Added: 3 years ago
From: alexandersot
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  • Boukala Kartelias vlepw!! Are Ellhnara mhn panikovalesai!!!

  • Is it dangerous when a diver muffledly screams underwater with a regulator in its mouth?

  • у тебя в балоне воздуха почти нет.... стоп стоп,я пошутил

  • Maybe this person didn't get enough training and/or pool session. I remember myself doing the same in the pool... the next day I just trusted the devices (regulators, tanks, etc) and I had a great experience diving on the sea.

  • @Nando85ec I first dove off the coast of BVI and never had one issue hahha

  • Holy crap!! a girl in my dive class did the same thing!!!!

  • @sunstopper What same thing? Panicking?

  • seen one of these catches in real life scary lol good thing he got caught 

  • Good job, nice catch.

  • good catch.

  • probably asian

  • What an idiot. You never go straight to the surface like that unless its an emergency. Gppd job on the instructors part of pulling him back

    down.

  • Geez the guy filming must have been a newb too. He's breathing like he's running a 5min mile.

  • hahaha

    

  • In the original video the uploader explained that this guy had got frightened on seeing his baro pointing at the red zone so he bolted thinking hewas out of air.

  • good reaction by monitor speed up risk for pulmons ! monitor very good

  • Fuuuck I hate watching stupid people dive. And that's from 7 years of watching it happen. "Problem with regulator? I know! I'll bolt and endanger myself and my buddy!"

  • @amidyville Panic can happen to anyone, any vis, any depth. Being able to reign in your panic comes with experience, but you shouldn't (quite literally) bet your life on never panicking underwater. Stupidity is just that, not momentarily forgetting your training or other experiences. Glad to see he was alright in the end.

  • lol panic ftw

  • Im still trying to figure out what freak the person out for him/her to bail. Its freaken clear water for one thing. Try doing your OW cert in 2 feet vis!!!

  • Dosnt he know u can't go up that fast or I'll get that stiff I'm ur blood lol!!

  • i think he misunderstood his meter and thought he was running out of air

  • What makes this guy panic?

  • What exactly happened here?

  • get back here you little bastard!

  • lol that was funny

  • lungs dont explode when breathing through Oxygen through a regulator, instead it forces nitrogen into the blood stream ( the Bends), if enough pressure is compensated judged by the depth of the dive.

  • Yep, never hold breath, we all know that pressure changes can cause lung tearing.

  • lol. he's like bring yo ass back here

  • @reggie503  lol,

  • I dont understand how can he panic there lol, I paniced only one time in Polish lake 27 meters inside of night that was scary but not in a tropical water -.-

  • HAAHHA..joke of death..

  • roflmao!

  • lol... his octo is hanging loose.. not very handy :P

  • his first mistake was diving by himself that grim sunny day. we will never find out exactly what happened to him except that he was found floating face down in the water about 5 hours after he was seen entering the river. he was a proffesional scuba diver that was always aware of the dangers of scuba diving.

  • @sniperserg I'm sorry for hearing that, but why did he dive alone then? Just wondering...

  • @11moii i will never know. i dont know if it was a macho man effect or what. he had open water, advanced open water, dry suit, gas certifications. bad shit happens to good people or good people do dumb things. be safe underwater.

  • my older brother andy zagariya passed away on 7-23-2010 diving shallow water in the columbia river. he was using top of the line gear. scubapro g-250 second stage regs. top of the line dry suit.

  • never go up at a rate of 18meters/min, or else you will end up having a bad day. This kid totally was going to end up dead if the instructor didn't get a grip of him. Going up is the most dangerous part of the dive, and this kid should have been constantly warned and told that in case of a panic attack just lay down on the sea floor and relax while catching your breath. Well at least my instructors brainwashed me about the risks of decompression sickness :>), and it worked like a charm.

  • @Airbusftw I wouldn't say dead, but definitely would have ended up with DCS and needing a chamber ride.

