Classic disgruntled Veteran
Guitarsoup said:Why would British or Pakistani families seek out the Congressman from Texas' 2nd District to push their agenda?bonfarr said:
Dan Crenshaw is still being an asshat on Fox News despite the likelihood these guys were dead before anyone even knew they were missing. He is claiming the tapping stopped on Wednesday and that was when the guys likely died and the CG and Navy leadership failed.
Crenshaw is getting paid by someone to push the agenda, possibly the Billionaire's family?
Talking about before it was "discovered" in 1985. Pretty sure SOSUS was around in the early 1970's in the Atlantic.Guitarsoup said:Don't think we had SOSUS in 1912.JB!98 said:
Off topic, but who thinks the Navy had a pretty good idea of where the Titanic was before it was "Discovered". If they have SOSUS they would have noticed the flow sound of a large object and had to account for it as background noise in a filter. Putting position, two and two together, Boom Titanic location.
Back to your regularly scheduled programming.
Definitely makes logical sense if you already hate Crenshaw and want to make up stuff about him to pile on, even if it is beyond ridiculous.bonfarr said:Guitarsoup said:Why would British or Pakistani families seek out the Congressman from Texas' 2nd District to push their agenda?bonfarr said:
Dan Crenshaw is still being an asshat on Fox News despite the likelihood these guys were dead before anyone even knew they were missing. He is claiming the tapping stopped on Wednesday and that was when the guys likely died and the CG and Navy leadership failed.
Crenshaw is getting paid by someone to push the agenda, possibly the Billionaire's family?
Possibly they wanted a bigger faster response during the first 24-48 hrs after communication was lost and now Crenshaw is covering for his earlier statements?
Guitarsoup said:Definitely makes logical sense if you already hate Crenshaw and want to make up stuff about him to pile on, even if it is beyond ridiculous.bonfarr said:Guitarsoup said:Why would British or Pakistani families seek out the Congressman from Texas' 2nd District to push their agenda?bonfarr said:
Dan Crenshaw is still being an asshat on Fox News despite the likelihood these guys were dead before anyone even knew they were missing. He is claiming the tapping stopped on Wednesday and that was when the guys likely died and the CG and Navy leadership failed.
Crenshaw is getting paid by someone to push the agenda, possibly the Billionaire's family?
Possibly they wanted a bigger faster response during the first 24-48 hrs after communication was lost and now Crenshaw is covering for his earlier statements?
I don't know that sound surveillance for objects making active noises and moving is quite the same as the things used to find non-moving objects half buried on the bed of the ocean.JB!98 said:Talking about before it was "discovered" in 1985. Pretty sure SOSUS was around in the early 1970's in the Atlantic.Guitarsoup said:Don't think we had SOSUS in 1912.JB!98 said:
Off topic, but who thinks the Navy had a pretty good idea of where the Titanic was before it was "Discovered". If they have SOSUS they would have noticed the flow sound of a large object and had to account for it as background noise in a filter. Putting position, two and two together, Boom Titanic location.
Back to your regularly scheduled programming.
Doesn't ruffle my feathers, it is just your crazy jumps here are inane.bonfarr said:Guitarsoup said:Definitely makes logical sense if you already hate Crenshaw and want to make up stuff about him to pile on, even if it is beyond ridiculous.bonfarr said:Guitarsoup said:Why would British or Pakistani families seek out the Congressman from Texas' 2nd District to push their agenda?bonfarr said:
Dan Crenshaw is still being an asshat on Fox News despite the likelihood these guys were dead before anyone even knew they were missing. He is claiming the tapping stopped on Wednesday and that was when the guys likely died and the CG and Navy leadership failed.
Crenshaw is getting paid by someone to push the agenda, possibly the Billionaire's family?
Possibly they wanted a bigger faster response during the first 24-48 hrs after communication was lost and now Crenshaw is covering for his earlier statements?
