I’ve been diving for 9 years now and as soon as I’m 18 I’m going to go for my dive master I’ve already hit all of the requirements and then I want to get instructor and then I really want to get into tech!
@@elmo319 of course man, I just love diving even if I didn’t get into tech I’d still teach but yeah it’ll be awesome when I do, I’ll be 18 in February so I’m hoping to ask my dad to pay for my dive master for my present
@@Marco-bq4hj Yessss haha. I’m in Greece on vacation and just went to 42 meters yesterday, it got super cold at a thermocline of about 33 meters. They also had another thermocline around 22 meters or so
@@Marco-bq4hj also I just realized there aren’t enough scuba videos online. I watched this one last year and I realized I’m watching it again now -_- I’m gonna try to get some pro videography gear and make some scuba videos so more people can see
Awesome dive and even in a shorty. Seems a bit cold though at 25 to 30c for over an hour, hanging still in deco. But don't you need some redundancy in case of a wing failure with full tanks?
it was quite warm actually, i rarely wear a suit unless going very deep. As for redundancy, thats an OMS Dual-Bladder 94lb wing. Also two large SMB's and 100m reel. A few years ago i was actually hurt from a wing failure at 55m so im extra cautious on those things now, both of my bladders are hooked up and tested before each tech dive.
Awesome dive man! I really recommend getting into dry suit diving though. Once you do it, it’s way better and you won’t wanna go back. It’s less restrictive on your shoulders and hips, feels better on your joints, keeps you warm in the water, keeps you more cool out of the water and it’s an additional form of buoyancy if needed
Awesome. Got a question about your gas selection.Your bottom mix is 14/51 which leaves 35% nitrogen. Your first deco gas is 28% which leaves 72% nitrogen. When you switch to your 28% you are going to start on-gassing nitrogen when you go from 35% to 72% nitrogen. I was taught to add helium to my first deep deco gas which is normally 32/35. Were you just saving $$$ or is there another reason for not adding helium to your deco gas?
was 4 years ago so dont all the way remember, defitely was not about the $$. 28 was also the travel gas for the way down which is most likely the reason. we also go to 70+m without trimix regularly at that time.
@@CameronPeppers Thanks for responding. The last deep diving I did was in Lake Superior on The Kamloops last summer. The Kamloops is in 270ft and the temp. was 36 degrees top to bottom. My back gas was 14/55 and I carried 32/35, 50/25 and 100%.We normally jump in breathing the 50/25 and switch to our back gas at 20 ft. Good times.
Stepping down the He more than 40pc is definitely not advisable as it can lead to isobaric counter diffusion. The whole set up looks weird to me. I realise they dive in a group of three so have some redundancy but the gas planning, without knowing their SAC and the exact dive plan, looks very tight to me given that they only carry 40cft deco gas tanks. The most weird thing is why would you do it? There’s evidently nothing to see down there. Just to say you’ve been to a 100m? I’ve been there so just asking out of curiosity.
All that equipment and multiple tanks of gasses mixed special for each depth range and interminable time in deco, all to do what William Trubridge does in about three and a half minutes on one breath of air, with no tanks or weights or computer or even fins.
Difference being these guys want to stay in those depths longer than 4 minutes... You don't build up narcosis and or blood nitrogen in that short time to give you decompression sickness...
@@abdullahabdulaziz7232 I get it that some people regard scuba as "easier" than freediving. And I can attest that recreational scuba is fun. And honestly, very few people can go as deep as Willian Trubridge, and nobody else can go that deep doing constant weight no fins (CNF in freediving parlance). But I would not consider deep technical diving "easy." It requires many hours of training and constant attention to detail. You need a ton of equipment and you must keep that equipment maintained and in perfect working order. You have to make sure your gasses are mixed exactly right and keep track of which tank is which. You have to calculate your deco precisely and be ready and able to recalculate if something doesn't go according to plan. And you have to maintain your concentration throughout those long hours of deco. One mistake and you're fish food. I'm sure these people find it fun and rewarding. But I'll bet none of them would call it "easy."
