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- Today
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Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
Thanks Hugues.
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Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
Hi Tim Happy you are ok and all other person on the boat also. Thanks for the warning NEVER go back to the cabin. Hugues
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Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
Not just fibreglass, I guess. Cladding, all sorts of stuff. You sure do not want to breath this stuff in. It was truly noxious.
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Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
So glad to hear you are ok Tim!!
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Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
Glad you and everyone on board made it out ok. Material loss is terrible, but it clearly could have been much worse. And thanks for the experienced advice. I didn’t know that about fibreglass, even though I’ve worked on boats. Definitely something to keep in mind. Thanks again, and best of luck with everything ahead.
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Retra Pro Max feel good vibe w/o booster?
Yes, thank you Dave. My bumpers and knobs are great. Used them in the dive pool today. Great! Cannot wait for my trip in a few weeks to use my new strobes with DH bumpers and knobs!
- Yesterday
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Laowa’s new AF 8–15mm F2.8 autofocus zoom lens - First Images
Excellent overview and summary, @Davide DB . If Laowa is able to make quality native Sony FE mount and Nikon Z mount fisheye lenses with AF, that will be a true game changer in the underwater market. Sony is the most popular underwater brand and the Z8 seems to be the most popular single body today. They would basically match the total dominance the Tokina 10-17 held for APS-C bodies.
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Sony Wide Angle Shooters- what is your favorite wide angle lens/set up?
In Nauticam land, the N100 to N120 adapter is designed to account for the width of the MC-11 or Metabones. Both are the same width. You would then add the appropriate extension ring (30mm in this case), zoom gear, and dome. Isotta would have something similar as this is a very common setup. If you add a TC, you need a new zoom gear that accounts for the longer overall lens length and the additional extension ring. In Nauticam the TC would add an additional 20mm of extension. Hope this helps explain the overall concept. Enjoy! Chip
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Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
Wow, glad you're Ok Tim. Great words of advice
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Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
A shocking experience! Thanks for sharing the cautionary tale to use all.
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Liveaboards: A Word to the Wise
You may have read or seen pictures of the fire that broke out in the Maldives on the Emperor Explorer liveaboard on 9 May. My partner and I were on it as part of a group of 25. Like many members, we’ve been lucky enough to have been on lots of liveaboards. During the pre-departure safety briefing we were given the usual advice: under no circumstances, if fire broke out, were we to return to our cabins to collect stuff. Head immediately to the muster station by the dive platform; put together a grab bag in case of emergencies: passport, phone, medication. All sensible stuff. Heard it all before. After 6 days of diving, relaxed and happy, we returned to the harbour at Hulhumale around midday. Moored up, the usual ritual of gear washing and packing. We were to disembark at 7am next morning. At about 4.30pm we assembled on the sundeck for the classic group photo. A few of our group of 25 then left on the vessel's dhoni for a shore visit. A few minutes later, enjoying the view from the sundeck, we heard the fire alarm. False alarm obviously but we began to make our way slowly to the rear of the sundeck and down the stairs. Laughing and joking. There was a smell of smoke and burning. Odd. Down another flight of stairs to the muster station to see several of the crew with fire extinguishers. So there was a fire. It didn’t seem a big deal and the crew would soon have it under control, of course. Crew members running past us with more fire extinguishers, a kitchen hand went by with a bucket filled with kitchen scraps - so obviously the fire was not a major issue if the kitchen was still operating. The scraps went into the ocean, the bucket joined many others being filled with water..... then flames shot out across the dive platform. This was real. Shouts for pumps. Crew running. Guests and crew yelling for neighbouring boats to come and pick up passengers. One dhoni approached cautiously and nudged its bow into our starboard stern. The Cruise Director yelling everyone to get off the boat and on to the dhoni. It took seconds to vault, leap, jump on board. The dhoni pulled away quickly. Within 2-3 minutes the whole of Emperor Explorer was engulfed in flames. Some of the crew leaped off the bow of the boat into the ocean. Everyone survived the experience. Not one I’d recommend. So what is the point of recounting this tale? Firstly, if you hear the alarm on a liveaboard PLEASE do not be tempted to yawn and turn over. Move. Curse afterwards if it's a false alarm. And give thanks. Secondly, resist the temptation to nip back to your cabin to collect your valuables or that grab bag. I thought about it, saw a bit of smoke in the salon that led to our cabin and decided not to try. I would not have got out. Do not try and get your stuff. Get Out. Third, on a liveaboard with large amounts of fibreglass and combustibles, the speed that fire moves is breathtaking. The smoke generated is thick, black and choking. Do not try to go to your cabin to get your stuff. Yeah, I know, I’ve made that point already. From whiffs of smoke to utter conflagration was something like 8 minutes. Fire can rage in places you can’t see. We lost all our camera gear, all our underwater camera stuff, all our dive gear, passports, iPhones, iPads, chargers, clothes, bags, cash. Everything. If we had returned to our cabin we could have lost our lives. It took a week to get emergency travel documents and get everyone in the group heading home. The Emperor team in Male were terrific: shoes, clothes, money, food, accommodation, mobile phone and credit were all whistled up. Thanks Ana and Jordy. Impressive performance. Permit me to make one final point: do not go back to your cabin to get your stuff. Get Out. Don’t ever say you have not been warned.
