My take is that people who buy these snorkeling FF masks are people who have some problems with "normal" masks and snorkels.
So you cannot really compare the two groups because the main difference is not in the masks they use, but in their skills.
These FF masks allow snorkeling to people who could not be snorkeling with traditional equipment. So it is quite normal that we see a number of accidents among them.
This brings back to the original problem faced at the beginning of the eighties for scuba training. In the first 30 years of scuba training para-military methods were employed. Training was long, difficult, and required top-notch physical and mental capabilities. Who did not meet these standards was simply expelled form the course and not certified.
Then a "new age" started, PADI was claiming that everyone could become a diver. A very minimal training replaced a 6-months-long para-military training, and we have seen that people with severe physical or mental problems were being certified, and were diving successfully and with pleasure.
People almost unable to swim, or to free dive to a few meters (which were previously considered unavoidable pre-requisites for scuba diving). People who were entirely dependent on their equipment for keeping them alive underwater.
Initially it was assumed that this change could have caused a lot of accidents, whilst the reality did show that the accident ratio was not significantly larger than for the super-hero divers of the previous generations.
So I suppose that we will see the same with this new equipment, which allows to enjoy snorkeling for people entirely unfit and lacking the mental attitude for doing traditional snorkeling.
An equipment fix to a lack of skill, sure.
But it worked in the past for scuba diving, it can work now for snorkeling.
So you cannot really compare the two groups because the main difference is not in the masks they use, but in their skills.
These FF masks allow snorkeling to people who could not be snorkeling with traditional equipment. So it is quite normal that we see a number of accidents among them.
This brings back to the original problem faced at the beginning of the eighties for scuba training. In the first 30 years of scuba training para-military methods were employed. Training was long, difficult, and required top-notch physical and mental capabilities. Who did not meet these standards was simply expelled form the course and not certified.
Then a "new age" started, PADI was claiming that everyone could become a diver. A very minimal training replaced a 6-months-long para-military training, and we have seen that people with severe physical or mental problems were being certified, and were diving successfully and with pleasure.
People almost unable to swim, or to free dive to a few meters (which were previously considered unavoidable pre-requisites for scuba diving). People who were entirely dependent on their equipment for keeping them alive underwater.
Initially it was assumed that this change could have caused a lot of accidents, whilst the reality did show that the accident ratio was not significantly larger than for the super-hero divers of the previous generations.
So I suppose that we will see the same with this new equipment, which allows to enjoy snorkeling for people entirely unfit and lacking the mental attitude for doing traditional snorkeling.
An equipment fix to a lack of skill, sure.
But it worked in the past for scuba diving, it can work now for snorkeling.