When I was doing my checkout dives this July I ran into a slight problem. We dove down in to a rock mass with a bunch of lobsters and hung around there at about 35 feet for 15 or so minutes. When coming back up to about 20 feet, my compressed wetsuit expanded and I floated to the top with my BCD totally deflated and 33 pounds still attached.
To me, this could be very dangerous if I were diving at a deeper depth and I was on my way to my 15 ft safety stop. Are there any ways to prevent another accident like this from occurring?
Here's what jumps out at me. How do you know your BCD was completely deflated? Did someone, like your instructor examine it, because it's hard to see yourself. 99 times out of 100, new divers that tell me they need more weight because they popped up on their safety stop popped up because they were overweighted, not underweighted.
If students are overweighted, they are forced to carry around a larger than necessary bubble of air in their BCD in order to be neutral. The larger the bubble, the greater the effect that changes in depth have on buoyancy. If the bubble is large enough even a slight change of depth can cause a change in volume and a corresponding change in buoyancy that is beyond the capacity of the lungs to control. New divers are especially prone to losing control in a situation like this, because they simply don't have the experience to feel slight changes in buoyancy and nip them in the bud, as a technical diver with a 22 lb gas swing has to be able to do. By the time they realize they are out of control, it is way too late even for coarse changes like fully dumping their bcd to keep them off the top.
Here's what I see:
1. An overweight scenario as described above.
2. A student inverted, deflator in hand with their left arm extended towards the bottom and about a 17 lb bubble of air in their BCD bulging towards their butt.
3. A student head up with deflator in hand, held at chest level with a 7 or 8 lb bubble in their bcd behind their head.
4. A student head up, deflator in hand left arm extended, left shoulder the high point, but with a BCD design that traps about a 1 or 2 lb bubble right behind their neck that they have to roll around ad work out the shoulder dump.
I think that Charlie also brings a great point, and agree that it is very common for new divers to react upon realizing that they are out of control by taking a deep breath.