Drill Master diving accident explained

Drill Master diving accident
Place:North Sea, Norway
Cause:Diving bell drop weight accidentally released
Participants:Per Skipnes, Robert John Smyth

The Drill Master diving accident was an incident in Norway in January 1974 that resulted in the death of two commercial divers. During a two-man dive from the North Sea rig Drill Master, the diving bell's drop weight was accidentally released, causing the bell to surface from a depth of with its bottom door open and drag the diver working outside through the water on his umbilical. The two divers, Per Skipnes and Robert John Smyth, both died from rapid decompression and drowning.[1] [2] The accident was caused by instructions aboard Drill Master which had not been updated when the bell system was modified and which stated that a valve should be closed during the dive which should have been open.[1] Skipnes' body was never recovered.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Limbrick, Jim . North Sea Divers – a Requiem . 96–98 . Hertford . Authors OnLine . 2001. 0-7552-0036-5 .
  2. Book: Smart, Michael . Into the Lion's Mouth: The Story of the Wildrake Diving Accident . 34–35, 148 . . Lion's Mouth Publishing . 2011 . 978-0-615-52838-0 . 2011915008.
  3. Web site: North Sea Commercial Diving Fatalities . The Norwegian . 5 December 2023 . 5 December 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20231205144412/https://the-norwegian.com/north-sea-diving-fatalities/ . live .