Alert icon
We're changing our privacy policy. This stuff matters.  Learn more  Dismiss

Fatal diver's accident in Blue Hole, Dahab, episode #4, Yuri Lipski "death caught on tape"

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
115,182
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon

Uploaded by on Oct 7, 2008

This is the episode from my documentary "the Sacred Truth" which explains (in a way) what happened with Yuri Lipski and what you can see and hear watching his video footage

  • likes, 11 dislikes

Link to this comment:

Share to:

Uploader Comments (overseasmedia)

  • 3:03 How many mothers..?

  • @raween He meant "Yuri's mother and his stepmother"

  • What I don't understand is if people can't go in the blue hole how did they gets his body from the blue hole?

  • @deanleerip Why they "can't go to Blue Hole"? Of course they can, you only have to become a technical diver!

see all

All Comments (200)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • Why does it matter that he didn't try to call for help? Couldn't that just be a sign of narcosis?

  • its very simple 1+1=2 so if from 40 meters and deeper you have to be advanced open water the train for Nirtox then deep diver then from there you can move to inro to tech divig then 40 45 50 and so if u go other the other way then its very simple your a dumb a** Mother f***** and you deserve what happens when you dont go with the rules.

  • @deanleerip The blue hole is not extremely deep, the problem being is people dive it on single tanks and run high risk of narcosis and oxygen poisoning at depth. Yuri did this, he was a good diver, not professional but experienced. Tarag(the Egyptian guy) is a technical diver who is far more experienced and uses trimix gas to reduce these symptoms. Yuri evidently had ripped his BCD, which enables him to float up and down and fell uncontrollably down the slope to 111m, he was in a fog of narcosis

  • @slunkmonky I know.

  • @iToxic1337 if you go deep enough its not oxygen deprivation, but actually the opposite, oxygen toxicity. That's why 'bottom gases' have as low as one third the atmospheric amount of oxygen. 21% oxygen at depths like 90m might be deadly to people. Extremely deep dives eventually have 7% oxygen,, if people breathed that on the surface they could pass out and die but at pressure it's the correct amount.

  • @PMJustinY Alot of things come into effect, overweighted, nitrogen narcosis, and possible convulsions at this point. The video doesn't show the whole clip. He may have been making his way towards the surface when the camera turned off, or he could of continued to sink and pass away.

  • damn this guy is brave

  • @iToxic1337 Basically you get "drunk" from Nitrogen and you loose the sense of balance, so you dont know which way is up or down. My narcosis sets in about 45 - 50 meters deep but it sets in slowly so I know what is going on and I can stop before I get into serious trouble. I start hearing the echo from my breathing like in a cave when you say something and it echoes plus everything starts to spin slowly like if I was on a carousel so I know don't go any deeper plus I always have someone with me

  • @a6km Another way I heard why is because the deeper you go down you lose the brain power to think about swimming up. And oxygen deprivation can make divers take out their regulators to give them to fish.

  • @PMJustinY its complicated to explain it all here but the deeper you go the slower you have to resurface, you have to be careful about your depth and time spent at that depth and so on, there is a lot of information about how scuba diving works and why is it done the way it is just google it up. Basically what could happen here was he dived too deep and the equipment he had could not bring him back :(

View all Comments »
Loading...

0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more