Fire on dive boat Conception in CA

Please register or login

Welcome to ScubaBoard, the world's largest scuba diving community. Registration is not required to read the forums, but we encourage you to join. Joining has its benefits and enables you to participate in the discussions.

Benefits of registering include

  • Ability to post and comment on topics and discussions.
  • A Free photo gallery to share your dive photos with the world.
  • You can make this box go away

Joining is quick and easy. Log in or Register now!

Status
Not open for further replies.
Went back to find this video from the Vision posted earlier. At least on that vessel, the forward centerline galley window is tilted open (clearly visible at the 1:43 mark). Also, again at least on that vessel, it would be an option to turn left coming out of the forward stairs and get into the shower area forward, which based on prior comments may have had an additional escape hatch.


The problem likely was the entire room was on fire. The floor, walls and ceiling. With the air superheated and loaded with highly toxic gases.

And in that case, about a third of the vessel would have already been on fire - the section directly over the passenger quarters. At that point it's questionable whether any alternative emergency exit setup would have helped.

Option 2: If any area in the bunk room is adequately above the waterline, mark out a suitable area that can be seen in the dark such that the battery powered chainsaw available can be used to create an opening. Passengers don a PFD that is at each bunk and exit through the side. Suitable storage area for the chainsaw is required. If the side is plywood and fiberglass I could have an opening large enough for even me quickly. Maybe this weekend I will simulate it on a scrap of plywood I have. I can nail it to two saw horses so the plywood is vertical. Guess on hole size is 2.5 feet wide by 2 feet high.

Sure. Make sure to do this chainsaw test in a pitch-black compartment with 30 or more people around you. Might want to have them write names on their extremities in sharpie first so the reattachment surgeons have it easier. Sorry to be sarcastic, but think hard about that one.
 
Something that has not been mentioned (I apologize if I have just missed it) is the effect that waking up from sleep has on awareness of surroundings and personal response time. This happens at 3 o’clock in the morning after a day or 2 of diving. People are exhausted and many are probably sleeping soundly. While I have never been in a boat fire, I have been in an apartment fire. My roommates and I were awakened at 5 am by people outside yelling, trying to wake everyone up. Fortunately for us the fire was moving slowly, because it took us a few minutes to fully clear our heads from sleep so that we could understand what was going on and to assess the situation. While we all made it out safely, I’m still amazed how long it took to fully wake up and completely understand what was happening. It’s doubful that anyone on board woke up with complete realization of what was happening.


Yes. A friend posted on Facebook that when she wakes up in the middle of the night in a hotel room sometimes it’s hard to even find the bathroom. Add to this yelling and smoke and ..... quite chaotic and rational thought likely impossible
 
Sure. Make sure to do this chainsaw test in a pitch-black compartment with 30 or more people around you. Might want to have them write names on their extremities in sharpie first so the reattachment surgeons have it easier. Sorry to be sarcastic, but think hard about that one.

There are ways to illuminate the area. Backup lighting systems not tied to the ship electrical system. Of course you can do nothing have have 100% of the people in that area die because there is no way out of a lethal situation. I am not sure what you call that case but it is not good.

I am perfectly capable of using a chain saw. Benign conditions...minimal risk to myself or others. Just set up a couple of people to keep others away.
 
Is it just me or were people taking just way too long to get off that boat, especially since the water was so shallow, it appeared to be waist/chest deep?
Maybe they were afraid to just jump because it was so shallow - most seemed to be taking more time trying to lower themselves so the drop was short - at least until it really flared and then folks were jumping (wisely as twisting an ankle or breaking a leg was the least of their worries at that point).
 
Yes. A friend posted on Facebook that when she wakes up in the middle of the night in a hotel room sometimes it’s hard to even find the bathroom. Add to this yelling and smoke and ..... quite chaotic and rational thought likely impossible
It’s too true. I spend 300+ nights a year in nearly as many hotels, and often wake up and cannot recall the layout of the room I’m in.

A few weeks back I was so annoyed at the guy in the room next to me, as his alarm was going off for what felt like hours, and it was shaking the wall between our rooms. When I snapped out of my haze I realized that it was the fire alarm. Thankfully whatever he had done was confined to his room, but it scares me to think how out of it I am in the mornings. I try to always have a fair degree of situational awareness, but if something half as tragic as this happened while I was asleep, I think I’d be in trouble.
 
Sorry...since I'm king (remember), you will need to place your grill somewhere it won't be a hazard and won't set off one of the required smoke detectors. If you can't find a good spot...NO GRILL. There, that wasn't hard to solve now, was it?
And no food, and no live aboard.
 
I am perfectly capable of using a chain saw. Benign conditions...minimal risk to myself or others. Just set up a couple of people to keep others away.

