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Quoted: It was always a recovery mission. Just high profile and lots of PR flat out lies. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Is it a recovery mission now? Will the submersible vessel ever be found? It was always a recovery mission. Just high profile and lots of PR flat out lies. People lie, who'd figure that. I was already suspicious the mother ship had already known of their demise. |
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Quoted: Like the Titantic, the Andrea Doria is crumbling quickly too. I believe most of the deaths on the wreck were cause by entanglements IIRC. View Quote Seinfeld Clip - Andrea Doria - Kramer's Astonishing Tales Of The Sea |
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Quoted: https://i.dailymail.co.uk/1s/2023/06/22/09/72407127-12221737-image-a-43_1687423528129.jpg A door with signage removed is seen at Ocean Gate Headquarters at the Waterfront Building within the Port of Everett complex in Everett, Washington. View Quote Again, the company more or less ceases to exist. And in a way, that's a shame. This guy could have took relatively minor extra precautions and been wildly successful, methinks. |
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I have also noticed on various social media people (commies so not really people) making comments about not caring about billionaire assholes.
This is after those billionaire assholes pandered to the left by not wanting to hire boring 50 year old white guys. Take note, rich people. Sucking leftist cock scores you nothing, you're still the enemy. |
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Quoted: One of my character shortcomings as a person who likes math and has spent his life reading terribly written hit-pieces about my favorite hobby, is that if you locked me in a room with someone who wrote like that, terrible things would happen. 6,000 psi is not 'two tons'. It's three tons of pressure per square inch. And the 6,000 psi figure isn't even right. It's more like ~5,500 psi. View Quote From other Sources - The pressure at the bottom of the Titanic is estimated to be 400 atmospheres – equal to 6000 PSI. Other sources says 5850 psi. I've seen 5,000 PSI and 5,500 PSI. |
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Maybe she's got a dinglehopper she can help fix it with.
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Quoted: In reality it's only 11 Rosie O'Donnels View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes |
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Quoted: One of my character shortcomings as a person who likes math and has spent his life reading terribly written hit-pieces about my favorite hobby, is that if you locked me in a room with someone who wrote like that, terrible things would happen. 6,000 psi is not 'two tons'. It's three tons of pressure per square inch. And the 6,000 psi figure isn't even right. It's more like ~5,500 psi. View Quote 14.7 lbs psi at sea level doubles every 33ft or so...12,500 ft deep dive...5,590 psi roughly right? 2,000 lbs = 1 ton 4,000 lbs = 2 tons 6,000 lbs = 3 tons and I am really dumb at math... |
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Former Titan passenger 'couldn't get comfortable with design'
Missing Sub: Former Titan passenger 'couldn't get comfortable with design' |
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Quoted: Some twit on one of the MSM news channels described it as something like "the weight of three Empire State Buildings on your chest." View Quote lol. {nerd mode} That's off by orders of magnitude. By my calculations it's more like six average ranch houses sitting on your chest. {/nm} |
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Quoted: We care about them too right? https://www.aljazeera.com/amp/news/2023/6/22/syrians-among-the-hundreds-dead-in-shipwreck-off-coast-of-greece View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: We care about them too right? week after an overloaded boat carrying hundreds of refugees and migrants sank off the western coast of Greece, details of those feared dead are emerging. Most of those on board – estimates range from 400 to 750 – were Pakistanis. Dozens of Egyptians, Syrians and Palestinians also risked their lives for an opportunity to reach Europe on the fishing trawler that departed from Libya. https://www.aljazeera.com/amp/news/2023/6/22/syrians-among-the-hundreds-dead-in-shipwreck-off-coast-of-greece I feel for them as humans. I'm also under no illusion that the people paying to import as many of them as possible into Europe actually give a shit if a boat capsizes every now and then killing a couple hundred....in fact they may view it as a positive thing, let a small number die in order to play on people's sympathies to make it even easier to bring more in. Same for the people getting left to die in the Sonora desert. |
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Quoted: Yeah I haven't gotten a fixed idea on the number of times either. But this is Expedition 5, iirc. And assuming like 12-15 guests per expedition, that means about 5 dives per expedition minimum. Plus some extras along the way, perhaps. I don't think it's only been down like 5 times, but I could be wrong. View Quote If "Number of times its been down" = X, then "number of times its come back up" = X-1 |
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Quoted: The fact that a mechanical failsafe didn't send it bobbing back to the surface after 20-24 hours, tops, is hard to ignore. View Quote Dont see a whole lot of extra tanks of compressed air on that puppy either for breathing or floatation... There should have been several redundant layers of recovery for it in case of failure... Guess they planned for catastrophic failure instead...it was like a kamakazi version of voyage to the bottom of the sea... |
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It's good to know that the empire state building weighs just under 1 ton.. Humans are terrifying....
