Adventure to the Titanic goes terribly wrong [Staff Warning in OP]

277,667 Views | 1587 Replies | Last: 4 mo ago by Stat Monitor Repairman
n_touch
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Philip J Fry said:

What a waste of taxpayer dollars. Declare they picked up the sound of implosion and move on.


Not really a waste. For military assets it is good training. Its like a fly over, they need the flight hours and its entertainment at the same time. Either way it costs money.
Gigem314
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nortex97 said:

aginlakeway said:

BQ78 said:

Imploded at 3200 meters on the way down. Acoustic sources picked it up

Where are you seeing that?

The (actual) sources are probably classified (meaning, USN Submarines etc.) I would guess the DoD has known since this happened…exactly when the implosion occurred.
That would make sense. Good of BQ78 to share what he can share. TexAgs is everywhere...

Such a tragic event. But hopefully it happened quickly and the crew didn't realize what was going on.
Guitarsoup
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McInnis 03 said:

BQ78 said:

Imploded at 3200 meters on the way down. Acoustic sources picked it up
Was waiting for a report that something picked up the "POP".

Now, the question is when did they pick it up. Hope these dudes didn't suffer anticipation and then failure.

In all reality what are the odds the thing failed down low and CEO Dumbass had some sort of device to crack that porthole on board in a fatal scenario?
It likely wouldn't be anticipation then failure. Just one bit catastrophic implosion with no warning.
aginlakeway
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BQ78 said:

They did send a distress message to the mothership just before implosion. Probably heard the hull cracking.

Doesn't sound like they suffered for long.
"I'm sure that won't make a bit of difference for those of you who enjoy a baseless rage over the decisions of a few teenagers."
Broncos
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BQ78 said:

They did send a distress message to the mothership just before implosion. Probably heard the hull cracking.
Thanks for all the professional insight, BQ.
GeorgiAg
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Gigem314 said:

nortex97 said:

aginlakeway said:

BQ78 said:

Imploded at 3200 meters on the way down. Acoustic sources picked it up

Where are you seeing that?

The (actual) sources are probably classified (meaning, USN Submarines etc.) I would guess the DoD has known since this happened…exactly when the implosion occurred.
That would make sense. Good of BQ78 to share what he can share. TexAgs is everywhere...

Such a tragic event. But hopefully it happened quickly and the crew didn't realize what was going on.
Absolutely. And prayers to their family and friends. Very sad. Is there a press conference at 3 pm ET?
Bonus Hole
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Night and day difference in construction and design.

Every submersible I have seen makes the Ocean Gate Titan look like a piece of garbage
Boiling Denim
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Aston04 said:

Hindsight 20/20... Dumb all around. But, in fairness, the CEO/inventor was on board too. He obviously believed in the safety of the vessel, even with the many strange design choices. Corners weren't cut purely to save a buck imo.
He had little respect for safety, as can be seen in his interviews, so it doesn't mean much if he thought it was safe.



Nanomachines son
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BQ78 said:

Imploded at 3200 meters on the way down. Acoustic sources picked it up


At least they went quick rather than being stuck in coffin underwater and suffocating to death.
TheEternalPessimist
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Seems like the entire deep sea submersible industry is going to have to review every safety protocol and review designs going forward.

I took it for granted that we had developed these tools for exploration in the deep -- without giving much thought to the danger associated with it. Think it would be fair to compare the level of danger here to the same level of danger going to space presents.

RIP to those lost.
BBRex
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BQ78 said:

They did send a distress message to the mothership just before implosion. Probably heard the hull cracking.


Man, that would have been terrifying for anyone who understood what that sound was.

I also can't imagine what hearing that "pop" would be like, either. The sound of five people dying at once. A pretty sobering reminder that the sea has no mercy or remorse.
Flavius Agximus
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Its Not Rocket Surgery said:

akaggie05 said:

I read that there were signs of damage/weakening on several occasions after previous dives and that the max depth was de-rated in response. Then there was vague mention of "repairs" and magically the full depth rating was restored.

I'd rather get launched into orbit on that ripoff Russian space shuttle that only flew once unmanned than go six inches underwater in this sub.
I read an article about this. Apparently the hull was showing "cyclic fatigue" stress damage during testing. The electronics were also fried in a likely lightning strike so he destroyed the original hull and rebuilt the submersible.

More on that here: OceanGate Expeditions sub suffered electrical damage and had to be rebuilt BEFORE Titanic dive | Daily Mail Online


While everyone is waiting for the Coast Guard presser, if you want to see what a properly designed, built, and tested full ocean submersible looks like, check out the Triton Submarine built DSV Limiting Factor. Obviously way overrated for Titanic, but it gives you the sense of how shoddy the Titan really was.
What's mind-boggling to me (among other things in this disaster) is that the British billionaire who was on the Titan had descended to the Marianas trench at 36,000 feet depth in the DSV Limiting Factor. Hard to understand how/why he would sign on for the Titan after that.

