Okay, I will try one response today as I have a busy day.I have dived a real wet bell. That is not a wet bell. If you look carefully, it is a plastic dome attached to a some weighed down boards. It is static location on the bottom. Probably used for divers to enter in order to verbally communicate while on the bottom. If you look carefully at the divers, they are on OC scuba.
If that was a wet bell there would be wire cables leading to the surface to lower and raise it. There would
also be a communication cable. There would also be a control panel above the divers inside the bell cupola for controlling gas flow into the bell. The divers would probably be on surface supply with a full-face mask or helmet.
Please stop situating the argument and argue the situation. And please stop trying to pretend you are a professional. Clearly you are not.
Using this shipwreck as an example of as an example of how it is safe to dive air to such depths is invalid due to the additional equipment involved (using a wet bell to transport people up and down does increase safety), the shipwreck max depth was at 61 meters up to 44 meters. That is quite a range where the gas density changes quite a bit.
You should spend some time looking at some of the readily available information on the internet. @iliketopetsharks provided a PDF article from which that screengrab came.
Now, you can thump your chest and tell us how you are a Andrew Tate-like alpha male doing dives that the average person will defecate in their drawers here on Scubaboard, but you won't be the first.
Nor last.