king_of_battle
Contributor
So I've been diving for a while but never got around to really filming it ever. Two weekends ago I dove U853 off Block Island through Giant Stride on Priority Too. I figured I'd film it with a new gopro. You can see the some of the video here.
Its far from a work of art - no music or anything just the sound of me breathing and clanking around inside - basically raw footage. Footage was from a helmet mounted gopro and you can tell by the shakeycamness of it. For those who haven't dove U853 before this is dropping into the blast hole forward of the conning tower and making my way towards the bow going through crew compartments and storage. As you go deeper into the wreck it gets progressively siltier and you can see in the last compartment before I turned that the forward section is almost entirely covered in fine silt. At about the 3 minute mark is a large cylinder to the left of the shot - a decaying torpedo I'm told. There's also one in the tubes at the stern but I didn't get any footage of it this dive.
This was a solo dive on a fathom ccr with an AL80 B/O. Max depth in this section was 120fsw with a temperature of around 52f.
Its far from a work of art - no music or anything just the sound of me breathing and clanking around inside - basically raw footage. Footage was from a helmet mounted gopro and you can tell by the shakeycamness of it. For those who haven't dove U853 before this is dropping into the blast hole forward of the conning tower and making my way towards the bow going through crew compartments and storage. As you go deeper into the wreck it gets progressively siltier and you can see in the last compartment before I turned that the forward section is almost entirely covered in fine silt. At about the 3 minute mark is a large cylinder to the left of the shot - a decaying torpedo I'm told. There's also one in the tubes at the stern but I didn't get any footage of it this dive.
This was a solo dive on a fathom ccr with an AL80 B/O. Max depth in this section was 120fsw with a temperature of around 52f.