Sorry to ruffle your feathers man, ok maybe Crenshaw is just an asshat all on his own accord and doesn't need prodding to show it.
fka ftc said:
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.
I'm pretty sure I have read that Ballard was actually part of some Naval operation but was given permission to conduct his Titanic search in the same area as part of his agreement to work with the USN.JB!98 said:Talking about before it was "discovered" in 1985. Pretty sure SOSUS was around in the early 1970's in the Atlantic.Guitarsoup said:Don't think we had SOSUS in 1912.JB!98 said:
Off topic, but who thinks the Navy had a pretty good idea of where the Titanic was before it was "Discovered". If they have SOSUS they would have noticed the flow sound of a large object and had to account for it as background noise in a filter. Putting position, two and two together, Boom Titanic location.
Back to your regularly scheduled programming.
That's right. He had to also find the USS Thresher and the USS Scorpion. Finding the nuke subs was top secret, so looking for the Titanic was the cover.Cinco Ranch Aggie said:I'm pretty sure I have read that Ballard was actually part of some Naval operation but was given permission to conduct his Titanic search in the same area as part of his agreement to work with the USN.JB!98 said:Talking about before it was "discovered" in 1985. Pretty sure SOSUS was around in the early 1970's in the Atlantic.Guitarsoup said:Don't think we had SOSUS in 1912.JB!98 said:
Off topic, but who thinks the Navy had a pretty good idea of where the Titanic was before it was "Discovered". If they have SOSUS they would have noticed the flow sound of a large object and had to account for it as background noise in a filter. Putting position, two and two together, Boom Titanic location.
Back to your regularly scheduled programming.
AgsOnDeck said:
I honestly wouldn't mind going out like that when I can't wipe my own ass anymore
Send me down boys
Much has been made of the waivers signed by the "passengers." Do those waivers protect Oceangate?Quote:
I don't know anything about engineering or deep sea exploration, but it's my understanding that this guy completely disregarded existing requirements and common sense.
More regulations aren't needed if people can completely disregard them and do whatever the hell they want.
Bregxit said:
Similar vein to the Mythbusters. Here is a crab getting sucked into a 3mm slit in an underwater pipe. Pressure outside the pipe was 3.5 tons.
The inevitable bankruptcy will protect Oceangate.aggiehawg said:Much has been made of the waivers signed by the "passengers." Do those waivers protect Oceangate?Quote:
I don't know anything about engineering or deep sea exploration, but it's my understanding that this guy completely disregarded existing requirements and common sense.
More regulations aren't needed if people can completely disregard them and do whatever the hell they want.
My initital take is no, they do not. This is in the gross negligence/wanton disregard category which void those, in general.
The Navy had found them before, but prior to the 80s, they couldn't really inspect it because the needed underwater camera technology didn't exist and they hadn't found everything. They were extremely interested in the nuclear reactors, which had never been found and to see how those were handling the 20 years at the bottom of the Atlantic.JABQ04 said:
Yep. What he learned looking looking those wrecks was their debris fields were easier to find than looking for the actual ships themselves, so when he looked for the Titanic he changed his approach to look for a debris field and then use that to find the actual ship.
ETA: The Navy already knew where the scorpion and Thresher were, Ballard was just involved because of his deep sea technology to inspect the wrecks and make sure the nuclear reactor wasn't leaking/wreck inspection.
Maybe, maybe not. Chapter 7 does not always discharge criminal activity resulting in death or bodiy harm. And when you get to wanton disregard, that's akin to being reckless and criminal.Quote:
The inevitable bankruptcy will protect Oceangate.
aggiehawg said:Maybe, maybe not. Chapter 7 does not always discharge criminal activity resulting in death or bodiy harm. And when you get to wanton disregard, that's akin to being reckless and criminal.Quote:
The inevitable bankruptcy will protect Oceangate.
CEO was very sternly warned 5 years ago his design and engineering were way off and dangerous. Shows he should have foreseen these issues.
