Rolex presents: The Trieste's Deepest Dive (Extended)

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  • Опубликовано: 12 мар 2012
  • In 1960, Lieutenant Don Walsh of the US Navy and Swiss oceanographer Jacques Piccard navigated the Trieste bathyscaphe into the Mariana Trench. They accomplished a feat so incredible that it forever raised the bar for deep-ocean exploration.
    #Rolex #Perpetual
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Комментарии • 303

  • @drpoundsign
    @drpoundsign Год назад +149

    SO...in 1960, they had sense enough to make a spherical steel submersible.
    TODAY...not so Much.

    • @Frostbytedigital
      @Frostbytedigital Год назад +18

      Comparing a vessel that went 3x times deeper is nowhere near the same pressure. I agree oceangate made a huge mistake using the material and shape that they did but companies like triton today ARE using tried and true spherical design on new crafts in 2023. Rolex also helped fund the dsv limiting factor which has been everywhere deep.

    • @markmcfarland2579
      @markmcfarland2579 Год назад +8

      Difference between Europeans and Americans

    • @TheNewNumberTw0
      @TheNewNumberTw0 Год назад +19

      @@markmcfarland2579 I think you are wrong. One of the people in the Trieste was a US Navy lieutenant. Project Nekton was an American project to modify the Triese to go this deep. I think the problem lies with the Oceangate people adopting the "Silicon Valley" attitude. There is so much similarity between their CEO and Elizabeth Holmes....

    • @esleiterjaquez7800
      @esleiterjaquez7800 Год назад +6

      @@Frostbytedigital so of they went 3 times deeper it only makes it harder, how you say dont compare if ocean gate had it easier?

    • @kernfgr
      @kernfgr Год назад +3

      Yep!
      Made from the best German Krupp steel .
      The sphere had been forged by the German Krupp works in Essen from a nickel-chromium-molybdenum steel and weighed around 14 tons. The wall thickness was nearly 4,7 inches, around the windows even 7 inches. Today outside USA an original test casting with a true-to-life interior can be seen in the Deutsches Museum in Munich.

  • @Rob1066-
    @Rob1066- Год назад +96

    I don't think they used a game controller.

  • @Carlos1618033
    @Carlos1618033 Год назад +29

    This is a proper submersible, no clowns were involved in its making.

  • @bruchett4799
    @bruchett4799 Год назад +39

    We talk more about the first men in the moon than the only 2 people who went to the deepest part of the earth.

    • @JoshKosh08
      @JoshKosh08 11 дней назад +1

      You mean 27 people...

  • @iAmJoshC
    @iAmJoshC Год назад +49

    It's Crazy that in 1960 we reached the bottom of the Challenger Deep (10.900 meters) and in 2023 we sadly witness a deadly failure at 3800 meters . What This Trieste accomplished kinda reminds me of ancient egyptians Who built the pyramids several thousands of years ago and now in 2023 we would not be able to replicate It

    • @aitortilla5128
      @aitortilla5128 Год назад +16

      That's because behind the Trieste there was a brilliant engineer and behind Oceangate there were only some amateurs.

    • @iAmJoshC
      @iAmJoshC Год назад +1

      @@aitortilla5128 yeah sure, but honestly Stockton had a aerospace eng degree @Princeton, he wasn't stupid or amateur. I think he definitely had an expertise but the problem Is that he bypassed rules in order to spend less Money and less time , and Also that aerospace engineering Is not (Sub)marine engineering. A very big difference. A true amateur would have imploded much earlier, probably at his First descent

    • @_dude..
      @_dude.. Год назад +4

      We could make the pyramids today. Except they would fall down after a decade because they're made cheap.

    • @deenhanslo8433
      @deenhanslo8433 Год назад

      ​@@aitortilla5128Oceangate / Bill gate 🤔

    • @MitchellElder
      @MitchellElder Год назад

      that was the first submarine implosion in the history of mankind. that ocmpany was warned not to send people in it. .. google DSV Limiting Factor and watch james cameron deep sea challenger .

