If Yuri Lipski had done this, he would still be alive.
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- Опубликовано: 23 июл 2024
- What's up Scuba Homies? In this video I once again revisit the topic of Yuri Lipski's fatal dive. We take a look at what a proper dive looks like at the Blue Hole in Dahab Egypt. It's always sad talking about diver deaths, but the divers in this video demonstrate the great lengths that tech divers go to, in order to be safe while diving. Using gasses like trimix for these depths is absolutely essential and requires extensive diver training. If Yuri Lipski had done training like this, he would still be alive. Remember! If you Vibe, Subscribe!
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My Yuri Lipski Video: • Tech Instructor Reacts...
Original Video: • Blue Hole, Dahab • 60 ...
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So relaxing when you watch it being done properly.
Absolutely! Thanks Sean.
Love your videos! Thank you for creating them and informing us.
Every time I get a comment like this, it fuels my motivation to make at least 10 more videos! Thank YOU!
Very nice video and absolutely very useful to show the beauty of this activity!
Thanks Michele!
@@DiveVibe looking forward to watching many other videos on your channel!!
Your vids are valuable. For me pool time makes me a better diver. Every hour I spend on a dive I spend four in the pool
Funny you mentioned snorkelers, just finished a bunch of dives in Cozumel. While doing safety stop, about 100 snorkelers swam by, there was a lot of awkward waving going on as we’re just hanging out at 15’. Good video.
Thanks! I love waving at the snorkelers! I like how excited they get.
A lot of them don’t care much for us open circuit divers. Our noise scares away the wild life.
I’d love to do that dive too. Doing on a rebreather would be amazing.
Mike, do you dive ccr? or not yet?
@@DiveVibe I bought a Choptima and I’m doing the course in Florida next week so I’ll be diving one very soon
Anyone ever tell you you've got an amazing voice?
You could do audiobooks and stuff.
And he's rather good looking too..🙂
Str8 clickbait bruh. And what i mean by this video being clickbait is that by the title and thumbnail, it appears that youre gonna play the yuri dive video and pick out a specific moment where he could have done something different and then say what that was. But you just played a video of other divers doing their dive, didnt even really get all too technical or watched their setup etc. Its like me making a video titled yurid be alive if he did this; and its just a video of us playing golf, eating wings, or anything else besides what he did lol
Nice!
Not having back up tanks
No plan
Rapid descent with no breaks in between and no control
Diving alone
The equipment these pros had were more than Yuri's. He didn't have backups or the trimix like they did.
i’d love to go to Hawaii and be your tank slinger. i just wanna go to Hawaii honestly. also great video zach 10/10 as always
I'm way too proud to ever let you see someone carrying my tanks!
@@DiveVibe AHAHAH NOT ME
Buoyancy control is one of the reasons why I'm so glad I learned to dive in Northern California. Visual clues aren't always available.
I'll never forget my first Black Water dive in Hawaii. The Captain warned us "Don't freak out when you jump in and can't see the bottom." I responded that "I'm from California. I freak out when I CAN see the bottom."
It really is enjoyable to watch great divers. Thanks!
(BTW, when I was shore diving at Atlantis in Dumaguete, Philippines, a crewmember would wade out to take my gear when I was still waist-deep. Kind of embarrassing for a committed shore diver, but it was certainly convenient!)
looool, I feel that. I have a buddy (who is also ex-army) with a pretty serious back problem. He is also a rebreather instructor and it's funny how angry he get's when you help him, even though he asked for it. RELATABLE!
GUE divers will spend the 30ft/9m stop on back gas, then the switch to o2 at 20 gets a lot simpler. You know they're GUE or UTD, even without checking the original video because of the gas switch procedure, where they have the teammate verify the gas they're switching to. All tanks on the left side is another GUE thing. The official line on that is that it makes donating the long hose easier, but mostly I've found that if you're on a slightly positively buoyant scooter, and if you need to use both hands for something, you can just toss the scooter to the right side, and there's nothing to snag the tow cord on.
Yeah I guess the instructor comes from a GUE background. It says in the description that it was a TDI course, but I had serious GUE vibes and I haven't even taken one of their courses. I did take a UTD course back in the day and I was buddies with some GUE dudes in cave country, but I guess their gas switching procedures with more than one bottle never came up. hahahaha Thanks Josh, your comments are always great.
IANTD does the same procedure (all tanks on the left, verification, tank markings, buddy confirmation). Thats "industry standard" and best practice. What agency would do it differently?
Switching back to the back gas after completing the deco on the 50% and cleaning up the hoses is to facilitate a clean switch with no hoses dangling when reaching the 6 meter stop and enabling an easy switch to the O2
Well that makes sense! Thanks!
2:25 what is independent doubles?
It's when you dive double tanks on your back that are not manifolded together. Meaning, if you have a regulator failure. You also lose access to the gas in that tank. Manifolded tanks solve that problem, among other things.
They were chilling down there. You don't need that much gear to do that dive.
imho, it takes a year of prep. to do a dive like this. if you're a professional diver, do it every day, maybe not. but for the average tec diver that has a full time job. it would take a year of practice and planning to put this together.
I agree!
@@DiveVibe my understanding of Yuri is he was on vacation, wanted to do the dive with one day of preparation. He asked someone to help him, they said it would take several days of planning and training to safely guide him. Yuri was in a rush to film the arch and did it by himself, on a single tank, with normal OC equipment. It cost him his life. One thing I learned diving in new locations is to ask the local dive shop people what they think, good or bad places etc... Clearly Yuri didn't listen to the locals.
@@williamsweet7511Wasn’t he overweight on top of everything?
@@nekoizmase9 He was incredibly overweight because of his camera.
Yuri’s dive was in the year 2000 so it was a completely different time…
For sure, but tech training did exist in 2000. He was cautioned by a local tech instructor.
I know how to dive the right way to prevent myself from any tragedy, it's simply not diving.
What he should have done? NOT GO TO A DEEP INESCAPABLE HOLE THATS KNOW AS THE “MOST DANGEROUS DIVING SPOTS IN THE WORLD”
Or better yet....if he had just stayed out the water and gone to a beach or a pool instead , he definitely would have been alive still
I love pools!
Not be ignorant and arrogant at the same time.
Common sense would have saved his life