Great content as always! It's incredibly useful, especially after taking my class. It helps me refresh my memory on all the skills we covered. Thanks, Graham!
Great content thanks for sharing. Next time please use a lav mic clipped to your shirt or increase the audio levels in post production. I have to max out the levels then be caution when returning to other video so I didn't blow my speakers. Almost had to bail out due to Run Away Audio Levels LOL 🤣 I look forward to your other videos on CCR and TD. Cheers, #SeattleRingHunter
Great content as always! It's incredibly useful, especially after taking my class. It helps me refresh my memory on all the skills we covered. Thanks, Graham!
Thank you :)
Enjoyed this, cheers Graham!
Great content thanks for sharing. Next time please use a lav mic clipped to your shirt or increase the audio levels in post production. I have to max out the levels then be caution when returning to other video so I didn't blow my speakers. Almost had to bail out due to Run Away Audio Levels LOL 🤣 I look forward to your other videos on CCR and TD. Cheers, #SeattleRingHunter
thanks for the feedback - lots to learn for this video malarky for sure
Good video.
awesome content, is there a book on hand signals that pertain to ccr usage that i can use and practice with my team mates?
Hi Thomas - try this ua-cam.com/video/yraBlG1zZwg/v-deo.html
Watching this almost makes me want to stick to OC haha ;)
There's alot of things can go wrong - but try and do 1h bottom time 70m on OC ... then you will love rebreathers ;)
@@gbdivering wow that's a lot of bailout tho :)
@@andrewxbg you need what you need :)
The safest way to dive a rebreather is not to.
but then you couldn't do all the dives that a rebreather allows you to do ;)
@@gbdivering There's enough other dives to last a lifetime.
@@jonnieinbangkok If thats what floats your boat - go for it!
The issue is muppets, muppets and other associated cockwombles definitely shouldn’t dive a rebreather.
They are certainly not safe diving them.