  • @DerdOn0ner
    @DerdOn0ner Год назад +28

    Ocean Gate should have watched this. They might have learned a thing or two

    • @perbrandt8772
      @perbrandt8772 8 месяцев назад

      Chances are they wouldn't have learned anything regardless.

  • @Incognito-jx5gr
    @Incognito-jx5gr Год назад +41

    Don Walsh definitely has a right to say of not being optimistic of current submersible rescue mission unless there's a miracle!

  • @yoshy4072
    @yoshy4072 Год назад +151

    I read about the Trieste decades ago, but it was still an amazing achievement considering it was done in 1960.

    • @Jump-n-smash
      @Jump-n-smash Год назад +10

      And they had technology, back in the sixties, to open the hatch from inside! Unbelievable!

    • @kinggeorges625
      @kinggeorges625 Год назад +6

      @@zeussx2120 the previous comment refers to Ocean Gate submbersible which sank recently, which was not able to open the hatch from inside despite being built in 2022

    • @Nikki.Penguin
      @Nikki.Penguin Год назад +3

      ​@@zeussx2120The problem is, when you come up and they don't find you immediately and the oxygen is running low. When you can open the lid from the inside, you don't suffocate.

    • @jacobkudrowich
      @jacobkudrowich Год назад +1

      ​@@Nikki.Penguinnot a problem if you've been dead this whole time from violent deep sea implosion.

    • @Ezekiel903
      @Ezekiel903 11 месяцев назад +1

      The Trieste was a bathyscaphe designed by Auguste Piccard an Buono, a submarine built specifically for deep sea exploration. Piccard first developed plans for this underwater vehicle in 1952, it was manufactured in Italy and launched on August 1, the Navy bought this The Trieste was a bathyscaphe designed by Auguste Piccard, a submarine built specifically for deep sea exploration. Piccard first developed plans for this underwater vehicle in 1952, it was manufactured in Italy and launched on August 1, 1953.

  • @JustHackingAround
    @JustHackingAround Год назад +35

    Incredible this was accomplished in the 60s. And how many lives were lost in this voyage? None.

    • @Dandelion_flight
      @Dandelion_flight Год назад +3

      Yeah my curiosity sent me here... and I am so shocked to learn about the Trieste going down to 11km in 1960 successfully.

    • @stevepalpatine2828
      @stevepalpatine2828 Год назад

      Well, one of the mechanics did stub his toe getting Trieste back onboard, does that count?
      Don't laugh.
      Poor guy lost a toe nail.

    • @msl5253
      @msl5253 Год назад

      @Justhackingaround
      Apparently; none!!

    • @Tempusverum
      @Tempusverum Год назад +2

      Lives lost in Mariana Trench: 0
      Lives lost on Moon: 0
      1960’s tech is seriously under-rated

  • @panzerblower6977
    @panzerblower6977 Год назад +9

    Rolex just casualy drop the longest ad ever

  • @ssss-df5qz
    @ssss-df5qz Год назад +76

    Crazy that they went to the limit back then, and the modern day sub that went missing just this week only a 3rd of the way.

    • @Grlsdntcry
      @Grlsdntcry Год назад

      Thats because they were actually qualified and apart of the Navy. Simply more educated in those times than a fraud who built a submersible from camper world and was told it was not safe did not meet the criteria.

    • @travisc1367
      @travisc1367 Год назад +1

      Absolutely a reason we don’t do this or go to the moon anymore. It has nothing to do with money either. Think hard.

