Constant Without Fins Progress
May 25, 2009 in Information by Jorg Jansen
I thought it would be interesting to show some progress diagrams from the different disciplines. Last week I was cleaning up some old backups and I found an excel sheet with all the world records until 2007. I put the sheet online in Google Docs, so that I can share it with everybody.
The first diagram is from Constant without fins for the men, the next for the woman. I know there is still a lot of info missing in the diagram, but I was in a hurry, so I will sort it out the next time. Next time another discipline.
You can click below for the complete list of information:
If you have any information so that I can fill in more cells, let me know in the comments, please!
Update: I managed to create an interactive timeline. So now an overview of the men and women records in one overview. Click here to see it in a seperate window or look below for a smaller one. Enjoy.
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I received the press release below about the US National Freediving Championships that will take place in Hawaii from April 22-25. Looks like it’s going to be an interesting competition, so if you’re in the neighborhood, go for it! US National Freediving Championship set for April 22 through 25, 2010 at Freedive Paradise event. 
AIDA International has a new website and a new web address. It is not yet made public on the old website. Probably because it’s still work in progress. But it is already looking to good for not mentioning it here.
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Jorg, if you are interested about other than just AIDA records, then have a look at the website of F.R.E.E. – their Unassited Constant Ballast records (equivalent to CNF) started deeper and sooner than those of AIDA. The first UCB record I see there was from David Lee – 45m in April 2001, then after many others, there was a nice jump in the increments made by Topi Lintunkangas in 2002 – 60m
http://www.divingfree.org/records/records3.htm
@trux
Thanks for the tip! Actually I already have included this one in my big list (around 320 world records from different organizations).
I am looking forward to martin stepanek’s world record attempt for CNF. I was expecting results about it yesterday, but I am not sure he had a resting day in between.
Jorg, very nice graph! I only would make it relevant to time so one can see what record was lasting and when things starte moving faster.
I just did it using your data and it looks cool!
Thanks again for putting this up and it’s good to see you back!
Martin
@Martin M Thanks Martin. I just updated it so it should be much more ‘realistic’ in terms of time.