I think the Dead Man's Handle is a good idea. I suppose a simple
version might require that the driver manually squeeze the throttle.
Sadly, I can see that many such devices could be easily thwarted.
As always, a safety device needing manual intervention to initiate its
safety function can be be over-ridden or ignored by cocky or hasty folk.
We had that case on the Potomac River in DC where a coach fell from a
dory & died after restarting the motor in front of an eight full of
young teenagers on a learn-to-row course. In that case the kill cords
existed, but had been locked away in an office drawer. And the PFD
which might still have saved him was unavailable as all of the club's
PFDs were being used to pad boats on a trailer for a regatta. That
club, on 2 separate occasions a few weeks earlier, had to call on the
Fire Department to rescue youngsters after 3 of their (non-buoyant)
eights sank - after which they had the temerity to write to tell me to
mind my own business.
So we're always dealing with hubris, arrogance & haste. And this
weekend's specific case also involved a very fancy & powerful RIB.
Still, a car can't run away under power as the driver must actively
depress the accelerator to sustain more than tick-over revs (unless they
have cruise control .......)
So we could consider the operating conditions for a small power boat. A
single-handed user must be able to moor up & cast off with the engine
running, but is there ever a realistic situation where you need power
when the driver is not in the intended driving position? If not, then a
spring-return throttle in a fixed mounting could make a lot of sense.
In the present case the casualties were limited to the occupants of the
RIB, but in too many cases of lost control a power boat will mince up
other water users. It does seem a suitable case for treatment.
The only value of an incident like this is to get us all thinking, & in
rowing we've had enough cases of out-of-control launches endangering
boats & crews.