    • @badbunny371
      @badbunny371 Год назад +28

      the one that went missing is not a modern day sub its a budget sub at home

    • @Tyler-bb5zk
      @Tyler-bb5zk Год назад +14

      crazy what happens when you think youre a genius breaking submarine regulations and standards

    • @rajithaabeykoon3068
      @rajithaabeykoon3068 Год назад +19

      that's because old white men built it

  • @tofucanmakeyourgaysonpregnant
    @tofucanmakeyourgaysonpregnant Год назад +32

    Desinged by Swiss, built by Italia, owned by USA. Man those old stuff perform better than current one

    • @furorceltica185
      @furorceltica185 Год назад +5

      This is why profit oriented mindset must NEVER get close to this line of work. Cutting cost is the last thing you want to do

    • @valkyries-mi2sx
      @valkyries-mi2sx Год назад

      The fundamental part the sphere itself was done by germans, just like the moon rocket has been done by a german ...

    • @normaluser5755
      @normaluser5755 11 месяцев назад

      ​@valkyries-mi2sx The original one was made in Italy. Later, it was replaced by one made in Germany.

  • @RiverBottomBoys.
    @RiverBottomBoys. Год назад +39

    Id pay $200k to ride in that sub.

    • @weldonpinder7295
      @weldonpinder7295 Месяц назад

      I'd pay that not to. The black abyss scares me to death. Not only that the dangers alone of that depth or any depth to cause that sub to be crushed is insane

  • @allopez3166
    @allopez3166 Год назад +3

    You couldn't pay me enough to go down that far. Some people are brave and crazy at the same time. I'm just crazy.

  • @johnsnow1749
    @johnsnow1749 Год назад +52

    I was wondering why this was presented by Rolex.

    • @versacekarate996
      @versacekarate996 Год назад +10

      i think they make a watch called the Submariner

    • @SamuelLanghorn
      @SamuelLanghorn Год назад +31

      c'mon my friend.
      they had their watch go down with Trieste and survive the pressure. If this is not good marketing, what is?

    • @WutThaFuh
      @WutThaFuh Год назад +6

      Because the Casio G-Shock was not yet available.

    • @iwantmyvanback
      @iwantmyvanback 3 дня назад

      Only time will tell. (Pun intended)

  • @AirSofter131995
    @AirSofter131995 2 года назад +109

    My grandfather spent part of his time in the navy on the Trieste. Still got the Rolex anchor pendant and submariner watch to prove it! Thanks for putting this documentary up. It's cool to get a glimpse into what his life was possibly like

  • @matt7iron
    @matt7iron Год назад +4

    I remember as a Kid in da 60's and 70's the greatest Frogman, the greatest diver in my eyes was Jacques Cousteau, I remember him on that TV show coming outta the water and removing that frogman oxygen mask on board the ship, I never learned how to swim and I am terrified of Water, and I've never had my head submerged under any water, nor my body floating in any water, ive not even been under bathtub water, I have respect for anyone who dives into water.

  • @justjames1111
    @justjames1111 Год назад +20

    Such a remarkable achievement and even more so when we look at our modern technology and yet, over 60 yrs later, nobody has been back.

  • @georgemallory797
    @georgemallory797 Год назад +39

    I cannot believe I took this long to finally learn about this other than the vehicle's name and the date. This was fantastic. America has done some really neat things.

    • @lucasamtab
      @lucasamtab Год назад +14

      is a Swiss-designed, Italian-built deep-diving research bathyscaphe

    • @TheCrazyracer1984
      @TheCrazyracer1984 Год назад

      Yeah, I'm more surprised we can do it now. Funding and red tape. They weren't exactly in the stone age.

    • @CR1T1KaL714
      @CR1T1KaL714 Год назад +1

      @@lucasamtab Yeah and it was the Americans who set up the dive and an American who piloted it so stfu

    • @CrucialConflict.
      @CrucialConflict. Год назад +1

      @@lucasamtab Following its acquisition by the United States Navy, Trieste was modified extensively by the Naval Electronics Laboratory, San Diego, California.
      The mission was accomplished, all thanks to our beautiful and powerful nation. Amen! (as always, throughout history) 💪👀👍

    • @johanconradie2120
      @johanconradie2120 10 месяцев назад

      you can't disprove it or prove it!!!