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Sony Wide Angle Shooters- what is your favorite wide angle lens/set up?
How does it work with the extension rings and the zoom / focus gear? I'm using a Sony A7RV in an Isotta housing and just purchased the Canon 8-15, I also have the Sony X2 TC, and a Sigma MC-11.
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Artisanal Warming Gel Filters
I updated the Backscatter HF-1 Reduction Rings to use a bayonet style connection and use the new filters. This allows the ring to be a lot slimmer and not bulk up the HF-1 as much. The length remains the same, so the ring's light cone does not change. The new one can't be used with the OEM HF-1 filters or diffusers and instead uses this custom one. I'll keep both versions available.
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Keldan Video Lights: Video 8X CRI82 x 2
They are still available ex UK. James
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Interactive VR of Salem Express shipwreck of Red Sea
If you haven't had chance to visit and dive this iconic shipwreck now you can. In 2023 I took about 550 pictures of it with the aim to create a panorama. Which I did and it was a painful process in photoshop. And there were major problems with parallaxes of items on superstructure. Fast forward to 2026 and AI powered 3DGS allowed me to reuse these images and look what is the result. So now have to come back (actually coming next week) to take more imagery of the superstructure part which is always in shade. And hope for the best :-). In the meantime enjoy this preview. https://superspl.at/scene/23b971fc
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RomiK started following Interactive VR of Salem Express shipwreck of Red Sea
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FS: Nikon 60mm macro lens with Nauticam N120 Macro port 60
Hi Walt, has the Macro Port 60 also been sold? Nevermind. I see the previous update.
- Last week
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CJWaterLight joined the community
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Nauticam USB-C bulkhead mini review
Mine is a two cell board and I might get 40 hours total on name brand cells. I'll be going rechargeable.
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Nauticam USB-C bulkhead mini review
Just as a remark, previous circuit board using CR2032 were less power hungry than than CR2450. I totally agree with that: NA-GH5 : CR2032. Lasts a week even with the system always on. NA-Z8 : CR2450. 2-3 days despite those cells are twice the capacity of CR2032.
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Nauticam USB-C bulkhead mini review
The vacuum circuit in my NA-D850 is much longer lasting than what is in the NA-Z8 housing. Something in the newest generation of these circuits took a nosedive in performance. I've heard similar tales of woe from newer Nauticam Sony housing owners as well.
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Nauticam USB-C bulkhead mini review
Hi Dave, verry sorry, my mistake. I mispelled may be something. I also have only one 2032 battery on my D850 housing vacuum system. Br Markus
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Nauticam USB-C bulkhead mini review
My Nauticam uses One cell, not two. They probably put two in yours as the efficiency is so poor. They are battery hogs and wasteful. When mine was damaged it became even worse. I am not evangelizing for rechargeable cells, but merely responding to someone have a similar problem to mine. To each their own.
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Nauticam USB-C bulkhead mini review
Hi Dave, if your happy to work with the rechargeable cells it is fine for me. Fact is that rechargeable 2032 have a capacity of 45 mAh and the Li cell between 210-240 mAh. For me, that's a significant capacity difference. Sorry ,but I do'nt want to change cells every few days, but I agree on your argument regarding waste. FYI: I started my dive trip in march with new installed CR2032 on my Nauticam vacuum system. I did 25 diving days and left the vacuum system running several days overnight (f.e. Malapascua, you leave 05.00 am...I think you know) and even left the vacuum running several times for 2 full days (too lazy open the housing). It was still running on the last diving day without change batteries. I just made a quick calculation and I roughly estimade more than 300 hours the vaccuum system was working with two CR2032. Br Markus
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Nauticam USB-C bulkhead mini review
Thanks for the spec sheet analysis. However, you came to the wrong conclusion. They last plenty long enough to be easy to use and live with. About a year ago my vac sensor started eating 2032s for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. It became unusable as it ate the battery after every dive day. Possibly caused by a minor moisture incident in the Philippines that triggered the alarm. In practice I tend to set the rig up and draw vacuum the night before diving and then open it at the end of the day or next morning. So, after 24-48 hours I had a dead cell. The rechargeable cells lasted at least that long and were not throw away. I since replaced my vac circuit but continue to use the rechargeable cells. They run much longer now, and I just recharge them after they die or after a several dive days. I have a six or ten pack of them so it's easy to rotate between them and recharge in a batch. In short, they are fine in real world use and much less wasteful. The vacuum circuits are real battery hogs even when they work properly and I always prefer to use a rechargeable cell whenever they are available.
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Nauticam USB-C bulkhead mini review
Have you tried a LiON battery? On a trip to Okinawa, I had my vacuum sensor light on for 5-6 days straight without a problem and downloaded photos and charged the camera through the Nauticam port. Brett
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waso started following Artisanal Warming Gel Filters
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Pair of used M10 Nauticam 1 inch ball mounts for housing
Drop to $50 for the pair