Zakariyah Mohammad Zakir Uddin the drysuit itself is the KVR1 with the thermal fusion undersuit. I have this same gear and LOVE it for the high altitude lake ice diving I do! I also run the MTX-R regs on a Black Ice BC for BM (but swapping to a BP and wing) and the XTX-50’s for SM.
I have been trying to figure this out myself. I believe this is royalty free music that comes with the video editing software used for this video. I've heard this same song on a couple TV shows which leads me to believe this is the case. A couple other diving videos I found also had music that I heard on various TV shows. For example, the Divers of the Dark video has music I heard on a show about living in the Arctic Circle.
Ohh yeah, got my apex mxt-r today can't wait to use this sidemount set next week in red sea, caves will need to wait until I grow my balls bigger lol. One day one day
Well.... It's quite a long story but I'll try to keep it short. The description adds the following info: 'The video well summarizes the exceptionally beautiful surroundings of the Plura cave, a home for demanding technical dives and one the deepest natural cave traverses in the world, reaching depth of 130 meters.' You'll only learn this in tec or divemaster/instructor (PADI courses) When you reach a certain depth, oxygen (O2) becomes a toxic gas, normally we dive with compressed air which is around 21% oxygen. When you'll get deeper oxygen will become toxic therefor tec divers often switch to a mix with lower oxygen so they add gasses like Helium, the mix is made of 02, N2 and He. It's a mix of 3 gasses and therefor called 'trimix'. However, they can also change the mixture to Nitrox or Heliox. Depends on how they planned the dive. When the divers try to surface they will have long decompression times due to a long duration of breathing N2. Therefor they switch to mixes with higher 02 after they descended. 0-130m is quickly done, diving deep is easy. The danger is always in the ascend due to long decompression times and taking caution in your gas mixes. So the most basic rule is still the golden rule, no matter how deep, exciting, amazing, etc it is; PLAN YOUR DIVE, DIVE YOUR PLAN