The instructor's account of the events (Spanish, auto-translated to English via FB), posts #18-19, is in this thread. Here's my brief summary pulling from that account:
- 40 minute class explaining diving theory, diving practices and equipment
- equipment setup by instructor, but had divers open tank, do safety checks under his supervision
- two DSD's and one OW
- after buddy check, divers went down to 1.5m and did exercises (likely mask clearing, regulator purging, etc.?)
- first dive went well
- instruction reiterated during surface interval
- second dive was 36 min
- at 14 min, 4m, Rocio (woman in incident) signed she wanted to go up. Instructor asked her why and she indicated she was having a laughing fit and he signed back it was okay to laugh into regulator and asked if she wanted to cancel (since they were next to the boat) or continue to follow. She indicated she wanted to follow.
- all three divers had 110 bar, so nothing to indicate one diver was more distressed than the other
- dive was by a buoy with max depth of 9m
- dive continued for 18 min, going away from the buoy
- upon return to the buoy, instructor asks divers if they're okay and the respond yes
- instructor looks for boat and when he turns around, Rocio is missing
- instructor asks other students if they've seen her and they indicate no
- instructor takes other students on reverse course and is unable to find Rocio, so surfaces with remaining two students
- instructor tells boat he's missing a diver and asks if they've seen bubble trails
- boat points out to a bubble trail and he descends again to search, but finds it's not her
- upon surfacing, he finds Rocio being brought to the boat by a colleague who had found her with mask on and no regulator in her mouth at 6m
- O2 administered, Koh Tao Rescue contacted, and two client divers on the boat were doctors helped in the emergency
- instructor followed Rocio from Koh Tao, to Koh Samui, to Bangkok
- instructor, two accompanying divers, and others from the dive op gave accounts to police (It would be nice to see these accounts.)
- instructor contacted consulate and family
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I'm only AOW, so I don't teach, but I know what you're saying.
Hmmm...so assuming they started with 200 bar in their tanks, at 14minutes they were down to 110 bar, that means in 14 minutes they used 90 bar of air.
Given that the dive was 32 minutes long in the synopsis list you posted....that means that given their air consumption during the next 14 minutes had they stayed at the same depth (4 meters) they would have used another 90 bar...which would only leave them with 20 bar in the tank had they surfaced at the 28 minute mark but they were under water for another full 4 minutes and descended to a deeper depth (9m) which means their consumption increased. If they started the dive with less than 200 bar in their tank they would have been out of air before reaching the surface...perhaps this is what happened to Rocio....if the standard protocol is to arrive at the surface with between 30 and 50 bar in ones tank (normally dive operators brief to surface with 50 bar), then the dive was mismanaged from the start and the dive instructor really f*&ed up....despite a 40 minute class explaining dive theory, the instructor himself was not managing his clients air properly from the description you have given. The more you post the more it seems like this death could have been avoided and the more the instructor seems culpable. You are not painting a good picture of this instructor....physics doesn't lie.
Maybe my calculation is off, correct me where I am mistaken
200 bar tank
110 bar indicated on SPG at 14min mark = 90 bar consumed in 14min (at 4m depth)
90/14 = 6.43 bar/min
6.43 bar x 32min = 205.76 bar consumed = OOA (not even taking into account that they descended to 9m)
-Z