That's amazing. I just started diving adventure two yrs ago and live it. I would love to progress to tech one day. Is there work out there as a tech or is it a hobby.
put your hand to the lifeless bottom and then wait deco, all for 100m logbook record - its epic
Love watching some hardworking, free people pushing the limits of human achievement!! I’m gonna try to get my Tech cert in the next 6 months
did you end up doing your tech cert, if so how did it go?
I’ve been diving for 9 years now and as soon as I’m 18 I’m going to go for my dive master I’ve already hit all of the requirements and then I want to get instructor and then I really want to get into tech!
@@elmo319 oh right fair enough, didn’t actually know that I knew you had to be 18 but I do still want to get instructor first yk
@@mrme5807 yeah you didn’t have to say the 12 bit
@@elmo319 of course man, I just love diving even if I didn’t get into tech I’d still teach but yeah it’ll be awesome when I do, I’ll be 18 in February so I’m hoping to ask my dad to pay for my dive master for my present
@@kylebeavan62 by the way there are deeper dives
300m 200m
It's amazing, someday I'll be like this.
There you are man. Goodluck on your dives!
What was your total deco obligation time for this dive?
What means deco obligated????
Great achievement 👌
wasn't too cold down there? at 100m depth with short wetsuit?
water temp got to about 25c at 100m. so quite warm still considering.
i think it was near 30c at a few meters that day.
@@CameronPeppers wow, i normally do deep dive (80m max) in Mediterranean but down there it gest pretty cold (12c) even during summer
@@Marco-bq4hj Yessss haha. I’m in Greece on vacation and just went to 42 meters yesterday, it got super cold at a thermocline of about 33 meters. They also had another thermocline around 22 meters or so
@@Marco-bq4hj also I just realized there aren’t enough scuba videos online. I watched this one last year and I realized I’m watching it again now -_- I’m gonna try to get some pro videography gear and make some scuba videos so more people can see
Was this recorded with a GoPro?
In a special housing made for 150m, Yes, this was a gopro 10
Lost a friend doing this in 2023. I believe it was the same area.
Would love to go that deep but on a rebreather.
Awesome dive and even in a shorty. Seems a bit cold though at 25 to 30c for over an hour, hanging still in deco.
But don't you need some redundancy in case of a wing failure with full tanks?
it was quite warm actually, i rarely wear a suit unless going very deep.
As for redundancy, thats an OMS Dual-Bladder 94lb wing. Also two large SMB's and 100m reel.
A few years ago i was actually hurt from a wing failure at 55m so im extra cautious on those things now, both of my bladders are hooked up and tested before each tech dive.
@@CameronPeppers A setup like that would make a lot of sense to me.
Kinda jealous on the conditions you guys have.
@@CameronPeppers Hey Cameron. Could you share what happened? Curious as learning from accidents can help prevent others from happening. Thanks.
Awesome dive man! I really recommend getting into dry suit diving though. Once you do it, it’s way better and you won’t wanna go back. It’s less restrictive on your shoulders and hips, feels better on your joints, keeps you warm in the water, keeps you more cool out of the water and it’s an additional form of buoyancy if needed
@@forgot_my_name_again come to South Florida... I just did a 2-hour rec dive in a compression shirt and bathing suit. 82F/28C
Awesome. Got a question about your gas selection.Your bottom mix is 14/51 which leaves 35% nitrogen. Your first deco gas is 28% which leaves 72% nitrogen. When you switch to your 28% you are going to start on-gassing nitrogen when you go from 35% to 72% nitrogen. I was taught to add helium to my first deep deco gas which is normally 32/35. Were you just saving $$$ or is there another reason for not adding helium to your deco gas?
was 4 years ago so dont all the way remember, defitely was not about the $$. 28 was also the travel gas for the way down which is most likely the reason. we also go to 70+m without trimix regularly at that time.
