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hi this is Dom Robinson and welcome to my deep wck diver channel the thing about exploratory diving is you never
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know what you're going to find So today we're going a really long way offshore
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the weather is fantastic and we've got really high hopes that we're going to find something special what we end up
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doing is learning a far more about old steamship engines than uh than we ever
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thought we going to do not that I've got anything against them of course I was just hoping for something uh like a Bell
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or whatever that would help us find it now this is the chart showing where we are and as you can see it's it's 50
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miles out of new Kei and uh that's a long long way offshore um so when you go
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this far offshore obviously you want to know a bit about the uh the wreck that you're diving and the only real source
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of information comes from uh the UK hydrographic office uh published on recite and this is the data that we had
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for Deep Off your Rex you can pretty much discount everything apart from the survey information the ukho just
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basically guesses at the name of Rex so in this particular case the bit that we're looking at is uh the sort of ter
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the paragraph of text just above the bottom where it says that the uh the site was surveyed in uh 1980 by HMS for
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and they established that the least depth was 82 M that's a chart datum um
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but most of it was about 92 M there was a small scour and there was a uh a wreck
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that was 40 m long and it at its highest point it stands 9 MERS above the seabed
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so that's a really small wreck but it just so happens what we're looking for is a really small wreck so this could
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fit the bill what we can probably say is it's not the wreck it's supposed to be because although UK think it is because
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that's 82 M long so this doesn't fit very well with that so spoiler alert we
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don't identify the wreck today and almost certainly no one ever will you'll
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see why if you stay tuned and uh and listen to the rest of my dive so even
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though we don't identify it it's still an interesting wreck from you know a bygone era and crucially for us it was a
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a strong possibility for a wreck that we spent quite a long time looking for so
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the US Coast Guard tamper was lost in 19 198 and it's a really important wreck
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for the for the US Coast Guard it's never been found we were looking for it and uh you know I reckon at some point
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we're going to find it but it's not today's dive so here we are on board Atlantic diver which is one of the very
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few deep diving boats still operating out of new in North Corall and uh the
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skipper Chris low has been doing this for a very long time pretty much all the wrecks in this area he put divers on for
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the first time time and he's he's kind of he doesn't really do so much of it anymore so we're really lucky to uh to
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have him as our Skipper um you can see him there on the right he's just kind of come out of the cabin out of the
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Wheelhouse just to make sure we're all okay now as is often the case this is
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rickon and myself we're we're diving together we're pretty much the last pair in the water on this dive I mean you can
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see looking out of the the side gate on the boat there just how great the conditions are you know it's really flat
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we're 40 odd miles offshore here so a really long way uh the gates not the widest so I'm taking real care to make
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sure I don't get uh I don't get anything caught in that is a risk when you go out with with the amount of gear that we've
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got but anyway you can see I'm in the water and uh and there's the shot behind me it's absolutely still you know Chris
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has got his bang on slack which is great and uh yeah and as you can see conditions in the water look really nice
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the viz is good it's it's blue um so this is this is kind of May um you know
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nice time of year to dive uh Sun's right above us so uh got really high hopes on this wreck it's 90 odd meters uh to the
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bottom and uh I'm just waiting for Rick to be ready and then we're going to uh we're going to scoot it down and get
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down as quickly as as we can there you go you can see the back of the boat Rick's obviously uh taking you know a
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bit of a while to get in for some reason but he's getting in I'm just chilling out on the surface uh waiting for him