Hamish Harding - Wikipedia

"The goal for all our teams at Texas A&M is to perform at a consistently high level and compete for conference and national titles."
Rockdoc
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Question: How is the pressure hull sealed off from wiring, cables, etc. passing thru it? The lights, motors, navigational equipment and the like have to be controlled through the hull. That's a lot of pressure differential to be handled by o-rings and such. Seems like a tremendous weak point.
Gigem314
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TheEternalPessimist said:

Seems like the entire deep sea submersible industry is going to have to review every safety protocol and review designs going forward.

I took it for granted that we had developed these tools for exploration in the deep -- without giving much thought to the danger associated with it. Think it would be fair to compare the level of danger here to the same level of danger going to space presents.

RIP to those lost.
Obviously the Space Shuttle was built 1000x more precise and professional than Titan...but I can't help but get a bit of a 'Challenger' parallel as far as taking for granted the dangers of exploration and taking ordinary citizens along for the ride despite warning signs. I have no doubt that safety standards will be impacted by this.
fka ftc
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For the early calls of more oversight and regulation, I don't think a dang thing is needed.

Diving a couple of miles under the ocean is inherently extremely dangerous and its up to the individual explorers to properly prepare and pay for their trip. James Cameron does it one way, OceanGate had a different approach.

This is not a ride at EPCOT. This is not a commercial SCUBA outfit in the Florida Keys. For these adventurers they knowing took risks that were clearly advised to them, including what I would assume to be numerous meetings and copious time with the OceanGate crew and employees.

At some point, the participants have to accept full responsibility for their activity. Regulations and oversight stifle innovation and creativity. Failures such as this inform others on the right... and wrong approach to dangerous exploration.
Bonus Hole
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CEO Harding is renowned for his travel ambitions, with a resume including a record-setting circumnavigation of the Earth, an Antarctic expedition with Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz Aldrin, and a seat aboard the fifth human flight of Blue Origin's New Shepard rocket

Can't say he didn't live a good life
Whirligigs
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Acceptable casualties except for the young adult. At least it was quick.
Tony Franklins Other Shoe
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TheEternalPessimist said:

Seems like the entire deep sea submersible industry is going to have to review every safety protocol and review designs going forward.


Real organizations do. But not this sheet show.

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Gigem314
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BBRex said:

BQ78 said:

They did send a distress message to the mothership just before implosion. Probably heard the hull cracking.


Man, that would have been terrifying for anyone who understood what that sound was.

I also can't imagine what hearing that "pop" would be like, either. The sound of five people dying at once. A pretty sobering reminder that the sea has no mercy or remorse.
Yeah I thought I read they had sent a distress message before loss of contact. You'd have to think the CEO and French navy vet that had been to the Titanic numerous other times realized what was happening.
infinity ag
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This is odd.


Wife of missing submersible pilot is a descendant from Titanic couple who perished
https://www.cnn.com/2023/06/22/entertainment/wendy-rush-titanic-sub/index.html
FTAG 2000
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TheEternalPessimist said:

Seems like the entire deep sea submersible industry is going to have to review every safety protocol and review designs going forward.

I took it for granted that we had developed these tools for exploration in the deep -- without giving much thought to the danger associated with it. Think it would be fair to compare the level of danger here to the same level of danger going to space presents.

RIP to those lost.

Not sure I agree.

BQ78 indicated earlier in the thread that those in the industry sent the CEO a letter detailing all the problems with this thing's design, and telling him it was a death trap.

He forged on anyway. His hubris and narcissism killed himself and those four other folks on Sunday.
FTAG 2000
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Gigem314 said:

BBRex said:

BQ78 said:

They did send a distress message to the mothership just before implosion. Probably heard the hull cracking.


Man, that would have been terrifying for anyone who understood what that sound was.

I also can't imagine what hearing that "pop" would be like, either. The sound of five people dying at once. A pretty sobering reminder that the sea has no mercy or remorse.
Yeah I thought I read they had sent a distress message before loss of contact. You'd have to think the CEO and French navy vet that had been to the Titanic numerous other times realized what was happening.

He'd also been on this sub before. Everyone else who rode it said a big fat nope to returning, but this guy went back for more. Why?
infinity ag
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Quote:

Isidor Straus was a co-owner of Macy's and the story of how they perished captured the attention of those interested in the story of the Titanic.

"On the night of 14 April, after Titanic had hit the iceberg, Isidor and Ida were directed to lifeboat eight. However, the aging Isidor refused to board the lifeboat while there were younger men being prevented from boarding," according to the UK National Archives. "Ida also refused to get into the lifeboat saying, 'Where you go, I go'. Her maid Ellen was put into the lifeboat and Ida gave Ellen her fur coat, saying she had no further use for it."
Do they make men and women like this anymore?
Old May Banker
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Quote:

Do they make men and women like this anymore?

Very rarely...
Broncos
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infinity ag said:

Quote:

Isidor Straus was a co-owner of Macy's and the story of how they perished captured the attention of those interested in the story of the Titanic.

"On the night of 14 April, after Titanic had hit the iceberg, Isidor and Ida were directed to lifeboat eight. However, the aging Isidor refused to board the lifeboat while there were younger men being prevented from boarding," according to the UK National Archives. "Ida also refused to get into the lifeboat saying, 'Where you go, I go'. Her maid Ellen was put into the lifeboat and Ida gave Ellen her fur coat, saying she had no further use for it."
Do they make men and women like this anymore?

