That would be excellent and despite a lot of very qualified folk calling for it very unlikely to ever happen, unfortunately. If manufacturers publish their testing and methodology it can be very enlightening however.
Other than someone checking what the download off the handset was it would appear that no actual accident analysis has been conducted in this example. By anyone.
As disclosure Deep Life did as an independent party test the JJ-BOV before it went through the CE process. It passed in CC mode but not OC mode. But I’d be very surprised if the diver was diving with one in this instance. Commented on because that’s the make of unit I understand to have been dived.
Mate, if you were interested you’d learn it wasn’t. Very hard to directly compare the performance of supposed underwater life support equipment for comparison if the majority are untested. And where some are tested it is interesting looking into that testing a little deeper. Especially when compared with the testing of OSEL’s units; which was only done to pass CE certification.
Feel free to sell me another CCR to dive on. All that I ask in your selection process is it has a minimum of 30% of the testing, such as WOB, hydrostatics, breathable volume and scrubber duration as required for EN14143 (and its technical file for audit) openly published and comparable. And that it has no obvious shortcomings to that standard or visually identifiable design issues to EN14143 or any other applicable ratified standard such as EN250 are present.
Cash waiting; with what you know, it shouldn’t be hard to spec me another rebreather to buy!
Thanks for bringing my name up. But I had zero direct involvement in that case or any! I was however surprised about the outcome of the accident analysis conducted by the expert witness. Whom didn’t even need the same unit as dived, just the same make/model, to identify a few minor design flaws like water blocked cells to start with. Which certainly did explain some odd things about the unit in question inclusive reports of Hyperoxia and why the divers using them were always reporting getting a lot of caustic water pooling in the scrubber (at the cells) which certainly weren’t the fault of the divers. Why that’s important for all rebreather divers is covered in DeepLife’s reporting on Oxygen Cells
Deep Life Design Team: Selected Design Validation Reports for DL & Open Safety Equipment Ltd's Rebreathers
Is any of that relevant in this case. Possibly. But without accident analysis being conducted on the unit and reported on quite likely no one will ever know. Which is a shame.