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waiting for him to be ready and uh you know what a great day to be doing it it's just it's so nice when you get
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conditions like this I mean you can look down uh you can see me looking down the shot there there's no current whatsoever
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which is uh which is just brilliant and I mean that's what you kind of get when you've got a skipper that this is that
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is is experienced as someone like Chris he's been diving and fishing out of this
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area his entire life so um you know he knows it like the back of his hand he he
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knows all the tides he knows the conditions he knows the sea States and of course you know what knows is is is
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all the wrecks and he he knows for certain that nobody else has ever dived this so um you know that's that's really
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nice you know it's it's great to have that opportunity now as I'm coming down here you can see this Loop here now uh
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one of the uh the things that Chris does a bit differently to other Skippers is he puts the lazy shot in himself so he
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doesn't rely on the divers to do it um it goes in with his main shotline but what he doesn't like doing is putting my
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Kindle in at the same time so um because it's it's ended up wrapped around the shot a few times so he has a strict no
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Kindles policy um on the lazy shot so if you want one you've got to put it in yourself so clearly that's what I've
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just done there you saw it was probably about 12 M or so um so that's there for uh for when I come back up now as you
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can see I'm kind of I'm heading down I'm sorting out the uh the video lights on my scooter um i' I've unfolded the arms
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and all that sort of stuff and I've made sure that the uh that the GoPro is running uh as you can see down coming
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down here the the visz is starting to drop a bit so one of the problems with diving in May is you sometimes get May
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Bloom which is kind of like Plankton and stuff in the water now the Plankton blooms destroys the visibility and then
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starts to die and drop down now this today I can't 100% remember but it's either at the beginning or the end of
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the plankt and Bloom probably I think the end um so this is that the planks
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are just starting to die off and drop down but what you often get is this kind of Green Layer so you can see at the
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moment I'm kind of in the Green Layer and uh and pretty shortly I'm going to pop out the bottom of it and then the
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viz will just kind of miraculously reappear yeah you can see I'm starting to get it in now and you can see the
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color of the water is changing from that kind of green color that it was um you know I guess from about 20 to 30 m and
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now it's it's starting to get blue again so it's um you know that's nice it means that we're going to get good viz on the
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bottom hopefully which is which is obviously what we want you probably also saw on the way down that I stuck my uh
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my tag on the lazy shot so uh Rick and myself are the last pair of divers in so
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we'll probably be the last pair up as well which means that when we get back up our our tags will be there we'll take
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them off we'll release the lazy shot and we will um obviously then drift in the current if there is any on the subject
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of uh of Deco I get quite a lot of questions from people asking me um about
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bottom times and how much Deco you need to do and all those kind of things so I thought I'd I'd do something bit
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different on this dive I thought I'd Break Up The Descent with uh a bit of a chat about um decompression profiles and
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this here is uh a screenshot or I guess a video grab from uh the the download of
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my dive computer onto uh on onto my computer and you can see there the uh
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the kind of little window that's moving around with the cursor that's got loads of information about the dive obviously
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the the main piece of information on there is is the depth and also the uh
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the time on the dive I'm in I'm currently at and it'll also give me uh some information there about TTS now TTS
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stands for time to surface and that what that is is if I was to leave the bottom at exactly that point and Ascend within
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all the parameters the dive computer expects such as Ascent rate and doing the stops at the right depth that TT is
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the very quickest that I could get to the surface so it's it's a really important piece of information so I'm
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hoping you saw that when I hit the bottom it took me about 5 minutes to get down there and I had 18 minutes TTS so