@@CameronPeppers Thanks for responding. The last deep diving I did was in Lake Superior on The Kamloops last summer. The Kamloops is in 270ft and the temp. was 36 degrees top to bottom. My back gas was 14/55 and I carried 32/35, 50/25 and 100%.We normally jump in breathing the 50/25 and switch to our back gas at 20 ft. Good times.
Stepping down the He more than 40pc is definitely not advisable as it can lead to isobaric counter diffusion. The whole set up looks weird to me. I realise they dive in a group of three so have some redundancy but the gas planning, without knowing their SAC and the exact dive plan, looks very tight to me given that they only carry 40cft deco gas tanks.
The most weird thing is why would you do it? There’s evidently nothing to see down there. Just to say you’ve been to a 100m? I’ve been there so just asking out of curiosity.
why only two stages for a trimix dive?
Awesome 100 M
Did you guys see anything huge at that depth?
Can Oh do the Hypoxix Trimic course There, Whats the Name of the base? ☺️
La Laguna Beach Club and Dive Center, Puerto Galera, Oriental Mindoro, Philippines
how much bottom time and how long was the whole dive?
10min bottom time, 68 mins total
@@CameronPeppers And I'm guessing the 10-minute bottom time includes descent time?
@@mekanwoke6968 yes. About 3mins descent time
@@CameronPeppers sounds good! Thank you! Great video btw! Gone deeper than that yet?
@@mekanwoke6968 thanks, and not yet, waiting for something to look at that deep to go again haha
All that equipment and multiple tanks of gasses mixed special for each depth range and interminable time in deco, all to do what William Trubridge does in about three and a half minutes on one breath of air, with no tanks or weights or computer or even fins.
Difference being these guys want to stay in those depths longer than 4 minutes... You don't build up narcosis and or blood nitrogen in that short time to give you decompression sickness...
@@zeiitgeist
Those tech divers still only get a few minutes bottom time, and then they have hours of decompression.
@@danielschechter8130 it's enjoyable and easier
@@abdullahabdulaziz7232
I get it that some people regard scuba as "easier" than freediving. And I can attest that recreational scuba is fun. And honestly, very few people can go as deep as Willian Trubridge, and nobody else can go that deep doing constant weight no fins (CNF in freediving parlance). But I would not consider deep technical diving "easy." It requires many hours of training and constant attention to detail. You need a ton of equipment and you must keep that equipment maintained and in perfect working order. You have to make sure your gasses are mixed exactly right and keep track of which tank is which. You have to calculate your deco precisely and be ready and able to recalculate if something doesn't go according to plan. And you have to maintain your concentration throughout those long hours of deco. One mistake and you're fish food. I'm sure these people find it fun and rewarding. But I'll bet none of them would call it "easy."
@@danielschechter8130 For sure, agreed.
I was comparing free-diving and open water scuba. I belive scuba is easier.
That's amazing. I just started diving adventure two yrs ago and live it. I would love to progress to tech one day. Is there work out there as a tech or is it a hobby.
usually just a hobby unless youre a really good instructor or a commercial diver
Excellent Movie and Dive! What GF do you use on a 100mt dive??
30/70 for me.
Just to see sand ???
the fun is in the trip not the detination !
Hola, TX 14/51, no hubiese sido mejor 10/50?
10/70 would have been better
good job 👌
What's the point? There's nothing there.
the fun is in the trip not the detination !
@@mathspodethemighty3484 what bollocks......whats the point in diving on nothing
Bro that music
why does most of the diving youtubers have bad taste of BGMs.
You should do a video so we can see how it’s done with good taste.
Better yet, how about no background music? It always sucks, and I’d rather just hear the raw sound anyway.
Really great man!
Awesome😃💪
Amazing
1.52 seems risky for a 100m dive.
Stay safe meng
100 metre dive using trimix gas but on shorts no offence but far from being impressed. DIR for life :) save diving to everyone 👈🏼
Pffff. Show off...
What camerra annd case did you guys use in order to hold on at that pressure?