  • I was diving many times in Florida swam over two sharks Black tip and a Nurse shark never mine the wall of Baracuddas it was difficult to compose yourself but I did it and happy for it 20 years i have been diving and stopped now. I dont want the any problems,

  • ah ha!  he scared to the balloon fish thatsway

  • somebody tell me why their alternate air sources are dangling about?

  • @Undeqd I was wondering myself

  • Comment removed

  • oh my god thats the bends all over what made him come up?

  • why did he go up the divemaster should have told him to deflate bc

  • @MrCoalie1 The BCD had nothing to do with it. It's already deflated, otherwise they wouldn't be on the bottom.

  • Wait,what happened,why did he panic in first place?

  • @isomikieee Well at 0:17 you can see his regulator blows out lots of air then he crabs it and freaks out and tries to swim up. Maybe he lost it out of his mouth or he just tried to breath out of his nose and forgot what to do after that. Lots of things can happen while diving.

  • Somebody better tell that kid to sing a song on his way up to the light or he will be seeing a different kind of light.

  • oh my god he was within inched of death.. man that guy saved his life!

  • @jammin1033 but what u mean he was going up how could that kill him?

  • @TheRumbleFighterMan well just that short distance up probably wouldn't have killed him but he could have embillized and got the bends =p

  • If you ascend rapidly without constantly breathing out rapidly the lungs over ecpand like a ballon and you lungs go pop (pulmenary embolisum).......no lung function = no air to brain = dead.

    If he had been deep and for a prolonged period then decompression illness (aka the bends). google it there are plenty of good explanations out there

  • @markbarry1977

    I think what you are trying to say is that your lungs expand and you can develop an Air embolism not pulmonary embolism. Pulmonary embolism usually develops from a deep venous thrombosis (blood clot in a vein) and obstructs an pulmonary artery. Air embolism develops when air is trapped in your alveoli and is diffused into the blood via pulmonary capillaries. Your "lung go pop" or tension pneumothorax can happen, but is not the same thing.

  • @jammin1033 he wouldn't have died and was not inches from death. He would have got bent at worse and just needed a chamber ride.

  • ahahaa)))) looks like me on my first divetraining in a pool ("open water diving") ))

  • @kosmogenez

    lol, I got my air turned off on the first day of ow. That made me panic - I didn't expect that from the instructor.

  • @soccom8341576 you had a crappy instructor. They should have briefed that on the surface before doing the air depletion exercise. We want you to know what it feels like when you take those last breaths so you can recognize it if it ever happens to you for real. That exercise saved my life once before.

  • how deep were they?

  • number one rule of diving dnt stop breathing! diving is a sport but not for anyone! this boy shouldnt have gone in anyways! this instructor is very good! he saved him from fucking up his lungs!

  • what a retard

  • So wait I'm confused, why can't you panic but most importantly why couldn't the diver ascend is it cause ascending too fast is dangerous. what happens if you do?

  • @Saebylla Your blood pressure drops fast and the nitrogen dissolved in it starts forming bubbles. Your blood foams and multiple blood vessels get jammed up by the bubbles. Also the sudden decrease in relative pressure in your lungs will cause some of your alveoli to bleed or quite literally explode. The more sudden the decrease in pressure the more severe the damage. Usually (as far as I know) the damage in the lungs is irreversible. Those things don't happen to apnea divers. Only scuba divers

  • @trailbandit

    your alveoli will not explode the tissues will tear apart.

    also if he had been further down say 100 feet or so or more or a little less depending on person you have to be carefull of nitrogen narcosis which is quite literally like being a drunken diver

    and if you fuck up even a tiny little bit while diving THERE CAN BE SERIOUS CONSEQUENCES!!!

  • @firedude201234 Good correction. Sorry I got a bit carried away :P

    Absolutely right. That's why in such depths trimix (Oxygen-helium-nitrogen) or Heliox (Oxygen-helium) mixes are used to decrease the effects of nitrogen narcosis. Adding helium to the mix also affects the decompression algorithms but I don't know this in detail.

