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  2. How to Find the Right Scuba Diving Insurance - AOL

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  3. Roy Fransen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roy_Fransen

    Although a regular swallow dive from a height of 75 feet (23 m) is twice the average of Olympic diving, the water in Fransen's dive was less than half as deep, and the surface area of the pool was much smaller. Every dive, even without fire, required precision alignment and split-second reactions. Head first (swallow dive) entry into the tank ...

  4. Civil liability in recreational diving - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_liability_in...

    Extended-range and tech diving routinely require planned decompression, and mitigation procedures for a possible computer failure on a decompression dive are well known. [1] "Do not dive beyond 60 feet (18 m) as an open-water diver or beyond 130 feet (40 m) as a recreational diver."

  5. List of diving hazards and precautions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_diving_hazards_and...

    Avoid diving in contaminated water. Analyse water before diving if presence of contaminants is suspected, but type and concentration is not known. If it is necessary, and depending on risk: A watertight drysuit with dry gloves and integral dry hood, and positive pressure full face diving mask will provide acceptable protection in some ...

  6. Dare to dive from 27 meters or 90 feet? Impact is like a car ...

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    Matt Cooper has no illusions about the hazards of diving from a 27-meter platform — about 90 feet, or as high as a nine-story building — into the sea, a lake, or a diving tank. “Even if it ...

  7. Diving safety - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diving_safety

    One of the standard ways to help the diver to manage an emergency is to provide another diver ready to assist. In professional diving this is known as the stand-by diver, and in the case of bell diving, the bellman. [14] [75] In technical diving, similar roles may be filled by support divers.

  8. Frank Gadsby - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Gadsby

    He later did a similar stunt dive in April 1931, diving from a 75 feet (23 m) height into a shallow pool with just 5 feet (1.5 m) of water depth, to a backdrop of fireworks. [7] During the 1930s, he toured with his group "Dare Devil Peggy's Water Circus", alongside Olympic divers, sometimes booked at considerable expense to the organisers. [15]

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