The moment a diver hits water is two sounds stacked — the sharp slap of impact and the muffled rumble of bubbles flooding around the body as it goes under. These 39 diving recordings cover that transition and the territories on either side: clean splash entries from boards and rocks, sustained scuba bubble streams from regulator exhausts, the muted underwater ambience a diver actually hears at depth, and a section of skydiving wind takes for the other kind of diving.
Sports and adventure editors reach for the splash material because it punctuates a cut cleanly. Documentary work on marine biology uses the long underwater ambience loops behind narration — they sit beautifully under voice. Game designers building diving or aquatic levels pull the scuba bubble streams for first-person breath loops. The skydiving wind takes pair well with action-cam footage where the camera mic clipped during the actual descent. Free to download for any project.