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right at the start of the dive i' already got decompression you can now see here that I'm about uh another five
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minutes into my bottom time so I've spent uh 10 minutes the dive has been going on for 10 minutes and you can see
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there I've got 48 minutes uh TTS so that 5 minutes underwater at that depth
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has incurred 30 minutes of decompression the other interesting thing to point out is the app five information and
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basically what that's saying is if you stay at your current depth for another five minutes that's what your TTS will
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be so at the moment you can see it's uh about uh you know it adds probably about
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25 30 minutes onto uh onto the TTS so uh
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that's something for you to be thinking about while while I'm on the dive because all the way through the dive
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this thing about TTS and how long I stay down and how much Deco I've got to do
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that is all going through my mind so uh what we're going to do now is carry on with a dive but then I'll pick up some
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more about the Deco profile uh when it comes to ascend so back with the dive
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here I am at 50 m just cleared my ears um and uh but yeah just kind of looking
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around I'm probably having a quick look just to check Rick is still with me there he is you probably saw just above me so so that's good you know one of the
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nice things about diving with Rick is is that we understand each other really well we communicate well we work we work
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together we we've done loads and loads of diving um and and by and large we do like to stick together particularly um
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on the kind of deeper Dives this one's 90ish meters today so not super deep but
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certainly um you know if if you get a problem it's a long way back up so uh so
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here we go and you can see how good the visz is you see it start to see some strobes at the bottom there so um those
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strobes will probably be 8 to 10 m above the bottom I guess so I saw them about
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65 M so you know looking straight down there's easily 15 M uh in the water
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column there um and obviously uh you know positioning your strobe is an
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interesting thing if you haven't done so you you you probably want to see my uh my strobe video somebody asked me there
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what what depth you should put the strobes at and it's kind of personal preference really I mean those ones
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there are probably a bit higher than I would like but you can see somebody else has put theirs a bit further down and me
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I like mine probably 5 m above the wreck maybe 5 to 10 met above the wreck 5 to
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10 m above the bottom um but you know I guess it's it's uh you know is an
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individual preference so here we go you see there we're getting to about 90 M and uh I'm going to uh I think I can
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just start to see the bottom coming into now yeah there it is you can see the seabed and you can see the the weight
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Chris um doesn't uh doesn't particularly use a grapple that's a bit deeper than I
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I recall there you go it's uh uh you know 96 M at the moment so I guess this
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is probably nearly a 100 meter dive uh I think you know those strobes are you
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know I'd have probably preferred to put them up a bit higher really but anyway doesn't matter my my standard double
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strobe is on you can see there's the uh the weight on the bottom uh Spud weight
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in the terminology rather than say a grapple now you can see it's not bang on the wreck but just in front of me there
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is um a bit of wreckage coming into view so it's it's just off the side I think as I came down I would have been able to
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see that you don't always see uh on the uh on the power lens you know you don't
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get much peripheral vision off off the power lens so I would have seen the wreck and I'd have seen uh probably some
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of the other divers on it I'd have seen their uh their torches and whatever so here I am coming in onto the side of the
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wreck now and uh I've just turned my main Beam on uh main torch is in my left
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hand I've obviously got the two video lights on the uh on the scooter and basically what I'm going to be doing now
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is trying to orientate myself also worth noting that at this point I don't know
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that this isn't the tamper so uh there's still a really high level of excitement
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that you know we've come out here all this way all that expense all that time
