Hatul
Contributor
To drown he must have had his reg out of mouth and perhaps his mask off, BC not inflated, fins off, unable to dump weights. Each one is a mistake.
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There was another case like this that resulted in death-- a technical diver jumped in the water with air off and BC deflated. He sank and was unable to turn on the valve and recover and drowned. For some reason he did not dump his weights either.That fits-if your air is on then you should be able to recover your reg and orally inflate your BCD and end up at the surface.
Why didn't his buddies do a search and recover him. Or did they do a search and I missed that.
Divers should train at least to rescue diver and practice those skills.
Tragic.
There was another case like this that resulted in death-- a technical diver jumped in the water with air off and BC deflated. He sank and was unable to turn on the valve and recover and drowned. For some reason he did not dump his weights either.
Adam
Most not all tech divers do not have ditchable weight however they should be able to reach there valves.
When I was filling my tank at the LDS the topic of conversation was this accident. A member of the dive team reported to the LDS that the air was turned on. The diver spit out his reg to call for help. His power inflator was hooked up and working but there is no explination why he didn't inflate his BC or drop weights to stay floating or recover his reg for air. A tragic accident caused by a series of small preventable errors that added up.I got a unconfirmed report from a local diver that his air was not turned on.
When I was filling my tank at the LDS the topic of conversation was this accident. A member of the dive team reported to the LDS that the air was turned on. The diver spit out his reg to call for help. His power inflator was hooked up and working but there is no explination why he didn't inflate his BC or drop weights to stay floating or recover his reg for air. A tragic accident caused by a series of small preventable errors that added up.
Judge, 43, drowned around 4 p.m. Saturday in Lake Michigan. He and two other divers were exploring a sunken steam vessel, the State of Michigan, in about 60 feet of water.
Shortly after their boat anchored, Judge went in with most of his dive gear on and his fins in hand. He sank as he struggled to put on his fins, the other divers told sheriff's dive team members who responded to the call for help.
The dive team found his body the next morning.
I think that is what he was saying, however in my hundreds a Great Lakes boat dives I have never seen anyone go in without fins.