  • @aligajani
    @aligajani Год назад +5

    Difference between nation state building stuff and private companies building stuff.

  • @5LAY3R
    @5LAY3R Год назад +3

    As the old saying goes:
    "When youre down, the only way to go is-more down??? 🤣

  • @Trumppower
    @Trumppower Год назад +8

    Who's watching this after the junk "Titan" incident?

  • @anovosedlik
    @anovosedlik 4 месяца назад +2

    Now you know why your grandparents are always like 'they don't make 'em like they used to!'

  • @jordanalbano9780
    @jordanalbano9780 Год назад +3

    It’s not the machine, it’s the team behind it

  • @thegeneral1648
    @thegeneral1648 Год назад +13

    Who’s watching this over what’s going on with the titanic sub, hit like

  • @FlandraLabs
    @FlandraLabs 2 года назад +79

    A spacecraft is built to withstand G-forces and pressure changes from 0-1 atmospheres of pressure. This craft was designed to handle a change of 1-1100 atmospheres. Insane.

    • @man-by9iz
      @man-by9iz Год назад +3

      Spacecraft have to be light

    • @Ezekiel903
      @Ezekiel903 Год назад +9

      build in Italy

    • @codydolphin
      @codydolphin Год назад +7

      @@Ezekiel903 Italian engineering

    • @PhilippSchuler-pk2lc
      @PhilippSchuler-pk2lc Год назад +2

      @@codydolphin nah was mostly swiss engineering

    • @valkyries-mi2sx
      @valkyries-mi2sx Год назад +1

      @@PhilippSchuler-pk2lc but you all do understand that the sphere itself the most fundamental part was done by germans, right !? ...

  • @cheryshstrong
    @cheryshstrong Год назад +308

    Is everyone here because their curiosity of the oceans depth being sparked after hearing of the titan submersible?

    • @jacobdowty6885
      @jacobdowty6885 Год назад +5

      Yes😭

    • @MontChillin
      @MontChillin Год назад +8

      Yeah. But I remember learning about the Picarrds in school.

    • @tractorbasil5713
      @tractorbasil5713 Год назад +12

      My curiosity imploded

    • @micahrutland9021
      @micahrutland9021 Год назад +11

      I've been obsessed with this subject my whole life, and it's cool to see many others get into it, even if it's because of a terrible event like the Titan.

    • @prathameshkotkar6108
      @prathameshkotkar6108 Год назад +3

      ​@@tractorbasil5713that's very dark

  • @weldonpinder7295
    @weldonpinder7295 Месяц назад +1

    The moment i heard that big bang down there i wouldve said get me the heck outta here

    • @mikec6014
      @mikec6014 Месяц назад

      Same I'd probably die of a heart attack if I heard a loud bang at that depth

  • @GTP2-zg9tn
    @GTP2-zg9tn Год назад +9

    French/Swiss Engineered Invented, Italian Built and American Captained. Talk about INCLUSION AND DIVERSITY!!!!

  • @skeelo69
    @skeelo69 2 года назад +57

    Makes you wonder why Rolex have not made a Trieste special edition diver watch with the case back inscribed with this historic event, this would be an instant best seller amongst the dive watch community and collectors alike. A special watch face that includes the outline of the Trieste and a light blue to a deep black.

    • @BigSteppaa.
      @BigSteppaa. Год назад +1

      I like the way you think.

    • @spectra789
      @spectra789 Год назад

      They actually made It...

    • @tomaspat4392
      @tomaspat4392 Год назад

      It was made but only for people who worked on it.

  • @drips1030
    @drips1030 Месяц назад +1

    Actually sweaty as they reach the bottom 🤣 I can't think of anything worse.

