Very neat dive. Have you ever tried one of those red filters on you camera for these "shallower" dives? They work great in Puget Sound where I have a drop camera I use where the water is too fast. 300' cable.
@@charlesspringer4709 I believe they use 133s. They’re well worth it if you can manage the extra weight. Myself and everyone on my crew dive steel 133s now and love them. The only downside is you won’t get to enjoy them if you are buddy diving and your buddy has smaller tanks. I went down with a buddy diving aluminum 80 once and came up with nearly 2k left mine.
@@exoticflorida2360 Wow! 133 sounds great. I have not done any scuba since the late 1960's. I had twin 38's which were short 1800psi oxygen bottles from aircraft! Very comfortable. No J valve. My Scubapro MarkV (still under lifetime warranty) has a HP port and a second LP port. I still have and use original Jetfins (free diving) which are still perfect. No BC's back then. I want to try those modern fins. One of these days I will do some geriatric diving in warm water. Here in Puget Sound the cold water, low vis, and fast tides make it more of a challenge than I care for. I had no idea the bottom has such fascinating features so far off the coast of Florida. Also the number and size of fish in the column is astounding. What the heck are these fish eating?
@@charlesspringer4709 it’s really great here. There are so many wrecks and reefs even though the reefs were much more plentiful years ago. Out in middle grounds there are monster fish if you are brave enough to dive that deep. Elsewhere, Dan Macmahon holds or held a record I believe free shafting a 400+ pound grouper at more than 400 ft. depth. A quick google search will pull up details and the details are mind blowing. Wow twin 38s that’s wild. We run single 133s generally filled to around 4000psi. Almost always run out of NDL before air becomes a factor. Varying Nitrox mixes depending on depth, though i believe Michael B. and the guys he dives with are running tri mix/helium mixtures when diving deep. I don’t know much about their level of scuba it is very advanced.
@@aocfishman00 I practice fishing in the same manner, but I use a 90 cm air pressure gun and a spear with a length of 120 cm. The spear is tied with a rope. There is no room for fish to escape, and it is easier to fill the spear.
Great Hogfish.
Good job👏👏👏👍👍🐟🐟🐟 from algeria،🇩🇿🇩🇿
Thanks 👍
Good
Very nice👍👍👍👍👍
Many many thanks
1st, awesome video!
Thanks!
😀👍
Looks fun. Do you know if any charters go out to the Middle Grounds, and if so, which ones?
these are secret sacred grounds, they are harvesting annual crop.
Very neat dive. Have you ever tried one of those red filters on you camera for these "shallower" dives? They work great in Puget Sound where I have a drop camera I use where the water is too fast. 300' cable.
How many cu ft are those tanks?
@@charlesspringer4709 I believe they use 133s. They’re well worth it if you can manage the extra weight. Myself and everyone on my crew dive steel 133s now and love them. The only downside is you won’t get to enjoy them if you are buddy diving and your buddy has smaller tanks. I went down with a buddy diving aluminum 80 once and came up with nearly 2k left mine.
@@exoticflorida2360 Wow! 133 sounds great. I have not done any scuba since the late 1960's. I had twin 38's which were short 1800psi oxygen bottles from aircraft! Very comfortable. No J valve. My Scubapro MarkV (still under lifetime warranty) has a HP port and a second LP port. I still have and use original Jetfins (free diving) which are still perfect. No BC's back then. I want to try those modern fins. One of these days I will do some geriatric diving in warm water. Here in Puget Sound the cold water, low vis, and fast tides make it more of a challenge than I care for. I had no idea the bottom has such fascinating features so far off the coast of Florida. Also the number and size of fish in the column is astounding. What the heck are these fish eating?
@@charlesspringer4709 it’s really great here. There are so many wrecks and reefs even though the reefs were much more plentiful years ago. Out in middle grounds there are monster fish if you are brave enough to dive that deep. Elsewhere, Dan Macmahon holds or held a record I believe free shafting a 400+ pound grouper at more than 400 ft. depth. A quick google search will pull up details and the details are mind blowing.
Wow twin 38s that’s wild. We run single 133s generally filled to around 4000psi. Almost always run out of NDL before air becomes a factor. Varying Nitrox mixes depending on depth, though i believe Michael B. and the guys he dives with are running tri mix/helium mixtures when diving deep. I don’t know much about their level of scuba it is very advanced.
Good job hhhh
Garangan taiwan
Why don't you use air pressure guns and the arrow is tied with a rope. It's faster to use and easier to load the arrow
Have to disagree - that is not efficient for this type of diving.
@@aocfishman00 I practice fishing in the same manner, but I use a 90 cm air pressure gun and a spear with a length of 120 cm. The spear is tied with a rope. There is no room for fish to escape, and it is easier to fill the spear.
Opinions vary
This is the underwater equivalent of competitive shopping…..yawn
Opinions vary.