Dive bell gas loss during internal bell checks
A member has reported that the aft dive bell onboard a dive support vessel suffered a gas loss while pre-dive bell internal checks were being carried out.
One diver (the bellman) was carrying out the bell checks while two of his colleagues remained in the compression chamber. During the internal checks, a bell flooding valve was accidentally opened as the diver’s umbilical made contact with it, allowing dive gas to escape from the dive bell. The dive bell pressure dropped from 75 msw to 52 msw. The diver (bellman) managed to locate and close the open flood valve.
The dive bell was re-pressurised and the bellman transferred to the compression chamber and, together with the rest of the diving team, underwent re-pressurisation to 95 msw as per the company’s diving emergency tables.
After investigation by the company involved, the immediate cause was attributed to a sudden gas loss and decompression of aft dive bell caused by the flood valve being accidentally opened allowing gas release. Underlying causes were identified as follows:
- Confined and restricted space when carrying out dive bell internal checks;
- Valves, valve panels, gauge panels in dive bell difficult to access;
- Bell ergonomics unsatisfactory;
- Secondary hull penetration valve left open;
- Flooding valve sensitive to touch;
- Dive bell interior cramped and short of space;
- Dive umbilical heavy and difficult to move;
- Heavy condensation and high noise when gas escaping making finding of the open valve difficult and the dive bell interior hazardous;
- Diver familiarisation should be more structured and vessel-specific;
- Bad practice of leaving bell internal penetration valve open.
The company has put procedures in place to ensure that the flood line is fitted with two valves, that both are closed and that the hull stop has a securing mechanism to avoid accidental opening (the securing mechanism also goes to the bilge drain in the bell).
Members are reminded of the importance of correct checklists being carried out in line with company procedures.
Safety Event
Published: 5 March 2009
Download: IMCA SF 03/09
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