It's a sticker! I use on my helmet, and it's not so simple to make it work (glue) well, first got to clean the surface, put some weight on it, let It dry for 24 hours, after it I swear you can't almost never take it off without damaging the surface, or if you be very careful you can try take it off with a wrench, i guess it's so strong that even 2 big man's can't pull it off hahahaha
Wow, for so many reasons. I was surprised at how long it took to finally get submerged. I realized that I was taking a breath every time the camera broke the surface. It almost felt as if I were clinging to the deck myself. I'm impressed by the strength of the camera mounts, rock solid. Bubbles, bubbles, and more bubbles. They never did stop. It would seem the sub could be tracked by just following the trail of bubbles. I wonder how long it takes until they quit. Great video, thanks for keeping the audio. Music would have ruined the effect.
It's not an emergency dive and the submarine is moving slowly as well, they planned for the footage as the camera casing cannot go deeper than periscope depth and too much speed could have detached it from the submarine.
You can tell this is an old British boat . They did not have room for a washer & dryer so they hang their laundry out on the deck . WHITE CLOTH IN VIDEO . LOL.
Bubbles are the ballasts filling with water. Also with almost any subs you'll see some amount of bubbles leaving them as they're underwater. Theyre not all completely bubble free
Thank you Comrade!! Most excellent footage. With this, I was able to build my own submarine. I can now go virtually undetected the entire length on the bottom of my swimming pool !!
I have lots of respect for the RU-vidrs who go out of their way and bring us footages that we would never see and experience in our lifetime. hats off to you and all of you out there.
My body is a jerk, so “playing” with fun things in the military was never an option for me personally. But I sure love watching videos of others enjoying them! Thank you for your service.☺️👍
I love seeing our fighting men returning from sea! I used to watch for the gun boats going over the horizon and coming back with a sub following close behind them! That’s one of the main reasons why I would winter where I did so I could watch the action of space and sea from one port while getting my surf fishing fix! 😁 To any and all who have served, are serving, or will serve, Thank You from the bottom of my heart! And may you return safe and sound!
Thank you! I've been a fan of submarines almost my entire life. Also, most of my family have ridden the boats (I was in the Air Force), so I have a connection. I've never seen anything like this, and I would assume most submariners have never seen anything like this. Pretty cool stuff you've done! Awesome work, thank you HMS Torbay and her crew!
What conects airforce and submarine forces????They both fly!!!😂You wonder how???Well....submarine can do ALMOST al manevars under water as aircraft in the air!!
For those of you who are asking why there is so much rust I’ll give you a reason. HMS Torbay is a Trafalgar Class submarine which has been in service many many years and was decommissioned in July 17 2017. The Trafalgar Class submarines were built and commissioned between 1977 and 1986. It is being phased out of service and being replaced by the new Astute class so there’s not much point in wasting millions of pounds giving a shrinking number of subs like the Torbay’ sister ships, Trenchant, Talent and Triumph a new lick of paint which has to be sonar reflective and so forth especially when they are all meant to be decommissioned by 2021.
Alex xeon Yes and reflective. Reflective coating makes the sonar waves bounce off the hull at angles and can fool any enemy vessel nearby that their sonar is pinging off of an underwater rock formation or some other natural obstacle.
Amazing footage! I never thought it was possible with anything outside Hollywood (like in the film Ice Station Zebra). Those GoPros are as tough as old boots.
wow, I was drafted to Torbay twice in the late 80's and 90's, on the first occasion spending over 600 days at sea in total, never seen her from this angle before though, thanks for the memories :-)
emily clark yeah the sea belongs to sharks, whales, submarines, giant propellers of cruise ships and tankers, oil rigs, chains of buoys that drop into the deep, 60 foot waves caused by 12 bft storms on the middle of the ocean where it's 3 miles deep and all that other stuff that causes panic in my head haha. Humans, or me atleast, belong on dry land.
I aint gonna lie... Ive scrolled past this video a dozen times wondering what it looks like but too chicken shit to watch it. Im currently watchin it with the side eye! Glad im not alone!
Im a sailor but my biggest nightmer is being left out on a submarines deck while it dives. Even Thinking about it scares me . This video gave it a clear view now.
@@lesslethalmusic so does that mean it goes like" "Ah hans ze Americans are boarding" "OK sink das unterseeboot" (that's google translate, sorry if its innacurate) "Hey ethan why are we getting closer to the wate- THIS WATER IS FREEZING!" "nice 6 kills hans" "No problem"
It would be pretty quick…on the other hand pirates had a torturous method called hulling where they would tie you by you hand and feet through you over the bow and pull you up and down each side of the hull getting sliced by barnacles and beat to hell under water to come up on the port side to get a quick breath then be pulled back under the hull to the starboard side to get another breath rinse and repeat until you died
Awesome, scary and absolutely fascinating video...the audio is freaky. Thank you to all aboard this vessel for providing such a cool peek at how she goes.
I'm not familiar with this class of submarines, but it exudes "Peace Through Strength" do me. I love it and thanks for sharing. I see someone mentions the Trafalgar Class of subs, but regardless .... Peace Through Strength. applies. Thank you to all those service men and women that volunteer to serve with honor, and protect the free world.
This reminds me of my point-of-view the only time I went surfing. Clinging for dear life to a large cambered surface which spent half the time underwater.
I just thought of a new worst way to die: strapped to the top of a submerging submarine. Watching this vid laying in bed in a pitch black bedroom with my iPad on my chest and headphones on is eerie a.f. Glad my dog is in the bed with me..lol
1:47 when it starts to blow out the air it has in its ballast tanks... Things you hear of, but never quite understand how awesome they are until you see them.
ACTUALLY, that is air VENTING out of the Main Ballast Tanks thru the open Main Vents at the top of the tanks - anbient water pressure is expelling the air,
Hearing the air blow out, now I understand why submarines are detectable when changing depth. Also, did you weld the gopro there?? That was a whole lot of pressure on whatever was holding it