@boulderjohn Do you have a link to the incident report/article? I'm trying to figure how anyone with even the most cursory knowledge of diving would go "Yeah, an AL-80 is plenty of air for a 300 foot dive." Like, even assuming they didn't know about MOD, and somehow didn't notice the Navy tables stop at 130 ft for a reason, they would've needed a ridiculously low SAC to have anywhere near enough air on one tank. Like, how on earth does this happen?
Hi All- This note is hard to write. Opal, Gabi Loco and another guest diver where hurt on a dive that should not have taken place.
First of all Opal is in the hospital as you read, unconscious and paralyzed and on a respirator. Gabi now has feelings in his legs after the chamber ride. The guest diver so far is recovering well after his ride. I am sure there will be more scheduled.
There are four divers going in the chamber with Opal to help her breath while she does her first ride. It is not good.
Ok you want to know what happened. They went to three hundred feet on air. No one knows...
First of all Opal is in the hospital as you read, unconscious and paralyzed and on a respirator. Gabi now has feelings in his legs after the chamber ride. The guest diver so far is recovering well after his ride. I am sure there will be more scheduled.
There are four divers going in the chamber with Opal to help her breath while she does her first ride. It is not good.
Ok you want to know what happened. They went to three hundred feet on air. No one knows...
- firstdive2005
- Replies: 584
- Forum: Cozumel
Be careful reading it. The thread starts with intentional misinformation. When they got back to the boat, they pretended they had been caught in a down current that took them to those depths. You have to go quite a ways in before you get the truth, and eventually you see the post by the DM admitting the truth.
The truth is that the three of them wanted to do a bounce dive to 300 feet, with the shop owner (Opal Cohen) and her DM (Gabi Loco) on AL 80s. Her boyfriend was on an AL 100. At 300 feet, Opal continued to descend. (When I went to Cozumel after it, people were divided as to whether she kept going because she was narced or passed out because she was narced.) Gabi went after her and turned her around at 400 feet while the boyfriend stayed at 300. On the ascent, Opal and Gabi ran out of air, and they did a 3-way buddy breathing ascent.
According to their plan, the dive should not have taken more than maybe 14 minutes, and they figured they had enough for that amount of time.
During the discussion, I was in contact with another professional from Cozumel who couldn't figure out how they ran out of air. Why, I was asked, did that short dip from 300-400 feet have such an impact? I had to explain Boyle's Law to that professional.