Bingo.
Guitarsoup said: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.
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.
Completely different situation. Scorpion was Skipjack class, not Thresher.Quote:
USS Scorpion had two nuclear tipped torpedoes aboard when she went down.
YokelRidesAgain said: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.
Essentially no non-insane people would hop on board if it was free, much less pay $250K for the privilege.
We were discussing the two Navy wrecks that Ballard was in charge of finding when he using the cover of looking for the Titanic. Those two wrecks are the Scorpion and Thresher.aggiehawg said:Completely different situation. Scorpion was Skipjack class, not Thresher.Quote:
USS Scorpion had two nuclear tipped torpedoes aboard when she went down.
I'm not sure what that has to do with one being on an operational deployment and the other still undergoing sea trials.aggiehawg said:Completely different situation. Scorpion was Skipjack class, not Thresher.Quote:
USS Scorpion had two nuclear tipped torpedoes aboard when she went down.
It had made more than 20 trips to the Titanic.nosoupforyou said:
Didn't I read that this was the 3rd voyage it has taken to the Titanic? If so, why didn't it make it this time?
Hard and fascinating story - appreciate the news updates that come through here, but I picked up on page 26
Sounds like it was completely safe.Joes said:It had made more than 20 trips to the Titanic.nosoupforyou said:
Didn't I read that this was the 3rd voyage it has taken to the Titanic? If so, why didn't it make it this time?
Hard and fascinating story - appreciate the news updates that come through here, but I picked up on page 26
Fine distinction but they were Pakistani - NOT Indian.annie88 said:
Two of the people on the submarine were Indian, but they keep pushing the white guy angle.
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.
Those waivers are not worth the paper they are written on. The first question is which jurisdiction's law applies. Many jurisdictions are reluctant to enforce waivers at all. Second, as you correctly noted, waivers cannot protect against gross negligence in any jurisdiction of which I am aware.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.
All I did was answer the question factually. Heck, I've been saying consistently that it was obvious that it imploded on descent. All this drama about searches and dwindling oxygen and counting clocks (down to the second in places, idiotically) for days on the news was just for drama and "entertainment".Guitarsoup said:Sounds like it was completely safe.Joes said:It had made more than 20 trips to the Titanic.nosoupforyou said:
Didn't I read that this was the 3rd voyage it has taken to the Titanic? If so, why didn't it make it this time?
Hard and fascinating story - appreciate the news updates that come through here, but I picked up on page 26
He also came from money big money, so probably multiple generations of family that protected assets.DannyDuberstein said:
Yeah, maybe Mr Fast and Loose with safety was sloppy with the legal structure, but with a high risk business like this, logic would be making sure you have a legal structure in place that is rock solid at insulating personal assets from the business
You need to watch the Theranos biopic about Elizabeth Holmes.AustinCountyAg said:
Eventually people will take the risk and do this again. It's like aviation. You have to start somewhere.
However, if I could afford or even wanted to travel down that deep in the ocean it damn sure wouldn't be on a piece milled camper world project with a company that operates out of a building that's nothing more than a loading dock. Unbelievable that this dude got people to trust him on this thing. Granted he does deserve some credit since he was able to make multiple trips to titanic, but it's pretty damn clear his operation was a ticking time bomb, and well, the bomb finally exploded.
This is why I don't have any assets.DannyDuberstein said:
Right, but like i mentioned in my edit, even if you set it up "right" to begin with, it can end up muddled and compromised if he was not careful about how he personally transacted with the entity and activity of the business. Caution and patience didn't seem to be his strongest assets
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.
Philip J Fry said:
It's the rumor that banging could be heard at 30 minute intervals they really irritates me on this he side of the media. Easily refuted, but that doesn't sell clicks.
Sea Speed said:BQ78 said:
Coast Guard ain't really in the military but they are a highly professional, especially existing as they do in the US government, organization.
Tell that to my buddy who runs teams who board narco subs
DannyDuberstein said:
That's reporting these days. One ahole mentions banging every 30 minutes on twitter, every reporter runs with it as "reports are….". That so called profession is a joke
Titanic sub implosion detected by Navy hours after losing communications, US official says https://t.co/4jCAufzIGA pic.twitter.com/JMGDNn7nUH
— New York Post (@nypost) June 23, 2023
Quote:
Why hold back the news?
The people that needed to know probably did.aggiedata said:
Why hold back the news?Titanic sub implosion detected by Navy hours after losing communications, US official says https://t.co/4jCAufzIGA pic.twitter.com/JMGDNn7nUH
— New York Post (@nypost) June 23, 2023
Quote:
The Navy began using the system, which is used to locate enemy submarines, to listen for the Titan almost immediately after it lost contact with its radio ship on Sunday, a US defense official told The Wall Street Journal.
Well, of course. The difference from early aviation is that people did not start taking passengers up on a heavier than air craft for crazy amounts of money after, like, 20 trips in a new contraption.AustinCountyAg said:
Eventually people will take the risk and do this again. It's like aviation. You have to start somewhere.
I'm not privy to Top Secret surveilance systems, but I'm pretty sure that "using the system" in this case means going over the logs/recordings and looking for anomolies. It's not like there's a guy sitting in a sound booth with headphones on listening to ocean noise 24/7…right?bonfarr said:Quote:
The Navy began using the system, which is used to locate enemy submarines, to listen for the Titan almost immediately after it lost contact with its radio ship on Sunday, a US defense official told The Wall Street Journal.
This timeline doesn't make sense if it is true the Ocean Gate team didn't notify the Coast Guard until the Titan was hours overdue from what would have been their 8 hr mission.
Pretty sure it is more shoddy journalism. They knew it the second it happened because it probably flagged the system. They probably didn't know exactly what it was, but the Navy knew when it happened and that it was an implosion. They didn't just start looking 8 hours later.bonfarr said:Quote:
The Navy began using the system, which is used to locate enemy submarines, to listen for the Titan almost immediately after it lost contact with its radio ship on Sunday, a US defense official told The Wall Street Journal.
This timeline doesn't make sense if it is true the Ocean Gate team didn't notify the Coast Guard until the Titan was hours overdue from what would have been their 8 hr mission.