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Quoted: I know most of us feel bad about 4 people dying in that machine. But is there anyone who feels bad for Cockton Rush(ceo oceangate)? I for one do not. View Quote It depends. If the problem was external (ie. tangled in net or debris) and not a result of the way he ran the operation then maybe the only thing he is guilty of is not being more blunt with the paying passengers. The waiver they signed said "you could die" but the waiver you sign to get into six flags or rent a car says the same thing. If it said "this sub does not comply with commonly accepted standards regarding it's design and construction and is considered an experimental design" then I would 100% be on the CEO's side. Put another way, I think his only fault is that he glossed over the risk to paying passengers. Innovation and risk taking is necessary, but the risk must be accepted by the risk takers with full awareness of what the risks are. |
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Quoted: Huge difference. A boat full of refugees capsizing and drowning is extremely sad. I'd bet most of them had no illusions that their trip would be a sure thing. They're doing it because the risk was greater in the place they were leaving would kill them for their beliefs or ethnicity than rolling the dice on a rickety old fishing boat. "I might die if I ride this shitty boat, but I'll DEFINITELY die if I DON'T get on this shitty boat." They are taking the best calculated risk they know how, and praying that cobbled mess gets them to freedom. It's doing their level best and praying that God handles the rest. A Harbor Freight submarine full of cheapskate hubris-filled thrill-seekers who clearly HAD the resources to do the best humanly possible, yet CHOSE NOT TO, is another matter entirely. View Quote Yeah but what the cost of a ticket on that ride...$1,000,000 total for all passengers?...tidy little profit if all went well... |
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Quoted: I have also noticed on various social media people (commies so not really people) making comments about not caring about billionaire assholes. This is after those billionaire assholes pandered to the left by not wanting to hire boring 50 year old white guys. Take note, rich people. Sucking leftist cock scores you nothing, you're still the enemy. View Quote |
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Quoted: If the main window is i deed acrylic and not polycarbonate, that right there leads to questions. Acrylic, may be optically more clear, there is a reason aircraft use polycarbonate. Acrylic doesn’t crackle as the idiot CEO says, it shatters like glass. There’s a good reason it’s not allowed to be used in race vehicles. View Quote Acrlic, actually IIRC a single acrylic company, makes the vast majority off submersible viewports. |
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Quoted: One of my character shortcomings as a person who likes math and has spent his life reading terribly written hit-pieces about my favorite hobby, is that if you locked me in a room with someone who wrote like that, terrible things would happen. 6,000 psi is not 'two tons'. It's three tons of pressure per square inch. And the 6,000 psi figure isn't even right. It's more like ~5,500 psi. View Quote |
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Quoted: 14.7 lbs psi at sea level doubles every 33ft or so...12,500 ft deep dive...5,590 psi roughly right? 2,000 lbs = 1 ton 4,000 lbs = 2 tons 6,000 lbs = 3 tons and I am really dumb at math... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: One of my character shortcomings as a person who likes math and has spent his life reading terribly written hit-pieces about my favorite hobby, is that if you locked me in a room with someone who wrote like that, terrible things would happen. 6,000 psi is not 'two tons'. It's three tons of pressure per square inch. And the 6,000 psi figure isn't even right. It's more like ~5,500 psi. 14.7 lbs psi at sea level doubles every 33ft or so...12,500 ft deep dive...5,590 psi roughly right? 2,000 lbs = 1 ton 4,000 lbs = 2 tons 6,000 lbs = 3 tons and I am really dumb at math... You need to then multiply by the specific gravity of sea water since it’s density is different than fresh water. |
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The S.S. Diversity was somehow less safe than carnival ride put together by methed out traveling 50yr old white men.
