He designed a workable precursor to modern diving cut
Around the year 1500, while working in Venice, Da Vinci devised a plan to defend the city from invading ships by sending men underwater in diving suits to cut holes in them. As a result, he created the diving suit. Leonardo's diving suit was manufactured for a BBC documentary using pigskin coated with fish oil to resist water, albeit it was never made during his lifetime. The garment was judged to be a functional forerunner to a modern diving suit by the scuba divers who tried it.
With the aid of a diving suit, you may study the lives of marine animals and plants or enjoy the depths after all, seeing how octopuses or colonies of brilliant, cherry Clownfish live at the bottom of the sea is immensely fascinating. However, currently, such technology is employed for more serious objectives, such as deep-sea exploration and numerous scientific studies. For military objectives, Leonardo da Vinci decided to create a comparable suit. People would be able to damage the bottoms of enemy ships with its assistance, allowing them to defend their own ships throughout the battle. Furthermore, this technology may have been effectively used by pearl divers at the time, making their task easier and more efficient.