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We veer quite dramatically from the subject of this thread
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Thanks, now corrected. I will try and remember to reread before postingCO not CO2, presumably.
ahh yes, I forgot a few things@letterboy
so a thorough accounting of the facts as known now...
couple went diving, one retired one not. dive was on one of two wrecks. depth was ~100 feet. mix was possibly 30% nitrox. after expected return to dive boat bubbles stopped. (current could not have been to bad if boat could see bubbles from mooring) diver sent down. divers found unresponsive. CPR failed to revive. Boat took back to dock per coast guard. divers pronounced dead.
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YES ! I trust you ! You are an expert !
So am I when on the SCUBA Board
FYI.
We also know the victims were from Franklin County, their names, professions and the were married with a passion for recreational diving
SDM
The hydro tester does thousands of fire extinquisher tests and just a couple of handfuls of scuba tank tests. They don't change and clean the water out of the pressure vessel and was probably the source.