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Quoted: Yeah but what the cost of a ticket on that ride...$1,000,000 total for all passengers?...tidy little profit if all went well... View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Huge difference. A boat full of refugees capsizing and drowning is extremely sad. I'd bet most of them had no illusions that their trip would be a sure thing. They're doing it because the risk was greater in the place they were leaving would kill them for their beliefs or ethnicity than rolling the dice on a rickety old fishing boat. "I might die if I ride this shitty boat, but I'll DEFINITELY die if I DON'T get on this shitty boat." They are taking the best calculated risk they know how, and praying that cobbled mess gets them to freedom. It's doing their level best and praying that God handles the rest. A Harbor Freight submarine full of cheapskate hubris-filled thrill-seekers who clearly HAD the resources to do the best humanly possible, yet CHOSE NOT TO, is another matter entirely. Yeah but what the cost of a ticket on that ride...$1,000,000 total for all passengers?...tidy little profit if all went well... Unless this is all a hoax. |
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I wish Communists, Socialists, Marxists, Despots, Fascists, Child Sex Predators, Gun Grabbers, and Authoritarians dead.
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Quoted: Im not a marine architect, but I have rebuilt a few hulls in my time and know FRP pretty well. The issue I see is that there would be no way for that ring to have a perfectly evenly distributed amount of sealer/bonding agent between itself and the CF tube. On the surface of the water that would not be a problem at all. but when you get to the depths of the titanic, with those pressures involved and the temperature is around 33deg. I honestly don't understand why they didn't just make it all out of Stainless Steel or Iron, I mean who Gives a shit how much it weighs. Or even better, why not all out of CF View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: I really would like to know what bonding agent they used for the Ti ring to the CF tube. I bet they used plexus lmao...now that would be funny It definitely looked like some kind of fuzor or seam sealer type of product Im not a marine architect, but I have rebuilt a few hulls in my time and know FRP pretty well. The issue I see is that there would be no way for that ring to have a perfectly evenly distributed amount of sealer/bonding agent between itself and the CF tube. On the surface of the water that would not be a problem at all. but when you get to the depths of the titanic, with those pressures involved and the temperature is around 33deg. I honestly don't understand why they didn't just make it all out of Stainless Steel or Iron, I mean who Gives a shit how much it weighs. Or even better, why not all out of CF Because carbon fiber's best strength is in the tensile strength of it's fibers. I.E. when they are being pulled apart, NOT when being compressed. Think about it like this... A tire has cords in it to add strength to the rubber. They are arranged so that the pressure inside the tire is pushing against the tensile strength of those cords. This is why tires can hold the high pressures they do. The rubber alone wouldn't be sufficient. Now what happens if you have a higher pressure OUTSIDE the tire than inside? You are now relying on the strength of the rubber and the mass of the cords for the tire to hold it's shape. The tensile strength of the cords is no longer relevant. At all. Whole different ballgame of forces at work here. This is why carbon fiber CAN make very good pressure vessels, but only when the pressure is working against the tensile strength of the fibers (when the pressure is INSIDE the vessel). This is also why carbon fiber is a bad plan for making submarine hulls. Crude explanation I know, but hope it makes sense. |
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Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Huge difference. A boat full of refugees capsizing and drowning is extremely sad. I'd bet most of them had no illusions that their trip would be a sure thing. They're doing it because the risk was greater in the place they were leaving would kill them for their beliefs or ethnicity than rolling the dice on a rickety old fishing boat. "I might die if I ride this shitty boat, but I'll DEFINITELY die if I DON'T get on this shitty boat." They are taking the best calculated risk they know how, and praying that cobbled mess gets them to freedom. It's doing their level best and praying that God handles the rest. A Harbor Freight submarine full of cheapskate hubris-filled thrill-seekers who clearly HAD the resources to do the best humanly possible, yet CHOSE NOT TO, is another matter entirely. Yeah but what the cost of a ticket on that ride...$1,000,000 total for all passengers?...tidy little profit if all went well... Unless this is all a hoax. If they did make 4 successful dives to that depth in that thing, that in itself would be the miracle at play here. |
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It's only June, I wonder if someone is going to top this for 'Darwin Award of the year'?
