Hetland
Contributor
So where did this pair screw up? AWAP suggests that an 80 cf tank could be adequate for a bounce dive to 250'. Personally, I adhere to the concept of deep stops even for normal dives on Cozumel. Ascents are slow and typically spent viewing the reef. They are not square profiles. So given a deeper than normal dive, I would want a larger tank. One to allow plenty of deep stops and two for contingency.
From an education viewpoint, I wonder about the risk of nitrogen narcosis and O2 toxicity at that depth. Just for purposes of discussion, my vague recollection of O2 toxicity is that there are time and depth components. If a few minutes at 250' has a very low risk of an O2 hit, we can disregard it for now for simplicity.
Then you have to wonder about a person's risk of debilitating nitrogen narcosis. Like many things, that could vary among people. Looking back at the Scuba Mau event, unverified recollection is that the plan was to 250' or possibly deeper. At least two of the three people on that dive lived in Cozumel so they had the chance to make frequent deep dives. Were they comfortable with the effects of air at that depth that the risk was relatively low or did others factors come into play to make it a lethal dive?
Return to the two visitors who reportedly went to 250'. Did they make frequent dives to that depth and knew how their bodies were affected? Does frequent diving to those depths allow a person to deal with those effects better, recognize onset of narcosis, etc.
Since I do not know the answers to those questions, it seems that the failure of the buddy system may have been the real problem. How can a buddy come up and say that he thought his buddy was already up? On a high risk dive like this, they should have been very close once they got to a depth that made it dangerous. Not having redundant equipment was likely not the problem. The use of 80 cf tanks versus 120 cf might have been an issue if one diver "lost" his air supply and had to use the buddies octo. But we will never know since from the report we have now, the survivor apparently has no idea what happened to the presumed deceased.
If we get factual info that the two had ascended from depth and the survivor decided to go through a swim through and the presumed deceased signaled that he was surfacing...and that is when they were separated, all this conjecture/scenario analysis can be thrown out.
I will note that in two recent fatalities (maybe more), buddy separation appears to be a factor. One was the cruise ship lady who was diving with her husband..possibly Santa Rosa March/April of last year I believe. Another was the woman from Utah diving with her two brothers. In both cases, there should be factual info available but it never seems to see the light of day.
Personally, I am a strong advocate of rescue diver training. Being able to help your buddy, other divers and even yourself might go a long way to reducing diver fatalities.
No, it's not a buddy system failure, it is a common sense failure. Nitrogen at those pressures is basically an anesthesia gas. Carbon dioxide (which will build up in your system because you won't breathe efficiently at those depths through a regulator) is even worse. Would you go skydiving while huffing ether, chloroform, maybe both? Of course not. Your brain simply stops working the deeper you go. It's like someone is pulling RAM from your computer. Something simple like reading your computer or adjusting your strobe takes 100% of your concentration even at shallower depths. You simply cannot divide your attention and manage another human being. Command decisions are difficult, if not impossible. It gets worse the harder you work (or breathe), because even more CO2 builds in your system, meaning that a panic will probably put you to sleep before your air or bottom time runs out.
It is not a buddy failure if both buddies set out to do stupid $#!^ they know is likely to kill them.