- Mar 20, 2000
- 102,407
- 8,595
- 126
say it ain't so
leaking port hole
water coming in
golly it's cold
Google solved this problem for up to 11000m: https://patents.google.com/patent/US7621229
Given this view of the sub's propulsion system, which the company says is 100% safe and proven by the best engineers in the business, I'm not sure we want it back.
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Yes. I have no idea why someone would pay to risk their life in an uncertified POS for no good reason.
That’s the sunk cost fallacy right there.I'm probably going to hell (wait, it doesn't exist):
Damn. Can you imagine the poor souls in the sub watching the pilot with this thing.
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What is the game controller used in the OceanGate expedition?
The missing OceanGate submarine vessel is controlled using a wireless Logitech F710 gamepad, CEO Stockton Rush confirmed previously. The controller runs the 'whole thing'.www.dailymail.co.uk
it's 400 atmosphere pressure down there... 40 Megapascal or 6,000 PSI for you metric challenged.Google is basically useless in helping me figure out how organic decay works in a purely carbon dioxide atmosphere. Will their bodies be preserved for centuries? Future humans may decide to put the sub as-is in a museum without ever opening it, letting visitors peer through the small window.
What are you saying? If it remains there, it will eventually get crushed by the ocean? Or it's impossible for future humans to bring it up?it's 400 atmosphere pressure down there... 40 Megapascal or 6,000 PSI for you metric challenged.
What are you saying? If it remains there, it will eventually get crushed by the ocean? Or it's impossible for future humans to bring it up?
Doing that vs. feeding the hungry and homeless in your local community for several years? I say they deserve it. The sub seems to have been designed by PC gamers/developers. Stress testing? Nah. Let's do it in production. We are so clever we can't possibly have overlooked something.I dunno but if I'm a millionaire and I pay $250k to go on this expedition, and you show me this vessel upon arriving, that's controlled with a PC controller from 1998 or whatever, I'm turning around and going back to my millionaire lifestyle, no fuss.
For their sake, I hope it isn’t true. You’d rather they were instantaneously compressed/drowned during an implosion rather than sitting their for 96 hours knowing that there’s no way to be saved.
Doing that vs. feeding the hungry in your local community for several years? I say they deserve it. The sub seems to have been designed by PC gamers/developers. Stress testing? Nah. Let's do it in production. We are so clever we can't possibly have overlooked something.
Doing that vs. feeding the hungry and homeless in your local community for several years? I say they deserve it. The sub seems to have been designed by PC gamers/developers. Stress testing? Nah. Let's do it in production. We are so clever we can't possibly have overlooked something.
It could be somewhere in the ocean on or near the surface, which I think would be really hard to see because it was a dumb idea to paint it white and blue. This case it's only a matter of time before they run out of air vs someone finding it and seeing it in the vast ocean.
He probably locked himself in the toilet!Could you imagine being stuck in that claustrophobic environment…with the very same CEO who got you to sign away $250K to meet your doom??
He probably locked himself in the toilet!
I'm that same employee for my company. EVERY TIME for the past 15 years, I felt like tomorrow would be the day when they unceremoniously kick me out for speaking the truth. I think they have gotten used to it and tend to ignore me most of the time.The company even fired an employee who warned them of dangers with their sub.
The true nightmare scenario is they lost comms, dumped their ballast, floated to the top, and are now adrift somewhere on the surface unable to escape the submersible or radio for help.
Oh crap!there is no toilet... just a privacy curtain and a box.
Sorry quotes are not working for me on mobile..but yea that is true. I'd rather donate money like that to my community or some youth center.
I do feel really bad for the 19 year old kid that is with his father. Most likely the intention was to have a cool father's day experience and I can't imagine what's going through the mom's head right now.
The company even fired an employee who warned them of dangers with their sub. I doubt any of these crew members researched the previous dives this vessel took and how it encountered similar issues, got lost for 5 hours in the past, etc.
It is really baffling how one interview and demonstration of this thing looked like it was put together by morons with off the shelf components without any stress testing and I'm not even a scientist or mechanical engineer, but I could immediately tell yea this thing is going to have issues eventually.
The CEO even mentioned there was no machine to scan the hull of the sub for integrity so they would use "acoustics" of pops and noises to figure out if the hull was in danger. Well if that is your methodology for determining issues, I think it's too late when you do hear these noises while you are already in the middle of the ocean.
The sub is below the carbonate compensation depth. Their bones will dissolve.Google is basically useless in helping me figure out how organic decay works in a purely carbon dioxide atmosphere. Will their bodies be preserved for centuries? Future humans may decide to put the sub as-is in a museum without ever opening it, letting visitors peer through the small window.
The envy runs deep in this one.Doing that vs. feeding the hungry and homeless in your local community for several years? I say they deserve it. The sub seems to have been designed by PC gamers/developers. Stress testing? Nah. Let's do it in production. We are so clever we can't possibly have overlooked something.