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Quoted: They are. A bit of dark humor is one thing. I'm not in love with society's glee in mocking this. I mean should the dirt poor in trailer parks celebrate every time a plane crashes with a bunch of wealthy Americans who can afford to fly on it? View Quote The dirt poor from trailer parks in the United States fly every day. |
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Quoted: Acrlic, actually IIRC a single acrylic company, makes the vast majority off submersible viewports. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: If the main window is i deed acrylic and not polycarbonate, that right there leads to questions. Acrylic, may be optically more clear, there is a reason aircraft use polycarbonate. Acrylic doesn’t crackle as the idiot CEO says, it shatters like glass. There’s a good reason it’s not allowed to be used in race vehicles. Acrlic, actually IIRC a single acrylic company, makes the vast majority off submersible viewports. Yeah the company where they should have bought their submersible from uses full Acrylic hulls. They have a few models that could make it down to the Titanic. Pretty interesting that they would decide to try to make their own rather than get one of these or have one built https://tritonsubs.com/subs/ultradeep/ |
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Quoted: I have also noticed on various social media people (commies so not really people) making comments about not caring about billionaire assholes. This is after those billionaire assholes pandered to the left by not wanting to hire boring 50 year old white guys. Take note, rich people. Sucking leftist cock scores you nothing, you're still the enemy. View Quote Those billionaires would probably rather be stuck in that sub breathing CO2 and shit fumes than stuck in a room with you or me. |
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Quoted: It's far more believable that the S.S. AliExpress just finally succumbed to the laws of physics. If they did make 4 successful dives to that depth in that thing, that in itself would be the miracle at play here. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: Huge difference. A boat full of refugees capsizing and drowning is extremely sad. I'd bet most of them had no illusions that their trip would be a sure thing. They're doing it because the risk was greater in the place they were leaving would kill them for their beliefs or ethnicity than rolling the dice on a rickety old fishing boat. "I might die if I ride this shitty boat, but I'll DEFINITELY die if I DON'T get on this shitty boat." They are taking the best calculated risk they know how, and praying that cobbled mess gets them to freedom. It's doing their level best and praying that God handles the rest. A Harbor Freight submarine full of cheapskate hubris-filled thrill-seekers who clearly HAD the resources to do the best humanly possible, yet CHOSE NOT TO, is another matter entirely. Yeah but what the cost of a ticket on that ride...$1,000,000 total for all passengers?...tidy little profit if all went well... Unless this is all a hoax. If they did make 4 successful dives to that depth in that thing, that in itself would be the miracle at play here. It's just that it's so creepy and totally ironic though. |
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Quoted: I have also noticed on various social media people (commies so not really people) making comments about not caring about billionaire assholes. This is after those billionaire assholes pandered to the left by not wanting to hire boring 50 year old white guys. Take note, rich people. Sucking leftist cock scores you nothing, you're still the enemy. View Quote But if you just agree to this one common sense gun law the left will let you keep your guns...AMIRIGHT. NOPE! Look at me here fucking arrowheads with sharp edges are banned. It's the consevative's handicap. The left wil accepept ANY incremantal gain when a conservative is only happy with perfection. |
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Quoted: If the main window is i deed acrylic and not polycarbonate, that right there leads to questions. Acrylic, may be optically more clear, there is a reason aircraft use polycarbonate. Acrylic doesn’t crackle as the idiot CEO says, it shatters like glass. There’s a good reason it’s not allowed to be used in race vehicles. View Quote When he talks about the sounds the acrylic makes, he probably has foundation for those statements - like microphones in use during pressure testing. |
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Quoted: I’m going with that. The launch ship had to have some good sonar and even that deep heard something. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: There is a pretty reliable Instagram out there who had posted that sonar had led them to believe it imploded long ago. CognitveMarine on IG I’m going with that. The launch ship had to have some good sonar and even that deep heard something. Attached File |
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If we are gonna do tourism visits to the wreck of the Titanic why do they not anchor a buoy near it? They could then follow the buoy anchor line down and know that they end up near the wreck. Could even put an automated weather station, wave height reporter, and a navigation beacon on it.
