kwhkg
Contributor
following, unconfirmed articl from today's Hong Kong Standard
Diver blames himself for war-wreck deaths - The Standard
Diver blames himself for war-wreck deaths - The Standard
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[h=3]Re: Subic Bay Accident[/h]由 flchow » 週三 7月 20, 2011 9:03 am
The only regret that I have from this dive is:
I should not had removed the jump line which helped me to feel my way out when I was separated from my buddies as well as completely lost with near ZERO visibility. I should had ran the line all the way back to the tie-off point of the main shot line. My buddies might came across this line!!!!
[h=3]Re: Subic Bay Accident[/h]由 flchow » 週四 7月 21, 2011 2:30 am
Engine room plays no part in the dive!!!
In the event of visibility loss plus team separation, lost buddy or lost line, it is generally a standard procedure to leave all lines in place until the entire team is accounted for outside the wreck.
bold addedarticle:A third diver, 49-year-old Chow Fung Lung of Hong Kong, told officials he saw Tin stop and turn around as they were leaving the wreck. He said Brittian signaled Chow to come back and then proceeded to go to Tin.
Chow said it was dark and he lost sight of the two, so he followed a line to the surface.
It'd be interesting to know what the team's general gas levels were when they split. There was mention that they'd only be in for "10 minutes" when the surviving diver exited...and they were diving doubles.
The only real clue/s will come from any reports emerging from the recovery operation... where they were found, what equipment/lines were available to them and what their gas was etc.
In one of the recovery photos, you can see Steve's doubles with manifold. Poster Rovic also mentioned above that he noted "two yellow scuba tanks." It seems that they were indeed diving doubles which Steve would certainly have used for a technical penetration but not for a gundeck swimthrough.
The surviving diver's assertion that "engine room plays no part of the dive," runs contrary to all of the reports on the divers' location upon recovery. True the reports were from local media, but they do seem to be based on the official word from the Freeport Maritime Security Chief who logically would be privy to the recovery efforts.
That the visiting diver was found first suggests that Steve was deeper into the wreck or in a harder to find spot.
Mr. Chow's first post on the HK Diving forum stated that his first post was deleted because he "told the truth." Perhaps a Chinese speaking SB member could post there and extend to him an invitation to tell his story here in a non-censored, blame-free environment...
He speaks English, but the HK forum doesn't, otherwise I'd do so myself.