Narrative:

We got a step up climb to FL360 and we were only at that altitude for about 5 minutes when I felt my ears pop. I looked down about the same time the captain did and I pointed out that the cabin pressurization went from 7700 ft to 8100 ft and started rising rapidly. We both said we needed to don our oxygen masks; so we did and established communication with each other. We then got the 'cabin cabin' aural warning message and the cabin pressure went up to 10;100 feet and was flashing red. I immediately said we need to descend and put 10;000 feet in the altimeter and speed hold 240. As I did that I opened up the speed brakes and called for the gear to be lowered. I made sure the seat belt sign was on and told the captain we need to notify the flight attendant. The captain notified ATC of our rapid descent and told them that we were going to 10;000 ft. ATC acknowledged and asked us if we were going to divert; the captain told them yes but we will get back with them on the location. Then the captain called the flight attendant and told her what was going on and if everything was okay. The flight attendant said everything was okay in the back. While in the descent; the captain backed up our configuration with the checklists and the QRH. As far as I know; the cabin pressure never exceeded 10;100 feet so the oxygen masks in the back of the plane never fell down. When we leveled off at 10;000 ft; we slowed down and retracted the gear and speed brakes and flew 200 kts and we started coordinating with dispatch about our divert situation. We were trying to figure out where we should divert when ATC gave us a heading for [a nearby airport]. We told dispatch where we were going and to give station operations a heads up that we were coming in. We flew a normal approach and had the fire trucks waiting for us. Threats were potential hypoxia; loudness of cockpit (gear down at 240 kias); and time to get down to 10000 feet. Possible errors could have been rushing procedures. We reacted quickly probably because adrenaline kicked in. We knew that hypoxia is very dangerous because of the limited amount of time to react. While I feel that I stayed relatively calm and flew the airplane; my reactions were quick and I probably could have slowed down some after we donned our O2 masks. Everything felt like it happened very fast.

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Original NASA ASRS Text

Title: EMB-145 First Officer reported executing a rapid descent and diverting to an alternate after losing cabin pressurization.

Narrative: We got a step up climb to FL360 and we were only at that altitude for about 5 minutes when I felt my ears pop. I looked down about the same time the Captain did and I pointed out that the cabin pressurization went from 7700 FT to 8100 FT and started rising rapidly. We both said we needed to don our oxygen masks; so we did and established communication with each other. We then got the 'CABIN CABIN' aural warning message and the cabin pressure went up to 10;100 feet and was flashing red. I immediately said we need to descend and put 10;000 feet in the altimeter and speed hold 240. As I did that I opened up the speed brakes and called for the gear to be lowered. I made sure the seat belt sign was on and told the Captain we need to notify the FA. The captain notified ATC of our rapid descent and told them that we were going to 10;000 ft. ATC acknowledged and asked us if we were going to divert; the Captain told them yes but we will get back with them on the location. Then the Captain called the FA and told her what was going on and if everything was okay. The FA said everything was okay in the back. While in the descent; the Captain backed up our configuration with the checklists and the QRH. As far as I know; the cabin pressure never exceeded 10;100 feet so the oxygen masks in the back of the plane never fell down. When we leveled off at 10;000 ft; we slowed down and retracted the gear and speed brakes and flew 200 kts and we started coordinating with Dispatch about our divert situation. We were trying to figure out where we should divert when ATC gave us a heading for [a nearby airport]. We told Dispatch where we were going and to give station operations a heads up that we were coming in. We flew a normal approach and had the fire trucks waiting for us. Threats were potential hypoxia; loudness of cockpit (gear down at 240 kias); and time to get down to 10000 feet. Possible errors could have been rushing procedures. We reacted quickly probably because adrenaline kicked in. We knew that hypoxia is very dangerous because of the limited amount of time to react. While I feel that I stayed relatively calm and flew the airplane; my reactions were quick and I probably could have slowed down some after we donned our O2 masks. Everything felt like it happened very fast.

Data retrieved from NASA's ASRS site and automatically converted to unabbreviated mixed upper/lowercase text. This report is for informational purposes with no guarantee of accuracy. See NASA's ASRS site for official report.