It's 2023, now they make men who think they're women.
Gigem314
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Quote:

He'd also been on this sub before. Everyone else who rode it said a big fat nope to returning, but this guy went back for more. Why?
Yeah, considering he'd been to the Titanic over 30 times before - and probably gone on much better vessels than the Titan. Yet he chose to keep going down again. Guess he thought it was worth the risk at 77.

Saw this from one of the articles, and these comments from the CEO seem haunting:
Quote:

'It's acrylic plexiglass,' Rush tells Estrada after being asked what the window mounted at the front of the Titan vessel is made of.

'It is seven inches thick and weighs about 80lbs. And when we go to the Titanic, it will squeeze in about three-quarters of an inch and just deforms,' he explains.

'And acrylic is great because before it cracks or fails, it starts to crackle so you get a huge warning if it's going to fail.'

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12222279/OceanGate-boss-Stockton-Rush-revealed-hes-broken-rules-make-lost-Titan-sub.html
Bonus Hole
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FTAG 2000 said:

Gigem314 said:

BBRex said:

BQ78 said:

They did send a distress message to the mothership just before implosion. Probably heard the hull cracking.


Man, that would have been terrifying for anyone who understood what that sound was.

I also can't imagine what hearing that "pop" would be like, either. The sound of five people dying at once. A pretty sobering reminder that the sea has no mercy or remorse.
Yeah I thought I read they had sent a distress message before loss of contact. You'd have to think the CEO and French navy vet that had been to the Titanic numerous other times realized what was happening.

He'd also been on this sub before. Everyone else who rode it said a big fat nope to returning, but this guy went back for more. Why?
Some people crave this sort of stuff, especially ex military

buzzardb267
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Not being all morbid and all, but what happens to the human body at that depth? Is it crushed into a blob, or is it still intact, just all the organs crushed? I guess my bottom line, is there anything to recover from the remains of the occupants?
"ROGER - OUT"
TexasRebel
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Those are the men and women who turned tough times into a luxurious life and made it easier for the next generation.
chase128
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Gigem314 said:

Quote:

He'd also been on this sub before. Everyone else who rode it said a big fat nope to returning, but this guy went back for more. Why?
Yeah, considering he'd been to the Titanic over 30 times before - and probably gone on much better vessels than the Titan. Yet he chose to keep going down again. Guess he thought it was worth the risk at 77.

Saw this from one of the articles, and these comments from the CEO seem haunting:
Quote:

'It's acrylic plexiglass,' Rush tells Estrada after being asked what the window mounted at the front of the Titan vessel is made of.

'It is seven inches thick and weighs about 80lbs. And when we go to the Titanic, it will squeeze in about three-quarters of an inch and just deforms,' he explains.

'And acrylic is great because before it cracks or fails, it starts to crackle so you get a huge warning if it's going to fail.'
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12222279/OceanGate-boss-Stockton-Rush-revealed-hes-broken-rules-make-lost-Titan-sub.html

And that warning does what good for you anyway when you're 12,500ft below the surface?
TexasRebel
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Gigem314 said:

Quote:

He'd also been on this sub before. Everyone else who rode it said a big fat nope to returning, but this guy went back for more. Why?
Yeah, considering he'd been to the Titanic over 30 times before - and probably gone on much better vessels than the Titan. Yet he chose to keep going down again. Guess he thought it was worth the risk at 77.

Saw this from one of the articles, and these comments from the CEO seem haunting:
Quote:

'It's acrylic plexiglass,' Rush tells Estrada after being asked what the window mounted at the front of the Titan vessel is made of.

'It is seven inches thick and weighs about 80lbs. And when we go to the Titanic, it will squeeze in about three-quarters of an inch and just deforms,' he explains.

'And acrylic is great because before it cracks or fails, it starts to crackle so you get a huge warning if it's going to fail.'
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-12222279/OceanGate-boss-Stockton-Rush-revealed-hes-broken-rules-make-lost-Titan-sub.html



Sorry. I don't want a warning of impending failure at 12,000 ft. deep. I want the warning above water. At depth it needs to fail safely.
TxSquarebody
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Interesting question. I don't know the answers. Are there any human bones that can survive 25,000 psi?
HarryJ33tamu
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buzzardb267 said:

Not being all morbid and all, but what happens to the human body at that depth? Is it crushed into a blob, or is it still intact, just all the organs crushed? I guess my bottom line, is there anything to recover from the remains of the occupants?


I don't think there will be any bodies recovered. My guess is that sub turned into a pancake and the bodies were pretty much squished. They'll tear apart and drift with the current.

Just my guess
VegasAg86
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chase128 said:

And that warning does what good for you anyway when you're 12,500ft below the surface?
Right? Does the warning mean you have seconds, minutes, hours? Seconds or minutes I'd rather just be surprised.
Bonus Hole
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People have been saying the bodies would be vaporized that low.
 
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