Case was closed before it ever started...
Well, actually it wasn't. As Madmole has pointed out, there were a lot of very strange things about this case.
And Agressor fleet didn't release anything nor did the papers... But he definately died diving off one...
But when there have been other diver fatalities or accidents, in the US or elsewhere, it's been all over the papers. Not this time.
In fact, in Thomas' own dive club's newsletters, they spelled his name differently on the two occasions they mention his tragic death:
http://www.westladiveclub.org/02Feb2003.pdf
http://www.westladiveclub.org/newsltr/03March2003.PDF
Also, from these newsletters, it was clear that the facts of the accident weren't clear. Just Of course, none of this means it
didn't happen or that he didn't in fact dive a YBOD, it just makes all the details very hard to objectively verify.
And remember, the issue
does need objective verifying.
But, thinking all these people are going to tell you first hand what happened means you're dreamin... Unless you own APD... Your not gonna get the true story on any of them....
Well, you could change that and say that there is a very vocal group of anti-rebreather people out there who take every chance to bash the Inspiration spouting all kinds of opinion and mixing this with errors and what would appear to be deliberate untruths.
We have the Inspiration blamed for
every rebreather death out there.
In one interesting case, a piece written by a famous cave diver who is not renowned for his subtlety, great writing skills or mastery of CCR basics, it was even turned into a bit of (very anachronistic) Brit-bashing: Confusing the Normandy landing beaches and conveniently omitting the one beach (Omaha) where most losses tragically occurred on 6 June 1944 ... and these are the
experts?
So really, the burden of proof isn't on APD, Martin Parker (who IMHO is repeatedly slandered by these people) or the Inspiration divers ... but rather on the people who are so vehemently against them that anything apparently goes. :boom:
Now, APD doesn't need me, Madmole or Caveseeker to exconerate them or laud their products. The turtles sell themselves, literally at a rate where
no other RB:s can compete. In fact, I have frequently in the past urged the US and Canadian manufacturers to obtain CE-certification so that they can properly compete with APD here in Europe. (I'm a strong believer in healthy competition.)
So why am I posting?
Simply because the purpose of a board like this for the developing divers using it is to spread
facts and
reasoned opinion, so that the reader can make up his or her own mind and gain some further knowledge. Hopefully that will extend to safer diving practices for all of us.
This is not gained by the sort of uninformed and biased scribblings which frequently occur on the Techdiver or DIRQuest lists ... to name but just two frequent sinners ...
Finally ...
I'm sorry people are afraid to say diving a Inspiration is dangerous. But give it up...
Well, here it is. Diving an Inspiration is dangerous!
Actually, all CCR:s are dangerous, whether they are Cis-Lunars, Biomarines, KISS:s or Topazes. Well, in fact, all SCR:s are dangerous as well (yup, the RB80, too).
They
all require great discipline, greater-than-average diving skills (no matter what some people say, RB divers or not) and top-notch training. Nothing else will do.
They still offer advantages which open-circuit diving cannot match and in the right hands, used by the right people with the right mindsets and the very best training, they are in some circumstances
safer than diving OC. Yup!
I very much regret the untimely and sad deaths of all divers when exercising their hobby of choice. I don't think CCR diving is for everybody, nor will it ever be. But it is the
only way to dive for many serious divers, particularly on deep wrecks (which is inherently dangerous per se) and in the pantheon of great rebreathers, the APD Inspiration holds its own.
K.
PS! Sorry for the length of this post. DS.