If one wants to point a finger, it is all the proffessionals in the marine industry that know there are safety issues, but do not get the regulations changed. Unfortunately, the marine industry, as well as others, have to see a body count before there is change.
I wonder how that would look in practice. How far do you go at theoretical risk mitigation, running up costs and design compromise for other functions in the regulatory process, before it's enough? There will always be safety issues...what's good enough?
Not easy questions in the wake of these deaths.
Apologies if I missed it; the number of posts in threads on the
Conception incident grows fast. Is there presently a dive boat, or one with a similar function, that is very similar to the
Conception in size and practical usage, yet has these theoretical advances that would 'make everyone happy,' so to speak?
Any thoughts on what it costs have have a boat like the
Conception built, and how much extra cost this might add?
I keep thinking of a boat designer in a room with
@Wookie , Coast Guard inspectors, some relevant material science/engineer types and so on, and the designer throws up a proposed schematic and asks 'What could go seriously wrong here?' Every time someone raises an issue, they 'fix' it with a design change.
Where do they stop? What does this boat look like? Can industry service providers afford this boat?
I ask because whatever changes we expect to see going forward have to be practically implementable.
Richard.