It's all summarized in the NTSB reports.Could you summarize the findings that are interesting? Not going to watch 44 minute video that might or might not be illuminating.
It's all summarized in the NTSB reports.Could you summarize the findings that are interesting? Not going to watch 44 minute video that might or might not be illuminating.
Key finding: CEO was a Jackass.Could you summarize the findings that are interesting? Not going to watch 44 minute video that might or might not be illuminating.
Far from technically precise thus zero informative.Key finding: CEO was a Jackass.
Burnt tomato soup comes to mind.Not to be morbid ... but I wonder what happens to human the human body when it's subjected to such an abrupt high pressure...
Well lets see:Not to be morbid ... but I wonder what happens to human the human body when it's subjected to such an abrupt high pressure, and then to the remains when they're recovered and brought to the surface ... I can imagine, though. Forensics must have had a rather unusual experience that day ...
Good guess ... probably starting with the eyeballs, then the abdomen, and then the brain is compressed into the size of a hazelnut after water rushes breaking through the eye sockets, and also through the ears and the upper palate ... after that, probably your once robust body ends up looking like a scarecrow.My best guess is you become very small.
Yep, just imagine being squooshed by the weight of a dozen Airbus A380's.Good guess ... probably starting with the eyeballs, then the abdomen, and then the brain is compressed into the size of a hazelnut after water rushes breaking through the eye sockets, and also through the ears and the upper palate ... after that, probably your once robust body ends up looking like a scarecrow.
And then there's the matter of the extreme heat generated by the pressure shock. Although probably the skin doesn't really have time enough to burn since all that water at a low temperature is extremely efficient at dissipating all the generated heat.
After that, my guess is that the high pressure water seeps into the body's tissues (and the individual cells, possibly through osmosis) and the body more or less recovers its former dimensions (though not its former appearance) ... I'd rather not get into discussing what things would have probably looked like after the remains were brought to the surface.
Well lets see:
The Titanic wreckage lies at a depth of about 3,800 meters (12,500 feet). At that depth, the pressure is an astonishing 380 atmospheres, or about 5,600 psi
My best guess is you become very small.
Sadly, there was also the USS Thresher an entire submarine and crew lost. A simple Google of USS Thresher will bring up the whole story. Thresher was to be the first in its class, the Thresher Class which for obvious reasons never happened.
Ron
The compression effect on things that aren't gas filled is pretty small, so eyeballs (which are filled with a saline solution) won't compress much. The same for the limbs. The chest and torso will crush, but only so far as the mass of the organs will limit it.Good guess ... probably starting with the eyeballs, then the abdomen, and then the brain is compressed into the size of a hazelnut after water rushes breaking through the eye sockets, and also through the ears and the upper palate ... after that, probably your once robust body ends up looking like a scarecrow.
And then there's the matter of the extreme heat generated by the pressure shock. Although probably the skin doesn't really have time enough to burn since all that water at a low temperature is extremely efficient at dissipating all the generated heat.
After that, my guess is that the high pressure water seeps into the body's tissues (and the individual cells, possibly through osmosis) and the body more or less recovers its former dimensions (though not its former appearance) ... I'd rather not get into discussing what things would have probably looked like after the remains were brought to the surface.
I designed and built a water jet cutting machine about 20 years ago, so yeah ... I know what it can do.Ever see a water jet cutting through steel?
That was the worst engineering decision *ever* ... one for the history books. A perfect example of seeing what one wants to see, and completely ignoring the recorded facts experience of accredited peers and institutions. One just doesn't use a fiber-anything material for compression, especially if said fibers are not completely interwoven and are simply parallel to one another. It's like adding glue to a rope and then expect it to work well as a column.Something I don't understand is his choice of material used. Then too, I am not an Oceangate Engineer, whatever that is. Much like the Thresher they ended up in Davey Jones Locker.
Ron
If nothing else, the use of a $30 gamepad controller should have been a clear indicator to anyone boarding that vessel that they most likely were not dealing with professionals.Something I don't understand is his choice of material used. Then too, I am not an Oceangate Engineer, whatever that is. Much like the Thresher they ended up in Davey Jones Locker.


It looks like they talk a lot about the previous damage to the sub that was not investigated. They had physical evidence of physical damage, yet they did not look into it. I cannot imagine why they would do something so stupid.Could you summarize the findings that are interesting? Not going to watch 44 minute video that might or might not be illuminating.
So everything inside could have been instantly vaporized.Burnt tomato soup comes to mind.
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