MattK911
Contributor
What 2nd stage was on his backgas and what was on his deco cylinder?
An already task loaded/ uncomfortable/ anxious diver switching to a regulator that doesn’t breathe as easily could have indeed been the cause. I’ve heard quite a few stories about something similar.
My shop owner told me of the most shocking examples. He had a couple students panic during a lights out air share drill due to switching from a balanced 2nd stage (ex. g250) on their longhose to an unbalanced 2nd on their necklace (ex R190). The difference in work of breathing was enough to make them believe that they weren’t able to breathe and they snatched the long hose back. This happened in 2 separate instances. One student got out of the water and adamantly claimed his necklace regulator was broken until they tested it and it was all within manufacturers specifications.
This happened back in the late 90’s/ early 2000’s. After the second occurrence he did not allow students to use unbalanced 2nd stages as necklace regulators for obvious reasons.
An already task loaded/ uncomfortable/ anxious diver switching to a regulator that doesn’t breathe as easily could have indeed been the cause. I’ve heard quite a few stories about something similar.
My shop owner told me of the most shocking examples. He had a couple students panic during a lights out air share drill due to switching from a balanced 2nd stage (ex. g250) on their longhose to an unbalanced 2nd on their necklace (ex R190). The difference in work of breathing was enough to make them believe that they weren’t able to breathe and they snatched the long hose back. This happened in 2 separate instances. One student got out of the water and adamantly claimed his necklace regulator was broken until they tested it and it was all within manufacturers specifications.
This happened back in the late 90’s/ early 2000’s. After the second occurrence he did not allow students to use unbalanced 2nd stages as necklace regulators for obvious reasons.