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I mean it takes takes I don't know 3 hours 4 hours to get out here um and
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we're kind of hoping against hope that it's going to be the tamper and uh just so you know what happened to the tamper
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tamper was a a US Coast Guard vessel came over to um to help out during the
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first world war so the US Navy the US Coast Guard were were all supporting um
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anti-submarine Patrols in the English Channel and uh you know Bristol Channel
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as this is here or I guess maybe Irish sea you might want to call it um so they're all supporting the war effort
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and the Tampa was escorting a convoy and for I think it needed to go and get some fuel so it it left the Convoy went off I
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think was heading towards Milford Haven to get some fuel and uh was never seen again 120 odd guys lost their lives um
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mixture of Americans uh some civilians some uh some Brits um and what's really
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sad is this was the 26th of September 1918 so so just over a month before the
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end of the war and it was uh the biggest American uh Naval loss not Navy I guess
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Coast Guard but you know the biggest American Maritime loss of the first world war um you know I guess a relative
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a point when the Americans weren't used to fighting uh in Wars overseas Wars and
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it made a really big impact on the US Coast Guard so to this day the US coast guards still have a vessel called tamper
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in service and um they they're really interested in the search that's going on
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for the tamper and they've um you know if we found it um they would they would be really interested so anyway so we
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know what to look for on the Tampa we know it's armed we know uh it's got some big winches we know uh it actually the
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Bell on it has got Miami written on it cuz that was its original name so we're looking for all of these things uh and
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as you can see see at the moment all the way through the the bottom phase of this dive what I've mainly been finding is a
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really broken wreck and it's really old as well you can just tell it by the how
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little is left of it and um obviously iron hold you can you can see that but
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there's basically uh very very little of this wreck left whilst I was telling you the story of the tamper uh went past a
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big pile of chain um so obviously I've been been to the bow I I know where that
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is didn't see any anchors um but uh don't always you know it's quite you can
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see the seab bed's quite muddy and you can see here I'm back at the uh at the boiler um another clear confirmation
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that this isn't the agila which is uh which is what the ukho thinks it is uh the agila has got two boilers there's
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clearly only one here and it's um you know it's relatively small so this is a really really small ship um and and
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clearly old as well and we'll see see another sign of it of it being old in second so um this is just in front of
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the uh the boiler you can see there's some sort of uh you know maybe hatch there uh probably where coal was loaded
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in uh often you get kind of hatches for loading coal uh after the bridge but just forward of the boiler um so that
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that may have been what that is but clearly this is the area of the bridge so so what I'm doing is I'm having a look around here you know just to see if
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there's any um you know any Bridge gear you know but there's nothing there's not even there's no Port holes uh um you
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know there's there's not very much at all so bridge on this would have probably been wooden so you know it may
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well be that the bridge is off to the side somewhere it may well be that the bridge got trolled I mean you can see
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there's all sorts of fishing gear even though it's so far offshore loads of fishing gear on this wreck and uh it
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could have been trolled down and here it is I promised you uh promised you interesting steam engines and you can
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see we're just uh we're just coming up to it here and it really confused as this steam engine it it didn't look like
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anything that we've seen for but what what are you know very very rare the thing on the right the cylindrical thing
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that's a condenser the big thing on the left that's the obviously the bit of the boiler and you can see there's some legs
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uh on which the uh the engine is standing up also a diver there um and what I'm going to do here is uh as I
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often do I like to go up on the top and have a look on the top of the engine you can see how many cylinders it's got you
