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Getbig Main Boards => General Topics => Topic started by: Stark on January 19, 2007, 04:23:39 PM
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Holy shit, I swear I must have seen nearly all the gore and bizzard desperate movies floating around the Internet, but nothing NOTHING gave me more chills than to see this.
This is a Movie of a diving instructor who filmed his own death he he because he is an Instructor he can dive alone (first thing I learned when I did my diving license NEVER EVER dive alone)
You see him for some reason decent very fast, getting paniced diluted in another dimension as one of the guys said, when he reaches the ground 91 m :o :o :o :o in like a record time (HOLY SHIT) he looks at his diving computer and finds out were he is and that he will die, from that point on it's panic panic panic.
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sounds like it belongs on orgrish
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sounds like it belongs on orgrish
You should know that Ogrish does not exist anymore... it's liveleak now ;)
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thanks for the headsup
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Here is one were the divers find another divers corps...female went for solo diver never came back
&NR
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you couldnt even tell what was going on
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I never dived any deeper then 36 meters, and always made sure that I did my safety stops. Before diving you make sure your equipment is checked, during the dive to check your dive computer on a regular base, because you want to know how deep you are, how much air you have left, and if you're not ascending or descending to fast. If you follow the rules and do that what you have learned, diving should be safe.
Panic will get you killed. I remember one dive in The Netherlands. The water was far from bright when you looked at the surface, but after descending it went to a dark greenish, with a visibility of less then a meter. In a few minutes I lost my buddy, and had to held my computer close by to see how deep I was. It really felt like maybe 7 or 8 meters, but it appeared to be 20 meters. I knew that certain areas on this diving spot were as deep as 80 meters, so I decided to slowly ascent. But you have to make sure what's up and what's down, so you just look at the bubbles. They always go up, so you know which way to go.
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I never dived any deeper then 36 meters, and always made sure that I did my safety stops. Before diving you make sure your equipment is checked, during the dive to check your dive computer on a regular base, because you want to know how deep you are, how much air you have left, and if you're not ascending or descending to fast. If you follow the rules and do that what you have learned, diving should be safe.
Panic will get you killed. I remember one dive in The Netherlands. The water was far from bright when you looked at the surface, but after descending it went to a dark greenish, with a visibility of less then a meter. In a few minutes I lost my buddy, and had to held my computer close by to see how deep I was. It really felt like maybe 7 or 8 meters, but it appeared to be 20 meters. I knew that certain areas on this diving spot were as deep as 80 meters, so I decided to slowly ascent. But you have to make sure what's up and what's down, so you just look at the bubbles. They always go up, so you know which way to go.
Juist... ;D
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Juist... ;D
Right! :D
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you couldnt even tell what was going on
Turn your sound up, it;s quit obvious what happend when you listen to his desperation ;)
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Right! :D
Ahuh.... ;)
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Sport?
Sport?
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But you have to make sure what's up and what's down, so you just look at the bubbles. They always go up, so you know which way to go.
Aside from the bubbles, won't you eventually float up? Not a diver so I don't know jack about it.
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Aside from the bubbles, won't you eventually float up? Not a diver so I don't know jack about it.
Yeah, if your tank gets lower on air you get lighter and you will float up. Normally on any level you're buoyant, that means your not going up or down.
In a situation I mentioned in a former post, it's important to not panic. Panic is bad for your well being.