In early October, Scubapro and the U.S. Consumer
Product Safety Commission issued a recall of the
Scubapro MK20 first stage. If someone servicing the regulator
over-tightens the yoke or DIN retainer, it could
cause a stress crack that might ultimately interrupt air
supply. Divers should stop using the regulators immediately
and bring them to any Scubapro dealer, where the
retainer will be modified (with a so-called “upgrade kit”)
to prohibit over-tightening.
This recall comes more than 16 months after the
problem first surfaced. In June 2005, Undercurrent reported that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA) had ordered all their Scubapro
MK20 regulators out of the water after four first stages
cracked. Scubapro, which had stopped selling the
MK20 in 2001, replaced NOAA’s MK20s with MK25
models, which do not allow over-torqueing. A spokesperson
for Johnson Outdoors, the parent company of
Scubapro, told Undercurrent that the NOAA reports were
the only cracking incidents the company was aware of.
Subsequently, however, we learned otherwise.
After our article appeared, we heard from several
readers whose MK20s or similar models had failed. Jim
Reilly (Lafayette Hill, PA) said, “I sent them not one,
but two emails asking if my regulator was safe to use and
never got an answer.” He then took his three MK20s
to his local dealer where he was told that the regional
Scubapro representative had directed dealers to offer
a discounted trade-in on an MK25. For $220 the shop
upgraded his MK20s to MK25s.
However, in May 2005 Scubapro had quietly begun
making its upgrade kits available to dealers, but only
if requested. In other words, a diver had to hear
about the problem (eventually a notice appeared on
Scubapro’s website) and ask for a repair. Unlike Reilly,
they would not have to pay for the upgrade.
When we told Johnson Outdoors’ spokesperson
Cynthia Georgeson, she said: “Since the initial stories
appeared and our dealers receiving the service update
resolving it, we have received a few additional cracked
units. . . At Johnson Outdoors, diver safety comes first
and we are confident that based on these independent
findings, our recent MK20 service update is the right
and appropriate step to help prevent issues in the
future.”
After the recall, we called Georgeson to ask why
there was more than a year’s delay between their discovering
the problem and the recall. She replied, “We
issued the recall to make sure we’d made every attempt
to reach the broadest number of dealers and consumers.”
Georgeson insisted that there had been no new
incidents in the intervening 15 months. Nevertheless,
unless an owner of one of the 48,500 regulators that
were recalled went to a dealer, or read of the problem
on the Scubapro website or in Undercurrent, they would
not know of the potential problem.
After questioning by Undercurrent, she called to confirm
that warranty holders would now be notified of the
recall by postcard. But don’t be surprised that you read
it here first.