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can see what size the cylinders are so you can see this cylinder clearly sorry this engine here has got two cylinders
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it's got a high pressure one at the right near the boiler and then it's got a low pressure uh cylinder to the left
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um which is obviously where when the gas is when the steam had expanded it would have gone through that so you may recall
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from when I showed you the decompression profile earlier on but this is um this is 10 minutes into my dive I've been on
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the bottom for 5 minutes and if you can remember all the way back to that decompression profile I had uh 48
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minutes TTS um so so uh my my 5 minutes
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of actually looking around the wreck has uh means that I you know in order to get to the surface I'm going to need to do
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nearly an hour's worth of decompression but you know what uh this is 95 M down
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uh so it's nearly a ton and you know this is simply the cost of doing diving
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like this you have to accept that you are you're going to do a whole load of Deco and uh we're all kind of we're used
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to that and we're prepared for it so we got all the right gear we um uh you know
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we're going to be warm enough you know I've got a heated vest all that kind of stuff and obviously we've got the system the lazy shot system to make sure the
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divers stay together we got loads of gas near us and uh we're all good for it now now just in front of me there you can
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probably see there's a uh the drive shaft or the prop shaft that's uh that's going from left to right and um so you
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know once again further confirmation that the stern is well basically the direction I'm heading now now so I'm
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going to go down there and have a look at that Sterns not always um that
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interesting um you know sometimes you can you get props and you know they they will tell you a little bit about the age
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of the wreck um you know maybe the how good a quality it is so if it's an iron
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prop uh clearly it's normally a fairly rubbish quality uh soort cheap ship if
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it's got a bronze prop then you know might be a bit more expensive but as you can see down here I mean there is the
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wreck is really flat it's it's completely broken down there's loads of
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uh really old fishing net all over it and you see why there's fishing net cuz obviously there's a ton of fish around
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here isn't it so uh you know like all all the wrecks um in uh off the off the
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British Coast they are uh they're fertile breathing breeding grounds for
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fish and they uh they keep the rest of the uh the sea populated and fishermen
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can't fish too close to them so they know if they do they're going get their NS CAU
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anyway uh back to the engine now uh you recall earlier on that I uh that I said
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we learned far more about steamship engines than we possibly might uh want to on this dive so we we came back up um
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with that engine uh nobody had really seen one like it before so we were all pretty excited we thought uh you know
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that might help us identify it so I'm in the really fortunate position that I uh
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I I know a a guy he's actually vica who um is a bit of an expert in Steam
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Engines so what I did was I sent him uh some of the Stills and some of the
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videos um including some of the imagery that you've seen already and said look you know can you tell us anything about
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this engine you know maybe you know uh how old it is or you know if it was in
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common use or anything like that so uh he uh very kindly produced a diagram that I've shown you at the beginning and
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and you can see here and basically what he said to us uh really nicely was uh look they made loads and loads of these
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engines um it is quite an old design but they carried on making them all the way through um up until really uh just
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before the second world war but he says probably yours was from you know maybe
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1890 that kind of time and and he based it on a few of the individual design
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features but yeah so uh really unfortunate that wasn't able to help us
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identify the wreck but we did learn a bit more about um steam engine design so
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that kind of thing where the condenser just next to it where um you got the various uh Pistons going up and down and
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all and the kind of the arms holding up the engine and everything so so that was uh that was kind of interesting what it
