nereas
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You mean like this:
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Test diver Riza Lacour burns up the speed course, measuring a fin's top speed with a digital underwater speedometer.
WOW! Can we zoom in please?
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You mean like this:
![]()
Test diver Riza Lacour burns up the speed course, measuring a fin's top speed with a digital underwater speedometer.
According to Thalassamania's numbers it's about 6' in 3.5s or almost 17' in 10s. 6' in 10s is well under half a knot.
Good advice above.
Yes, there is such a device, but it requires you to have it anchored (as a reference point). I have no idea what the US Navy paid for them, but it had to be insane.
You could easily jury rig a simple version with any hinged pointer airpseed gauge, like the kind that are on back yard rain gauges. Test it, measure it and move it underwater in a swimming pool. Calibrate it like that.
In Tobago, we actually laser measured a chute called "The African Express Turnoff" and then timed it. I recall it was approx 4.5mph and we tumbled thru it.
Wish I could zoom, here's the link.
And it appears don't know who to fasten their tank to their BC.Wow that zoom now works great! All we need to do yet however is somehow fix that pixel resolution problem.
This is precisely why I love visiting Florida, where the babes actually do scuba dive in bikinis.
I primarily rely upon my extensive powers of exaggeration.
It would, of course, read zero since you're moving with the current.In which case you are not going to have time to get out your pocket current meter and measure your speed into h.e.l.l. .