So to answer some of the questions:
Yes, it's an aircraft emergency slide.
The filling does not actually happen by the compressed air. The cylinder containing the air is under a pressure of 300 bars and the air is released into a device called aspirator, in which an enormous negative pressure is created by the compressed air flowing into the slide. Due to the negative pressure, surrounding air gets sucked into the slide until a certain pressure is achieved and the valve of the aspirator closes.
It is more than dumb to trigger the slide in the way the guy does in the video, considering that the force the slide develops during inflation can easily break off an aircraft door.
*jumps*
Yes, it's an aircraft emergency slide.
The filling does not actually happen by the compressed air. The cylinder containing the air is under a pressure of 300 bars and the air is released into a device called aspirator, in which an enormous negative pressure is created by the compressed air flowing into the slide. Due to the negative pressure, surrounding air gets sucked into the slide until a certain pressure is achieved and the valve of the aspirator closes.
It is more than dumb to trigger the slide in the way the guy does in the video, considering that the force the slide develops during inflation can easily break off an aircraft door.