lung damage), so you might have one pure oxygen tank, and one or more regular air tanks for deco.
@--~ThatGamerGuy~-- I'm a recreational dive instructor(not currently working as such), rebreather diver, and I've only just dipped my toes into tech diving, but I'm going to go further into that on my next couple of dive vacations. I've only done 6 planned decompression dives, but soon I'll do the work to get certified on trimix, and hypoxic trimix, so I can dive down to 60+ meters(56 meters/183 feet is the 1.4 PPO2 MOD of air, below that you need hypoxic trimix to avoid CNS oxygen toxicity).
Cave diving is much more dangerous, and requires a much higher level of training than recreational diving, and adherence to strict rules. Statistically about 3/10 cave divers eventually die on a cave dive. I certainly wouldn't recommend starting young(even 18 or 21), needs maturity.
60lb wing?
That'd be pretty typical for doubles and multiple stage tanks. Also preferably dual-bladder, for redundancy, though you can also use a liftbag.
tek dive whit wet suit? no comment...
Is wetsuit not for tek dive?
@@willibordus absoluty no! how if u have a gav problemens come back from 70-80 mt? tel me pls...
@@giulianaferrando4625 with a dual bladder on the wing like mine!