Bobby
Contributor
Ok I keep quiet and listen a lot but one question keeps going thru my mind that I have not seen addressed much in the forum..
From the report, one diver his CC loop was open and out of his mouth. The inhale side of the loop was crushed. Question is: Did this damage come while exiting the restriction or after his unconsciousness?
I have only seen one post that said maybe the pressure from the depth crushed the loop once the dilute ran out or hitting the surface of rock in the cave. Maybe the damage to the loop happened in the restriction, He goes on OC as bailout and exits the restriction. Then Second diver gets stuck in restriction removes CCR and drops it exiting restriction causes a silt out and has buoyancy problems. Now both are now on OC as bailout. It has been assumed here that the diver who had on the CCR that it was operational until the end.
I am not the expert , I am an OC cave diver, so I will defer to the experts here on CCR to look at it from this different angle for educational purpose. What caused the loop failure by crushing and when it happened would make a big difference I think... Ideas ?
Understand that the term "crushed" does not mean damaged when referring to a CCR counter lung. When you inhale the CCR counter lungs deflate as you are taking the gas out of them and into your lungs. When we refer to a counter lung "crushing" that means there is not enough gas in the counter lung to take a full breath. Since the loop was out of the diver mouth the exhale counter lung likely filled with water, however the exhale side would not necessarily flood if the orientation of the CCR is at the right angle & not changed. Though the lung was crushed it likely was still functional.
There are multiple reason why the inhale side was crushed. Diver could have breathed down to the end, after loosing the loop he could have been negative and it crushed as he descended, both, etc.