  • @trailbandit

    well you did get the point across that its bad either way...

    and as you remembered which i forgot thereis the mixtures which i am no where near certified in let alone know much about them. from the sounds of it you know more about OHN and heliox mixtures then i do. (we went over it a little in the course but i dont remember jack shit about it because i dont need it lmao)

  • @trailbandit Thanks for the info.

  • Ruler Number one is Never Hold Your Breath, Rule Number 2 Don't Rush or Panic, 3 Check you air supply every 5 minutes!!!

  • Hmmm, judging from experience. The weird sound towards the end, Was either him screaming.... or generally the sound of your reg when your air is running low, maybe his air ran out and he was trying to surface....which in itself is not good lol, they don't look very deep, but who knows.

  • wow, seriously lucky the instructor managed to catch him, he shot off like an Exocet Missile, that would have been a nice long stint in the chamber or death.

  • why did he/she panic?

  • It looks like the panic diver was young maybe a kid??

  • out of control...

    he must of forgotten the 18 m per min ascent

  • @ry4n0007 wow!... Is it that fast? I thought it was even less

  • Awesome on the instructors part, dang, this guy hella panicked.

  • Panic will certanly kill you quickly. They appeared to be in shallow water even tho you can kill yourself on an uncontrolled ascent. As for attaching the octo I would agree if you are not teaching. I leave mine hanging when I have students.  Those few seconds I save may save a life. And should anyone come after mine in a panic that I don't see coming I did not want to run the risk of an out of air diver yanking my primary because they can't get my octo fast enough. Just some thoughts.

  • lol, both don't have their octopus attached to their jacket.

    fail.

  • number one rule when diving never panic

  • wrong, that's the 2nd rule ;o)

    1st: Do not stop breathing

  • @Lipplz Doesn't that apply to anything?

  • lol dude i was just like making sound more important i knew that

  • @paronfisk yes, but in diving their is a significantly higher chance of it killing you

  • @GTH8991 Actually Its not the panic that kills you its your actions.

  • @paronfisk i realize, im not retarded, but their death is a result of the persons actions, which in this case are the direct result of them panicking, so, they die because the panic

  • @GTH8991 You can still panic but be in control of it.

  • @Lipplz Its not lol, Its never hold your breath....

  • @YTviewer118 if you didnt read my reply i knew that but i used the wording to make it sound important

  • @Lipplz wrong the number 1 rule is to never EVER hold your breath :-)

    Dive safe

  • why cant you hold your breath

  • @steamingpoopfart the reason you can't hold your breath is when youre the air gets compressed, and if you fill your lungs at 20 M and then rush to 10M while holding your breath it will expand, think of it like a balloon that gets too much air in it, it goes pop.

    Dive Safe

  • @Lipplz Isn't that "never hold your breath"?? xD

  • @11moii what happens if you hold your breath when your diving?

  • @unclepoepoe Well, you see, the pressure compresses the air in our lungs, and if we then hold our breaths and dive upwards, the air expands and can cause the lungs, not to explode, but over expand

    :D

  • @11moii Well, they can actually break, because of all the pressure, so its kind of an explotion, isn't it?

  • @Co0lt No. The lungs aren't one big air bag. They are comprised of all the avioli and bronchi. As you ascend holding a breath of compressed air from depth, the air expands in the avioli rupturing them. The lungs overexpand causing tears in the tissue, but don't explode. That's why it's called a "lung overexpansion injury".

  • @hallgb Ofcourse I understand its not one big air bag.

    Well allright, thank you anyway, that was more than I knew.

    Are you a diver yourself?

  • @Co0lt Yes. Been diving for about 9 years now and a certified Divemaster with about 162 (logged) dives. Physiology is one of the exams we had to take for it. Once I get back to the US plan on knocking out my instructor rating. If you have any questions about diving or the physiology of it, feel free to message me.

  • @hallgb That's really cool.

    I've been thinking about training into being a diver too, I know most of the basics.

    But it might have to wait to later years!

  • @Co0lt why wait? :-) You can get certified as an Open Water Diver as young as 10.

