The most effective way to prevent a recurrence of this will be to determine the cause...
Best sentence in the thread so far.
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The most effective way to prevent a recurrence of this will be to determine the cause...
I think it's pretty clear...
It is what it is. I'm reasonable sure the crew and passengers didn't ignore fire alarms going off for 20 minutes. I'm also reasonably sure that the crew didn't work together to cook up a story to tell the grape escape crew. So the on-watch crewman discovering the salon and galley fully involved within a very short period of detecting the fire either means the fire was burning and growing for a long time undetected or it exploded into an inferno extraordinarily fast.Now this sentence I don’t like as much...
live aboard dive boats have one thing in common ... a charging station , and if you have seen them you know that they are a fire hazzard... everyone is charging for the next day and next dive ... these stations are a mess, wires and batteries everywhere.. you have No clue if someones Batteries and chargers are safe ... None what so ever... and you charge up your batteries at night..
3am ... everyone is Out tired ... very tired from diving
fires equal Smoke .... Smoke like the fire on the boat Kills instantly
Contact irritants include particulate matter such as soot. Particles larger than five microns will lodge in the upper airways, causing mechanical obstruction. They are observed in the nose and the mouth. Particles smaller than one micron are inhaled deep into the lungs, where the carbonaceous soot is toxic to the macrophages. Macrophages are cells that remove foreign particles. Heavy metals coating the surface of soot cause direct lung damage by forming free oxygen radicals which damage cilia and alveolar surfaces.
Fires generate irritating and corrosive gases. Aldehydes and acrolein are released when wood and cellulose burn. These products cause intense tearing, coughing, and choking. Acrolein is highly toxic to lung tissue, causing protein destruction in the deep lung tissue.
Degradation of plastics creates most of the corrosive gases found in fires. Plastics that contain a chlorine molecule such as polyvinyl chloride are deadly. Burning of these plastics forms hydrogen chloride, phosgene, and hydrochloric acid. Hydrogen chloride is the most toxic of these three; its contact with moist mucosa results in the formation of hydrochloric acid. The eyes, oral pharynx, and upper airway are immediately affected; upper airway edema results. If superheated air has also been inhaled, swelling can be severe and cause rapid, significant airway obstruction. Because hydrogen chloride is only moderately water soluble, it will be inhaled into the bronchus and smaller airways. Tissue response includes swelling, cilia paralysis, and massive fluid leak into the smaller airways. Bronchospasm and bronchorrhea will present as wheezing and pulmonary edema. Phosgene is a combination of chlorine, hydrogen, and carbon molecules. It is commonly present in smoke. Phosgene is poorly soluble in water and is inhaled deep into the lungs. When phosgene contacts moisture in the terminal alveoli, hydrochloric acid is formed, and the terminal alveoli are damaged
rest in peace for those who died ...
Please, everyone. THERE WERE NO CLOSED DOORS BETWEEN THE BUNKS AND THE OUTSIDE, PERIOD!mentioned here the crew opened the door to see if they can reach the passengers but the galley was on fire.
Please, everyone. THERE WERE NO CLOSED DOORS BETWEEN THE BUNKS AND THE OUTSIDE, PERIOD!
Roak
That was me. And there is NO inference that there is no need to take action. Don't assume that I meant something I did not mean. What I said is that I'd go on a similar live-aboard tomorrow...because the chances are slim AND because crews from here on out will be exponentially more vigilant. You know what they say, when you ASSume......Some have stated that this was an extremely rare event and possibly by inference there is no need to take action to prevent a recurrence. I disagree. If it was so rare it would not have happened.
AGREED (and I'm really sorry for your suffering). I think that ScubaBoarders as a group are compassionate and caring people, but I don't think many, if any, of us would commit suicide by deciding to hurl ourselves into the inferno rather than leaping overboard. I know I'd be overboard if assistance was futile. Why the hell should they go down with the ship? Isn't that an old movie trope? EDIT: Dr Google says it's an old TV trope.Pardon thy rant..
Anyone who wants to auto-blame the crew for bailing out should be ashamed. I was severely burned in 2012 and I have never blamed anyone for not coming in to get me when I was calling out for help and the fire was burning. There were plenty that helped once I got clear but you can't expect people to walk into an inferno without bunker gear. (Fire department was in route but not there) It'll just add to to the body county. Seriously... Unless you have been seriously burned or faced real heat, you don't really know. If someone was derelict or it washes out that there was poor maint. after the Coast Guard inspection, I'll be a critic, but I can't even imagine what the crew is dealing with right now. I know the families and friends are in hell essentially too but I've read a lot of the "Captain and crew should go down with the ship" talk. (I've been sick and I'm catching up)