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in fact there we go you can see it again you can see the the arms on the right hand side the condensers on the left um
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and that's our um that's our engine the great thing is though what it was able to definitively do is say that this
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isn't the tamper and the reason it isn't the tamper um well you know along with all the other things there's no guns or
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anything like that is because um the uh the tamper had a three-cylinder engine
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and that's clearly a one a two-cylinder engine so definitely not the tamper what it is though um we will never know
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almost certainly and the reason is because you can see through this dive uh you can see me and the other guys who
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were part of the part of the team we all looking around and uh it's a small small wreck so even though it's 95 is M we
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we've got you know the opportunity to have a good look around there and you can see me there I'm I'm really having a look in you know potentially the the
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maker plate is somewhere now down here the engine makers plate perhaps having a really good look and we found basically
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nothing we didn't find uh the Bell we didn't find the maker plate we didn't
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find any Crockery um we didn't find in fact we
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only found one P hole and you'll see that right at the end it's a right really Mankey old thing and and Port
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holes don't help you identify Rex anyway so basically uh eight of us scrutinizing
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this wreck for um if you know say we probably spent 18 or 19 minutes on it each and none of us none of us found
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anything and uh between us we' got we got people who are who are you know pretty good at finding things so that's
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obviously for me that's a fairly clear indication that there's uh there's nothing to to find down here it's either
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uh buried or it's been pulled off or possibly was never there in the first place and so I consider it extremely
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unlikely that anybody will actually even dive this wreck again and the reason is because I put information about the
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wreck on recite that basically says uh it's an old steam ship it's very small there's
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nothing interesting um and I would imagine anybody who's thinking about coming uh heading 50 miles out of new to
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do a to do a 100 meter dive they're going to be wanting to do something that's a bit more interesting than this
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so um I guess we've saved anybody else the pain of coming to this wreck uh by
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by having a good luck and confirming there's nothing there so so what you can see here is I'm actually just off the side of the wreck and what I'm doing is
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you know I I guess I'm I'm a bit hopeful that maybe something has collapsed and is is just sticking out of the mud or
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whatever on the bottom uh unfortunately uh that isn't the case so uh I'm
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slightly heading back towards the bridge now sorry slightly towards the B I'm going to turn in towards the bridge and
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uh you know I have had a really good scrub of it but you know sometimes going away from something coming back you uh
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you spot some stuff that you you didn't see in the first place so um you know I
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guess that's hopeful there's something down there you probably just see there's a bit of a ladder maybe um but yeah those double uh double
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video lights that's kind of classic Rick and the the boiler there you can see it
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would have been uh stoked from the other side of it so the the side near the engine um which I guess if somebody had
25:08
a ship's plan set of ship's plans and they thought they knew which wreck this was that that might help but the reality
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is is that this is a small coastal steamer that probably vanished towards the end of the uh 19th century um and
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there AR any number of uh ships that went missing at about that time that kind of fit this description you know
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this far offshore let's say it went down in a storm or a collision it's um you
25:35
know not particularly likely that anybody would survived so therefore you know it may be that in the records this
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ship is just shown as having having vanished so it would have left a port I don't know maybe Bristol perhaps or
25:48
Liverpool or you know maybe it's come around Land's End or maybe it's come from Ireland or some something like that
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and wherever it left it was bound for somewhere and then just didn't um was
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never heard of again so uh you know that's why I think it really unlikely
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this wreck will ever be identified fact there you go you can see that is just there that is the top of a PO hole just