  • @hallgb Well, bad economics and some other personal problems atm ^^

  • @Co0lt ah. Gotcha.  Hopefully you can get into it sometime. I've had a blast with it and made a lot of friends around the world because of it. :)

  • @hallgb Oyeah, Man I wish I didn't need a cert. I know there's so many important things I need to learn.

    But if I dive with experienced divers and learn myself, I could just dive in and start, I've done it few times... only inside in a pool with a friend tho, and even that felt totally.. strange, I really felt free. I can't imagine how it feels to dive in the real ocean, with all the almost "alien" life. I think it's almost a dream for me, but sometime it WILL happen!

  • @Co0lt Don't do it without the training. That's like playing Russian roulette and only a matter of time before the inevitable occurs: your death. There are a lot of things that can happen underwater that your buddy can't talk you through if it happens. This is where instruction and practice comes in. We can talk you through these skills on the surface, then evaluate them in the pool in the shallows, then go to the deep. Your friends that let you do it without instruction are idiots.

  • @hallgb Ah ofcourse, my friend told me all the important things I had to remember, before I even could put my gear on he told me that, so there wouldnt be any accidents!

  • @hallgb To dive without instruction is just a death waiting to happen. No kidding at all. You will eventually kill yourself. Period.

  • @Lehmann108 Dude.... read what I already said. It's pretty obvious that I stated diving without training leads to the inevitable. Considering I'm a certified and current Divemaster starting my instructor IDC in 10 days... pretty obvious I stress the value of training.

  • @hallgb I hear ya now! Good diving!

  • @11moii oh thanks!!

  • @Lipplz mmmmm...... I thought it was "never hold your breath".

  • @wirikuta14 yes it is but if you are panic and dont hold your breath you can sill get harm, and dont being panic can make you think better

  • @Ziwa10  if you hold your breath you can get hurt, panicked or not.

  • @wirikuta14 true

  • @Lipplz I thought it was "dont forget your airtank"

  • @Lipplz That works for driveing and everything else.. number 1 rule panic u die..

  • @Lipplz its never hold your breathe smart one. im certified so i would know

  • what hapend?

  • @thediverguy1 He paniced... If he went up too fast he couldve gotten decompression sickness... and thats bad.

  • Dumbass kid

  • I know a guy (Diving instructor) who did 40 meters emergency ascent when his equipment had a problem. He survived and he keep diving :)

  • Good eyes on the DM. As a beginner diver why does he have a camera with him? It never ceases to amaze me how new divers will try to bring a camera with them when their buoyancy is all over the place.

    But what I did like about the DM is the calm assertive reaction, grabbing the OW's leg to slow his ascent. Good job. Next time--don't mess with the reef!

  • @thinisin What does DM and OW stand for?

  • Wow, that diver tried to shoot straight to the surface. Good actions on the buddies/guide/dive masters part.

  • Feel the panic,but don't allow it to ov ertake you. I think lots of people feel that way if truthful,needs more airflow probably.That is what happened to me,more air relieved feeling of not pulling air..

  • No wonder our coral reefs are in such bad shape.

  • what happened?

  • My first confined water dive was great. The first open one less so. Felt like about to drown when first went under in cold quarry water. On bottom then started to feel onset of panic when couldn't pull enough air. Nearly bolted for top but instructor calmed it. Then during dive mask filled with water and weight belt came lose, requiring running repair by instructor while I held on to a platform. Feeling of panic wasn't nice and came out of the blue. Cool it or lose it. Feel panic and be tested.

  • Everyones first dive is a test to see how they handle themselves. All your feelings remind me of my first time as the task loads where very high being a novice at the time.

  • It happens to the best of us sometimes. Some people more than others and to different degrees. I found this sort of occurrence when they feel they are not getting enough air. Dialing up the air flow might help with this sort of thing if he had it on his reg.

  • it might also cause the problem. Feeling like you dont get enough air is not a problem insufficient air flow. Todays regulators deliver a lot more than you'd ever need.