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Quoted: From other Sources - The pressure at the bottom of the Titanic is estimated to be 400 atmospheres – equal to 6000 PSI. Other sources says 5850 psi. I've seen 5,000 PSI and 5,500 PSI. View Quote I posted the actual calculations earlier in the thread. Water doesn't really compress (in theory it does, in reality even at 12,500' it does not), so density is pretty constant, at around 64 pounds per cubic foot. That's the figure I used earlier. And even at deep sea pressures it's only going to be a little more than 65 pounds per cubic foot. Let's use 65 as a very reasonable average. Such a cubic foot has 144 inches of footprint, and 65/144 is 0.451388888888 PSI. The titanic sits on the ocean floor at very nearly 12,500 feet. 12,500 * 0.45138888888 gives us ~5642 PSI of pressure. The actual pressure, were you to somehow take a reliable measuring device to the sea floor by the Titanic wreck, would be very, very, very close to this 5642 figure, possibly slightly less, possibly slightly more. The figures of 5000 or 5500 or 5850 or 6000 are not estimates, they are just rounded numbers. Sort of like 'we searched an area about Two Connecticuts in size'. I suppose you could argue that 5500 or 6000 are reasonably 'rounded' figures. The '2' isn't significant. The '40' might not even be significant. But the numbers aren't rounded because of a lack of understanding of how to calculate pressure at depth; they're rounded because they're targeted to an audience who doesn't know, or generally even care, about details. Just throw out a big scary number. *shrug* |
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Quoted: One of my character shortcomings as a person who likes math and has spent his life reading terribly written hit-pieces about my favorite hobby, is that if you locked me in a room with someone who wrote like that, terrible things would happen. 6,000 psi is not 'two tons'. It's three tons of pressure per square inch. And the 6,000 psi figure isn't even right. It's more like ~5,500 psi. View Quote Just calculated it right before reading this... 5,568.181818 PSI at 12,500 ft down but what's the difference at that point. |
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Quoted: I posted the actual calculations earlier in the thread. Water doesn't really compress (in theory it does, in reality even at 12,500' it does not), so density is pretty constant, at around 64 pounds per cubic foot. That's the figure I used earlier. And even at deep sea pressures it's only going to be a little more than 65 pounds per cubic foot. Let's use 65 as a very reasonable average. Such a cubic foot has 144 inches of footprint, and 65/144 is 0.451388888888 PSI. The titanic sits on the ocean floor at very nearly 12,500 feet. 12,500 * 0.45138888888 gives us ~5642 PSI of pressure. The actual pressure, were you to somehow take a reliable measuring device to the sea floor by the Titanic wreck, would be very, very, very close to this 5642 figure, possibly slightly less, possibly slightly more. The figures of 5000 or 5500 or 5850 or 6000 are not estimates, they are just rounded numbers. Sort of like 'we searched an area about Two Connecticuts in size'. I suppose you could argue that 5500 or 6000 are reasonably 'rounded' figures. The '2' isn't significant. The '40' might not even be significant. But the numbers aren't rounded because of a lack of understanding of how to calculate pressure at depth; they're rounded because they're targeted to an audience who doesn't know, or generally even care, about details. Just throw out a big scary number. *shrug* View Quote |
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Quoted: If we are gonna do tourism visits to the wreck of the Titanic why do they not anchor a buoy near it? They could then follow the buoy anchor line down and know that they end up near the wreck. Could even put an automated weather station, wave height reporter, and a navigation beacon on it. View Quote Now you've done it.. |
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