Well, he's dead, so...aggiehawg said:Maybe, maybe not. Chapter 7 does not always discharge criminal activity resulting in death or bodiy harm. And when you get to wanton disregard, that's akin to being reckless and criminal.Quote:
The inevitable bankruptcy will protect Oceangate.
CEO was very sternly warned 5 years ago his design and engineering were way off and dangerous. Shows he should have foreseen these issues.
Everybody quibbling about game controllers, and this right here, this is the the one YOU choose to get hung up on?agracer said:I think the 96hr Oxygen thing is false. I doubt the people who built this sub have any clue how much Oxygen is available for 5 people operating that thing.AgsOnDeck said:The submarine #OceanGate
— Moon 🌙 (@__Pluvi0phile__) June 22, 2023
named #Titan has officially ran out of oxygen , five passengers were on board including a billionaire Pakistani Dad and his son.
Titanic is a grave site and no one should disturb it.#Titanic pic.twitter.com/G9n6N8BhUz
Not sure it matters, they're done either way. How many people are going to sign up to go down to Titanic on a similar vessel after this?aggiehawg said:
Much has been made of the waivers signed by the "passengers." Do those waivers protect Oceangate?
My initital take is no, they do not. This is in the gross negligence/wanton disregard category which void those, in general.
Depends on his estate plans. If he had it set up a long while ago and done correctly, much of it can be protected.PlaneCrashGuy said:
So his kids will have to pay for his dumbassery? Or will there be laws protecting them too?
IIRC the USN still dives the sites periodically to measure the levels.Guitarsoup said:The Navy had found them before, but prior to the 80s, they couldn't really inspect it because the needed underwater camera technology didn't exist and they hadn't found everything. They were extremely interested in the nuclear reactors, which had never been found and to see how those were handling the 20 years at the bottom of the Atlantic.JABQ04 said:
Yep. What he learned looking looking those wrecks was their debris fields were easier to find than looking for the actual ships themselves, so when he looked for the Titanic he changed his approach to look for a debris field and then use that to find the actual ship.
ETA: The Navy already knew where the scorpion and Thresher were, Ballard was just involved because of his deep sea technology to inspect the wrecks and make sure the nuclear reactor wasn't leaking/wreck inspection.
Wonder if they removed the nuclear weapons or anything.jabberwalkie09 said:IIRC the USN still dives the periodically to measure the levels.Guitarsoup said:The Navy had found them before, but prior to the 80s, they couldn't really inspect it because the needed underwater camera technology didn't exist and they hadn't found everything. They were extremely interested in the nuclear reactors, which had never been found and to see how those were handling the 20 years at the bottom of the Atlantic.JABQ04 said:
Yep. What he learned looking looking those wrecks was their debris fields were easier to find than looking for the actual ships themselves, so when he looked for the Titanic he changed his approach to look for a debris field and then use that to find the actual ship.
ETA: The Navy already knew where the scorpion and Thresher were, Ballard was just involved because of his deep sea technology to inspect the wrecks and make sure the nuclear reactor wasn't leaking/wreck inspection.
They were still in sea trials. No weapons on board. Testing is done because it was a nuke powered sub.Quote:
Wonder if they removed the nuclear weapons or anything.
USS Scorpion had two nuclear tipped torpedoes aboard when she went down. She was on a regular deployment.aggiehawg said:They were still in sea trials. No weapons on board. Testing is done because it was a nuke powered sub.Quote:
Wonder if they removed the nuclear weapons or anything.
The USS Scorpion had a lot of nuke weapons on board. The story is a torpedo armed itself somehow and the crew tried to dump it, but the torpedo sought out the only sub in the area - the USS Scorpion.aggiehawg said:They were still in sea trials. No weapons on board. Testing is done because it was a nuke powered sub.Quote:
Wonder if they removed the nuclear weapons or anything.