    In my experience it's mostly related to stress. Inexperience, buoyancy problems, current, personal fitness vs. swimmingeffort, malfunctioning equipment, darkness and so forth.

  • Feeling like your getting not enough air IS a problem to a person who is already stressed. And no sorry your wrong not all regs deliver the same as you know not all peoples bugets are the same. You try diving with a cheap reg and see what happens at depth. I personaly use what I consider the best gear for my technical diving but I have used other friends equipment that seems like your breathing through a garden hose. When I tour groups and I see this sort of thing I dial up the air.

  • I never said all regs deliver the SAME amount of air. But they all deliver more than enough. Please read my comment properly.

    If you are a good diver you can dive with a hard to breathe reg and be totally fine. I know i am.

    When i go diving and see this sort of thing i dial the air down btw (or abort the dive if they are not good enough) because it's cold where i life and regulators are more likely to freeze if dialed up :) Freeflows at depth cause more problems than breathing comfort.

  • Im reading you correctly! If a novice is struggling and dialing down the air to make them more firghten and then call them "not good enough" is appalling. I also dive in cold waters so Im experienced in this. I find your methods and reasons questionable. When guiding a stressed person you can help them overcome the fears slowly by dialing up the air as much as you can even if the dive time wil be less. Its not about whos the best diver but helping out those who cant. No not all regs deliver....

  • Consider getting a metal regulator. Mares has the Abyss which is a leading cold water reg.

  • The Abyss is not really a leading coldwater reg. imho.

    Poseidons Xstream deep performs much better in cold. You can breathe icecrystals in the air before those freeflow. So do the Apeks top regs. Altough with Apeks you can get freeflows when they are fully dialed up. Dialed down however Apeks are solid too.

  • @Samurailord not sure about the X stream but if its anything like the Posiedon sidedraught jetstream they are prone to freezing open.

  • @Samurailord I heard that apeks are made to be able to be disassembled under water. I have Poseidon Xstream myself and I like them.

  • I know how he feels. It feels very claustrophobic down there, especially if he saw a shark.

  • they obv not gunna be deep...for that reason!! no need for that tho lol

  • Wtf?

  • wow if the diver hadnt pulled him back down that could have ended with his lungs exploding -__-

  • @CJ632

    <.< how? sorry. I never did this o3o

    .

  • as you go down deeper your chest gets more compressed its divided by 33 feet 66 ft 99 ft compresses more and more you go down and when you begin going back up your chest expands but you need time to let it expand much like a balloon it can only take so much pressure and going up that fast can cause some very serious lung prolems or death hoped this helped

  • when you go deeper the air compresses and becomes more dense, this basicaly means the same amount of air takes up less space, including inside ur lungs, so if ur at depth and ascend rapidly without letting air out of ur lungs, the air will take up more and more space inside until ur lungs cant contain it anymore, then u get whats called a lung expansion injury. i hope you got that lol

  • @bubblezw00t just google decompression illnes

  • @CJ632

    your lungs wont explode theyll tear/rupture....theres a big difference

  • What is that guy messing with that causes him to point ?

  • Some people just can't take it. It does feel kind of claustrophobic down there.

  • lol wat a fuckn idiot wonder what deph he was try under water welding now thats a job im training 2 be 1 :)

  • dude the training for underwater welding isnt shit the hydrolic chainsaw is more dangerous than welding. just so long as you are using dc straight polarity

  • To the top '' CLIMB '' he must have a death wish

  • Mira como se menea, la morena que me pega¡¡¡ jajajaajjaaa, ¡¡eso es lo que yo llamo "1,2 y3 despegar"!!

  • Comment removed

  • I hope you're being sarcastic...

  • Seams like if you live in America you can get sued for everything...

  • Not the first time i heard that xD

  • yeah... have you been evaluated lately? coz i'd say your a moron...

  • bs man

  • yeah i scuba dived at 13 first time - why should you panic , you have an instructor right beside you

  • Shit happens. And depth might play with your mind.