Referencing the recent thread in A & I: http://www.scubaboard.com/forums/accidents-incidents/385666-fatality-wkp.html
I'm posting this in light of the recent accident at WKP. I know most of us follow the standard procedure of verifying bottles at gas switches, but I'm curious how many people do it for stage drops as well.
And yes, I realize that this accident wasn't a stage drop per se, but more like a misstep on a deco cache but it started me thinking about other cylinder handling that we take for granted. If the details reported above are accurate, two opportunities to catch the issue were missed, one where the original bottle drop was made at 70' and again when the gas switch was done at 120'.
Is this incident going to affect your personal procedure in any way?
Todd Leonard has been sharing what little info is available on the Cave Diver's forum. Apparently, a deep bottle was dropped at the 70' stop, instead of the 70' bottle. At 120, the switch was made onto the 70' bottle, and it was apparently breathed for about an hour before the seizure occurred.
I'm posting this in light of the recent accident at WKP. I know most of us follow the standard procedure of verifying bottles at gas switches, but I'm curious how many people do it for stage drops as well.
And yes, I realize that this accident wasn't a stage drop per se, but more like a misstep on a deco cache but it started me thinking about other cylinder handling that we take for granted. If the details reported above are accurate, two opportunities to catch the issue were missed, one where the original bottle drop was made at 70' and again when the gas switch was done at 120'.
Is this incident going to affect your personal procedure in any way?