"I'm very happy with the result," Trubridge told deeperblue.com.
"But the ascent from that dive was terrible. At the bottom I was fumbling with where to place the tag on my leg, and eventually had to start upwards with my tag in my hand. A few seconds into my ascent I knew I could not hold that tag in my hand and so I spent a few more seconds trying to place it securely. With my focus off, I was not in the right head space, not in the place I like to be, to complete my dive with ease or confidence, in fact as I neared the surface I thought I might have a big black out at the top."
Trubridge also holds the record for constant weight without fins diving, at 101m.
In the discipline, the diver descends and ascends by swimming without the use of fins, or without pulling on the rope or changing their ballast; only a single hold of the rope to stop the descent and to start the ascent is allowed.
Trubridge hopes to beat the record in July.
At 202m, Dean's Blue Hole is the world's deepest known salt water blue hole with an entrance below the sea level.
In January 2015, Trubridge announced he had beaten his personal breath-holding record, after lasting nine minutes with "empty lungs".
The former Hawke's Bay man operates a free-diving school at Dean's Blue Hole in Long Island, Bahamas. He is also Suunto Vertical Blue champion and 2010 and 2011 World Absolute Freediver.