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in there by the uh by the uh the side of the boiler and I'm going to try and pull it out and uh and have a quick look at
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it and uh you can see it's it's it's pretty well wedged in there so uh even
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though I'm having a good old go at it it's uh it's not going to come out it's just kicked up the viz and uh yeah I
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guess that summarize that summarizes the dive can't even get a really rubbish port hole out to have a look at it so um
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you know I guess it's in some ways it's nicest dive it's nice that the we got on the wreck it's nice that we've we've
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eliminated this as a possibility for the tamper uh the visibility is quite nice
26:53
uh there's quite a lot of fish um uh the dive you know there's no hles with a
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dive all my kit works well and all those kind of things but ultimately in terms of what we're trying to do which is
27:03
identify Rex bit of a disappointment oh you can see there that's a that's a small boiler by the side of the main
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boiler um so that's probably a donkey boiler which would have been a small
27:15
boiler that they they kept stoked uh rather than firing the main boiler and that would have provided steam you know
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maybe for for winches or you know possibly even just things like heat um
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those kind of things so what I'm going to do now is I think I've I've had enough of the dive there's Rick you can
27:33
see me signaling to him and suggesting that you know really um we should be quitting the dive you can see there I'm
27:39
suggesting that we're going to we're going to head back to the shot I I think Rick see me I think he's in agreement
27:45
certainly looks that way doesn't it oh yeah a bit of a uh is that a ling down there might be a Conger probably a
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Conger so you can see I'm heading back to the shot which is just off the side of the wreck um those strobes obviously
27:57
um you know make it really easy and if you haven't seen my strobe video then I really recommend that you uh you should
28:04
do you get a feel for this kind of thing and I'm going to go up so I think that's probably Rick's strobe at the bottom
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that's my strobe there you can see actually that the current I would say is picked up a bit so you can see there's a
28:16
bit of tens there's a bit more tension on the shot that than there was before Rick and me are the last divers on the
28:21
wreck we were the first pair down and uh you can see in fact not quite there's
28:26
there's two divers there there's one coming back back to the shot and there's Rick on it so um I'm just looking at Rick I want to make sure that I don't
28:33
leave him on the wreck by himself so I'm waiting for him to come over I thought he was coming over anyway turns out
28:39
turns out he W he wasn't so uh you know I'm going to do the decent thing I think
28:45
and just go back and say to him look look Rick I thought we were I thought we were we were we were canning it here but
28:52
but Ricky like a lot of us um you know he's got his own thing for being on the wreck and if often you know for him it's
29:00
all about the pH photographs so I'm pretty certain that's what he's doing down here he's uh he's getting himself
29:06
something sorted but um and uh and clearly he's he's
29:11
completely ignoring any attempts I'm I'm making to communicate with him so uh he's there by he's there by the engine
29:18
and I think I'm just going to go up to him now probably give him a bit of a tug on his Finn um that'll get his attention
29:24
pretty quick and let him know that it's uh that I'm back and you know probably
29:29
it's time for him as well so uh one of the interesting things
29:35
about Rick is that he uses yeah you go just told him on back is he uses carbon
29:41
fiber cylinders so uh he carries them both on his left as as you saw there they're they're 300 bar 7 Lish cylinders
29:49
so carry the same gas as an Al 80 but they're just far nicer in the sense that
29:54
they they're much lighter on the land uh they've got great pointy characteristics and all those kind of things um the only
30:01
downside for them of course is they're uh they're more expensive than um than the Aly 80s that that the rest of us
30:08
carry so um but but but really nice and I guess just something a bit different
30:13
there so here we are back at the shot there's uh there's the other diver that's James who's got some sort of
30:19
looks as though one of his uh his lb has come loose and is flapping around there but rather than trying to resolve it
30:26
here obviously what we want to be doing is is heading up the shotline and uh and resolving it when we're on Deco stop so
30:33
you'll have probably seen on some of my other videos that I like to scooter up gets you up nice and quick so uh that's
30:38
what I'm doing back to my decompression profile I promis you i' I'd come back to this you
30:43
see I um I left the bottom 23 minutes into my dive at that point I had 128
30:49
minutes of TTS so basically just over 2 hours of of decompression and you can see here that I get to my first
30:56
decompression start at about 48 M and I've got 118 minutes of decompression to
31:02
do what I then do is uh two things the first thing is that I raise my po2 to
31:08
1.5 you can't see that on the computer but that does cut down my TTS and the
31:13
second thing that I then do is which is a bit naughty is I switch uh diluent on the rebreather from the helium mix of
31:21
1071 that I've been using at the bottom to 21% which is air now that cuts
31:28
another 17 minutes of uh of decompression off so I've managed to get it down from uh
31:34
from8 when I got to my first Deco stop down to 83 which is which is quite a
31:39
nice saving but um uh lots of people will tell you that um particularly the
31:46
uh the changing to to air diluent is is a naughty thing to do because it will uh
31:52