Don't forget the water coming in from the other side of the bulkhead, might need a waterproof electric chain saw.


Bob
 
Pardon thy rant..
I haven't seen this much at SB, but jeezus, there's a lot of it everywhere else, more often by the usual non-diving suspects, with nothing better to do, and the media... Anyone who wants to auto-blame the crew for bailing out should be ashamed. I was severely burned in 2012 and I have never blamed anyone for not coming in to get me when I was calling out for help and the fire was burning. There were plenty that helped once I got clear but you can't expect people to walk into an inferno without bunker gear. (Fire department was in route but not there) It'll just add to to the body county. Seriously... Unless you have been seriously burned or faced real heat, you don't really know. If someone was derelict or it washes out that there was poor maint. after the Coast Guard inspection, I'll be a critic, but I can't even imagine what the crew is dealing with right now. I know the families and friends are in hell essentially too but I've read a lot of the "Captain and crew should go down with the ship" talk. (I've been sick and I'm catching up)

On the topic of batteries:
The Lithium Polymer (Li-Po) angle is plausible. Lithium Ion (Li-Ion) and others that are hard cased - not so much. I've been using large capacity Li-Po's in R/C helis, planes and multi-rotors since they originally came out and finally gained the mAh and C-rating needed to equal nitro motors. I know people who burned their houses down with these when leaving LiPo's unattended on charge, though the chargers are better now. I've seen crashed planes and helis with Li-Po's fireball shortly after a crash. The first thing we do when one goes down is run over to it and yank out the Li-Po. They are great batteries but NEVER leave them unattended when charging unless contained. We started using a variety of other lithium chemistry batteries (A123's, etc) but none of them have the same discharge rate.

I have a $500ish charger that balances and has temp sensors for thermal shutoff, yet I never charge a large capacity LiPo battery unattended. The chargers I've seen (and owned) for many dive related li-po batteries are passive, without any type of cell-balance in the charger, and certainly no "fail safe" in the way of thermal shutoff protection. IF a LiPo DPV battery was over-charged or shorted, it would be nasty. (NOTE: I'm not current with all the latest and greatest dive gear electronics so this now may be incorporated, especially on high-end DPV's) Just thought I'd touch on my experience with these batteries.

I have Zero idea if this was the cause and I still wish I had purchased a Li-Po for my Cuda. I trust the batteries. Just not the chargers.

R.I.P. to everyone who perished... And to my fellow Texas Swamp Diver, Neal Baltz + his girlfriend. You mentioned him previously, Frank. @Wookie . For some reason I thought he had been crew on the Spree when still in TX, as well as the Fling. I think his stories were the first time(s) I heard about either boat, and the Flower Gardens.

Names now released so original post reinstated by Mod
 
Last edited:
There are ways to illuminate the area. Backup lighting systems not tied to the ship electrical system. Of course you can do nothing have have 100% of the people in that area die because there is no way out of a lethal situation. I am not sure what you call that case but it is not good.

I am perfectly capable of using a chain saw. Benign conditions...minimal risk to myself or others. Just set up a couple of people to keep others away.

"Benign conditions" and "lethal situation" are not synonyms. In the situation you are discussing the compartment may be obscured by smoke rendering the emergency lighting ineffective. Also, I presume in your emergency briefing at departure you will assign specific passengers with the responsibility of grabbing a power tool in a crowded space under emergency conditions, lest a half-dozen people all start grabbing for the thing at once. Also, in this situation the entire length of the deck above is on fire, which begs the question of whether conditions below are even survivable at that point.

At a certain point, you will hit a level of catastrophe that safety systems cannot handle. I can have the safest, sturdiest 75-ft dive vessel imaginable with easy-to-use emergency exits, but if I get hit by a rogue wave, drive it into a Cat 5 hurricane, or get run over by the QM2 that's it. Whatever caused the fire in this instance, by the time anyone reacted to it the crew was apparently unable to get off the bridge except by jumping off (which probably explains the reported broken ankle and broken leg among the five survivors) and nobody from below got out of the two available exits separated by about 1/3 the length of the vessel. Either every alert system available - fire/smoke detectors, the anchor watch, the passengers below - failed to detect a small fire in sufficient time to effect an evacuation, or whatever happened was large and catastrophic. That will be a matter for investigators to discern.

The most effective way to prevent a recurrence of this will be to determine the cause (or potential causes) and speed of the fire and institute measures to prevent a similar casualty. After that, modifications to the emergency exit system may be reviewed - something that doesn't involve building the hull thin enough to cut through or swinging around high-voltage power tools in crowded spaces.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
https://www.shearwater.com/products/perdix-ai/

Back
Top Bottom