Or....waiting on the surface to get out as they can't open the hatch...it's screwed on from the outside. So, they could be on the surface and run out of air. It just seems incredibly risky on about every level.
About this floating on the surface /waiting to be let out thing ... why did they paint the sub white? Wouldn't it have been smarter to paint it bright orange or red? You know, so a plane could spot it more easily?
What if they need to do more than pee, though? I think my guts would be churning if I was facing probable death ...
While it's not their biggest problem, yeah. Sitting in your own poo (and other people's poo) would be the cherry on the top of an awful way to go.
... A writer/producer for The Simpsons went down to see the Titanic on this submersible last summer. He described it as "sinking like a rock for 2.5 hours"......then being pushed off-course by currents by about 500 yards.....then only having 20 minutes to see the Titanic as they needed to ascend. They got lost. It would just seem to be that they should have some guidance capabilities on the submersible itself, but instead it appears that they rely entirely on the vessel above for navigation ...
I read his story (and other people's stories). I don't remember which previous passengers said these things, but they struck me as awful:
- One person said that as they "sunk" for that 2.5 hours, they turned off the electricity and their only light came from glow sticks. You know, those little things they sell at the Dollar Store.
- One person said that -- for a time -- as they descended, the submersible turned vertical and they slid /fell on top of one another. It's possible these people spent their last hours not sitting cross legged in a small space but crammed into the butt end of this thing.
... And after hearing about who the CEO liked to hire - young, inspirational workers instead of 50 year old men who had submarine experience ...
I bet the 50-year old experienced submariners wouldn't go.
Yeah, my husband (engineer) is that one jerk in the room who won't sign off until every one of his questions is answered. It can be a pain to live with...but he's the guy you want running your nuclear reactor (which he did) ...
My engineer husband is retired from the nuclear industry, and -- yes -- he is also the jerk who wants to know about every nut and bolt, who will question every possibility. Neither your husband nor mine would've been hired to work for this company.
I feel for the families. As morbid as it is I hope they did implode and didn’t suffer.
I think we all hope that, especially now that the oxygen time line has run out.
... that there's no way for them to exit that thing from the inside ...
On the other hand, suppose they were trapped down there and COULD open it from the inside. As the hours went by, it's possible one of them could've opened it thinking
anything is better than this -- and that would've meant immediate and certain death. We all know it's 100% impossible to swim up from that depth. Michael Phelps couldn't come close to do it.
No good option exists.
I heard that at a certain depth, the weight is equivalent to a 747 bearing down on you.
The depth is also an incredibly vast distance, it’s almost frightening to imagine. There’s various info graphics circulated to illustrate how far down this is.
Here’s one:
View attachment 769871
Nothing like a graphic to give us perspective.
Somehow, going DOWN in depth seems scarier than going out into outer space.
Mayhap that's because we all have experience being underwater, and we have a healthy respect for its power, whereas space is hypothetical for us?
I think it says a lot about our society that we care more about 5 rich guys in a homemade submarine than about the hundreds of migrants that drowned. I guess that second story isn't as sexy for the media because there's no suspense.
Disagree. I'd be just as concerned if that submersible contained five low-level enlisted Navy seamen. I think we all can't stay away from this story because it's unique and tragic -- and because we like to see people "win" at long odds, though that's not going to happen now.
The Coast Guard has just said they have discovered a debris field. They are not sure yet if it's the Titan.
I didn't hear that. Is it on the ocean floor? Would they be able to tell if it were new debris?
... I guess I don't completely see the point of risking my life to see the titanic ruins. The 5 in the sub only get to see it on a monitor ...
No, they have a tiny viewing window. I read in one of the accounts of previous voyages that they spent significant time scooting around the ocean floor looking for the ruins and only had about 20 minutes to view Titanic.
I hope if they are alive and running out of oxygen they don't turn on each other down there.
I'd be first to go because I'd never think of that.
A less sinister possibility is that IF they crashed on the ocean floor, some of the explorers might not've survived the crash.
Anyway, it's possible that five people weren't sharing that air.