KevinNM
Contributor
Aren't they required to have a bail-out system?Given the location in the original story I have to wonder if this wasn't a commercial harvester diving on surface-supplied air.
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Aren't they required to have a bail-out system?Given the location in the original story I have to wonder if this wasn't a commercial harvester diving on surface-supplied air.
Aren't they required to have a bail-out system?
When they examined the reg later they found out that DM 1 had been doing his own reg servicing without proper training and there is a part that he had put in upside down.
The cause was relayed to me on a later dive by the shop owner/captain. Reg had been taken apart and examined by a trained technician after the trip. This is now a paraphrase but one part can be put in correctly or upside down. The two sides are only slightly different. But if in incorrectly under higher pressure it can cause a jam in the closed position. Another buddy of mine who is tech for a number of kinds of regs seemed to know the part of which we were speaking and was aware of the potential.
Air2 / Air3 is the BCD regulator and inflator - it was a one way valve that was installed - upside down / backwards...
I dont use an Octo - I use a primary and my Air3.
It's rare that we quickly learn such from followup news, but we did this time!If this death was due to an equipment failure it would be helpful to know what kind of failure.
Bingo!Given the location in the original story I have to wonder if this wasn't a commercial harvester diving on surface-supplied air.
The county medical examiner noted that it was an “unsafe dive operation,” with disregard for emergency procedures.Aren't they required to have a bail-out system?
LUMMI RESERVATION
A Lummi man was identified Friday, Oct. 28, as the commercial diver killed this week in an accident near the San Juan Islands.
Hank William Hoskins Sr. drowned when his air hose severed while diving in the general area of Sucia Island around 4 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 26. He did not have a backup air supply, according to the Whatcom County Medical Examiner’s Office.
The crew on the boat reported he had been underwater for about five minutes before he could be pulled on board. He was rushed by boat about 10 miles east of Sucia to Gooseberry Point, where aid crews and the U.S. Coast Guard helped to bring him ashore.
Hoskins could not be revived. He was 40.
Asphyxiation by saltwater drowning was the official cause of death, said Gary Goldfogel, the county medical examiner. Goldfogel ruled the death an accident. He noted, however, that it was an “unsafe dive operation,” with disregard for emergency procedures.
Hoskins, a fisherman who has lived on the Lummi Reservation for years, had one son and about 10 nephews on the Lummi Blackhawks football team. Out of respect for the Hoskins, the team’s game against Neah Bay was canceled.
I thought that regulators would - sort of - always fail by freeflowing, instead of shut down. Can somebody explain?