Stena Seaspread diving accident

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Date21 January 1981 (1981-01-21)
Coordinates61°21′47″N 1°34′47″E / 61.36306°N 1.57972°E / 61.36306; 1.57972
Causebell umbilical fouled on SALM
Stena Seaspread diving accident
Date21 January 1981 (1981-01-21)
LocationThistle oil field, East Shetland Basin, North Sea, Scotland
Coordinates61°21′47″N 1°34′47″E / 61.36306°N 1.57972°E / 61.36306; 1.57972
Causebell umbilical fouled on SALM
ParticipantsPhil Robinson, Jim Tucker
Outcomesuccessful through-water transfer to rescue bell

The Stena Seaspread diving accident occurred on 21 January 1981, when a diving bell containing two divers had its umbilical cord severed. Both divers were rescued.[1][2]

Stena Seaspread in the Thistle Field, circa 1980. Photo by Mike Allen.

On 21 January 1981, Mike Allen was supervising bell dive No. 342 on board the Stena Seaspread, adjacent to the Thistle SALM. Allen had also been the rescue supervisor during the Wildrake diving accident in August 1979. Just after 10 o’clock that morning, Allen's boss, dive superintendent Mike O'Meara, stepped into the control van to ask how things were going.[3] Five hundred feet below, diver Phil Robinson had just returned to the diving bell to join his partner, Jim Tucker. Robinson had been conducting a magnetic particle inspection on the SALM base when he ran out of ink. While his equipment was recharging, he took a short break.[4][5]

Accident

Rescue

References

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