- cross-posted to:
- random@kbin.social
- worldnews@kbin.social
- cross-posted to:
- random@kbin.social
- worldnews@kbin.social
12,500 ft underwater? Pass.
Yeah this sounds like a bespoke Hell created just for me in case I am very, very evil in this lifetime. Inconceivable that people would pay actual money to experience this. :(
A quarter million dollars to get in an Atlantan fleshlight.
What are we calling this? OceanGate-gate?
Titanic 2: Revenge of the Ship
How does one even plan for contingencies? 96-hour life support, but can specialized rescue subs get there in time?
I feel like a proper contingency in this scenario would be some sort of “instant death” system. Knowing you’re going to die, but waiting 96 hours for it to happen sounds terrible.
I get where you’re coming from but this sounds like an insanely bad idea. Perhaps I’d agree with you if there was something like cyanide pills people could opt to take, but even then I’m hesitant. There should be no way for one person (or some subset of people) to decide for everyone that now is the time to die; if someone wants to be in their head and push the limit and die at the last minute, that’s their call and theirs alone. Also, if there is some miraculous rescue but someone has pulled the “instant death” switch, they’ve effectively murdered the rest of the people.
I’ve been toying around with some design concepts for a DIY submarine for like a decade now. The first thing I thought about, right after “how do I control it going up/down” was “what do I do when that system fails, and I need to ascend in an emergency?” My thought was to have some scuba tanks attached to deployable salvage lift bags, so even if my ballasts were completely screwed, I could still ascend.
If there’s not something analogous to that on board the Titan, I’d be shocked at their stupidity; It seems incredibly foolhardy to intentionally go somewhere that no rescue vehicle can recover you, without secondary and tertiary systems in place to rescue yourself.
I’ve always been fascinated by submarines. I’ve wanted to make a remote control one with fpv but radio signals don’t penetrate water very well underwater. If I have to have it tethered to a signal wire it’s just “meh”.
What a nightmare scenario. What about plumbing and water for 96 hours? How scary. Poor passengers!
They have a toilet behind a curtain. Imagine trying to hold poop for 3+ days… Imagine being the first one that poops and the odour… My eyes are stinging thinking about it…
Would be nice as journalist to be insistent on inquiring the duration of the dive so far.
They write it’s missing – but it is obvious where it is.
They write contact was lost, but it is unknown when. This seems to be the whole point of such a news. Was contact lost 4 hours ago or 4 days ago? Contact lost 4h ago would probably be all fine, as they mention the dive tour takes around 8 hours. 4 days ago would mean they are all dead, as oxygen lasts that long according to the article.
Also the link someone else posted says it has life support for 96 hours
And it left on Sunday around 6am to start the 96 hr timer. Best case they lost power, dropped their load, and floated to the surface and are just bobbing around somewhere in the ocean.
There is only one billionaire aboard, seem like a waste of space.
There are
26402639 billionaires in the world. It may not be much when you think about it, but it’s a great start!
They may as well be on the moon.
Curious if they are connected via a tether of some type.
Either way, that’s not good and really sad.
OceanGate - with that name, I think they were onto something…
Maybe they should look under water instead of under way…
Near, far, wherever they are,
I believe that the search will go on ♫Website of the company: https://oceangate.com/our-subs/titan-submersible.html
Article from CBS describing previous dives: https://www.cbsnews.com/news/titanic-visiting-the-most-famous-shipwreck-in-the-world/
Rescue teams involved in the hunt for a missing submersible that had planned to visit the wrecked Titanic said “noises” had been detected early Wednesday close to where the sub ended contact with its control ship.
U.S. Coast Guard Rear Adm. John Mauger said the source of the noise was still unclear.