increases the the risk of isobaric counter diffusion and um they're absolutely right I I don't really do it
31:59
very I don't do it very often not really sure why I did it on this dive I guess what I should also do is point out at
32:05
the same time that as well as just changing the the diluent I also um uh
32:11
switch to 21% diluent and I do multiple flushes of my Loop to get the helium out
32:18
I do the flushes not just when I switch but but kind of Fairly regularly through the uh through the decompression as well
32:25
and uh the way I'm able to do this is because I carry a 3 l cylinder of air on
32:30
my uh on my unit and the 3 lit cylinder of air is is great because it means I can do as many air deal flushes as I
32:36
want I've got a ton of gas it's also what I use to run the uh the buoyancy on my wing and on my dry suit uh I can both
32:45
of them can also be connected to my diluent as well so I've got some redundancy but yeah so uh so that's what I do with with those gas switches and as
32:52
you can see here the um I I carry On Doing My Deco and uh eventually I clear
32:58
my Deco stops uh just over the 2hour Mark I actually stay down for another four or five minutes um probably out of
33:04
guilt of doing that um doing that uh that that switching my uh switching my
33:11
deal but anyway what I would say is that's a it's an old school practice it's very naughty uh you probably
33:17
shouldn't copy me because there is a risk of ice Spar counter diffusion and
33:23
it's not something I do very often so um please forgive me and I'm sure lots of
33:28
people will tell me in the comments that it's a really bad thing to do um i' just like to say I know I'm very sorry I'll
33:33
never do it again anyway back to the dive so um this is us obviously
33:39
continuing the ascent there's uh there's dive in front of me streaming his delayed SMB um obviously doesn't look
33:46
great but but doesn't uh really change the price Fish you can see me going up quite fast there you see my uh my sheer
33:53
water's not super happy about it you can also see that I'm uh obviously venting as I go and once again you see faster
34:00
scent alarm there on on the sheer water which really not happy once again you know you do these things at your own
34:06
risk um I I I like to get off the bottom quick I I figur the pressure change at
34:12
the bottom isn't as great as it is near the surface so um that's why I I I do it
34:18
I do it quick and then what I do is when I get to about half the distance from the bottom to My Deco stops I I slow the
34:24
rate of ascent down and then just take it at a normal kind of 10 meters a minute from there so you can see that's
34:30
just what I'm doing now um slowing things down and um it will it will go
34:36
you know a bit less rapidly from here on in and there's Rick you can see he's
34:42
with me as well he's on the shot line he tends to do the same thing as me and um
34:48
you see there Ascent rate's coming down and uh it's back within the sort of five
34:53
normal yellow bars that you get on a on a sheer water to indicate speed there you go I'm looking up the line there you
34:59
see his diver above me um oops I've gone back into the red there didn't mean to do that so uh I'm back back in the
35:06
yellow and uh there we go there's uh there's James with his his streaming delayed SMB and uh I'm getting quite
35:14
close to my first Deco stop now so slowing the rate of as scent down and what I can do is I can start um sorting
35:22
out my gear don't need the scooter anymore don't need the video lights so do a bit of admin turn off the video
35:29
lights and I'll be probably turning off the GoPro at the same sort of time so
35:34
it's it's simply a case now of of preparing for the for the Deco stops the other thing you'll see me do very
35:40
shortly is I will change the uh po2 I'll change it on my fact this is me doing it
35:46
now there you go I'm going to change it on my uh controller for for the vision
35:51
um I'm setting it to 1.5 P2 that will obviously help accelerate the
35:57
decompression once I've done it on there I will do it on my other computer on my offboard you
36:03
see it's set to 1.3 at the moment so uh that will be changed I'll edit it uh
36:09
eventually when I when I get to the right set right page there you go I'm going to change it you can see there
36:14
it's going to 1.5 and I'm just keeping an eye on the shotline making sure I'm not too far away that that's that's Rick he's
36:21
probably doing the same thing so I've sorted out my uh my my computers uh you
36:26
see me I'm taking my torch uh off my wrist that's going to be clipped up on my uh on my left side on on one of the
36:34
uh D Clips I've got on there and then it's it's literally just a case of uh of
36:39
getting on and doing My Deco you can see there obviously just checking what depth I need to be at and
36:46
it's it's 45 M I've I didn't turn my strobes off at the bottom so I'm I'm turning them off now as well there we go
36:52
both of those are off and there you go you can see my hands set 85 minutes TTS on that one and a bit more on the on the
37:00
sheer water which is which is what you expect because i' I have different gradient factors set on them I use the
37:06
sheer water to control my scent and I have that set at 6080 um gradient factors for my uh
37:14
inspiration for the for the vision I have that set at 995 and the reason I do it that way is
37:22
uh if I absolutely need to get out of the water quickly I use the uh the gradient fact factors on my
37:29
inspiration otherwise I follow the ones on the sheer water which uh um obviously
37:34
give me that um nice conservancy and therefore keep me uh you know minimize
37:40
the risk of DCI so I've got another hour and a half hour 40 minutes of decompression to do um and I guess you
37:49
know gives you plenty of time to reflect so I guess the thing on this dive is
37:54
clearly it wasn't a success in the sense that we didn't find anything we didn't
38:00
identify anything all we did we choked something off as uh as it wasn't what we're looking for but that's what
38:06
happens so anyway I hope you enjoyed this dive you found it quite interesting
38:12
um not least cuz it's doesn't always work we're not always successful anyway
38:17
please feel free to do all the usual sort of stuff and um you know like subscribe tell your mates add a comment
38:24
Etc and uh anyway I look forward to seeing you on my uh next video