  • @bradgray4360
    @bradgray4360 Год назад +5

    I guess you can't beat their record because that's the deepest part of the ocean isn't it .man what guts but to have faith in your training and especially the Trieste and for creatures that you could crush with your hands but yet survive that far down

  • @nellythree
    @nellythree 6 месяцев назад

    Found my way here from tiktok, saw a video about how deep the ocean is and saw the word trieste I never heard before...love learning ❤

  • @LJSkyistBigskyMT
    @LJSkyistBigskyMT Год назад +7

    Excellent documentary.

  • @agresorpacheco4772
    @agresorpacheco4772 10 месяцев назад

    Nice👍👍👍👍 from Cagayan valley Philippines🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭 lives in Madrid Spain🇪🇸🇪🇸🇪🇸 Europe

  • @neryvilcaapaza6546
    @neryvilcaapaza6546 2 года назад +5

    Impresionante

  • @duomaxwell3613
    @duomaxwell3613 Год назад +3

    a 1960 tech vs Oceangate....

  • @MM-xp8vs
    @MM-xp8vs Год назад +1

    Just Amazing

  • @shopsshire9282
    @shopsshire9282 21 день назад

    Fun fact: Rolex engineered a Deepsea Challenger watch which was on one of the robotic arms of the Green Deepesea Challenge Submersible that James Cameron dove to the Challenge Deep March 26, 2012. The recorded depth was 10, 908 meters or 35,787 feet .

  • @admiralpercy
    @admiralpercy 2 года назад +16

    "Look at this wonder of nature!"
    *detonates bombs in it*
    *releases gasoline into the water on purpose*

  • @user-kz7kj2un6i
    @user-kz7kj2un6i Год назад +7

    After the titan accident I always search for water videos diving etc 😌
    Rip to those 5 souls 🥺

  • @joemckie8178
    @joemckie8178 2 года назад +7

    How True !
    Those Guys were "Heroes" !

  • @job38four10
    @job38four10 Год назад +2

    I'm on here because of the recent Ocean Gate submersible disaster near Titanic and everyone is making a big deal of how dangerous it is going down 2 miles to the Titanic.
    Then I watch this video of 60 years ago, first I ever heard of something like this, 2 people going down 7 miles below the ocean and back, WHAT THE HECK!!!!!!!!!! This is 60 years ago, 7 miles down and back, so now in the the year 2023 AD it's still highly dangerous to go just 2 miles down in the ocean. This dont make since when one looks at a 1960 Chevy pickup vs a 2023 Chevy pickup.............

  • @idontevenlikehavingagoogle8077
    @idontevenlikehavingagoogle8077 Год назад +22

    superior old white man engineering

  • @nickname2729
    @nickname2729 Год назад +1

    Omg im cries 😢

  • @mathewdee1632
    @mathewdee1632 Год назад +15

    What was the Big Bang ? My soul would have left my body at that point

    • @joaoalbertodosanjosgomes1536
      @joaoalbertodosanjosgomes1536 Год назад +2

      I prefer the Big Band.

    • @prod1kgado
      @prod1kgado Год назад

      Probably crash into a whale

    • @Just.A.T-Rex
      @Just.A.T-Rex Год назад +6

      The bang turned out to be a secondary Plexiglas window in the entry tube cracking from changing sea pressures, though it posed no mortal threat.

  • @abacojoe9353
    @abacojoe9353 2 года назад +49

    That was great! I remember reading about this in National Geographic as a kid back in the early '60s.

  • @Phil.2-10
    @Phil.2-10 Год назад +2

    7:30 The cab (sphere) was NOT made in Italy. It was made at the Krupp steel works in Essen, Germany.

  • @addisonfrance
    @addisonfrance 2 года назад +54

    I wish they taught stuff like this in school

  • @Cameraville
    @Cameraville 2 года назад

    Amazing

  • @dionst.michael1482
    @dionst.michael1482 Год назад

    Don’t know how I ended up here but glad I watched. Interesting

  • @yanelitipochurata7930
    @yanelitipochurata7930 2 года назад +4

    Perfecto 👍

  • @moonlightfitz
    @moonlightfitz Год назад +7

    Incredible.

  • @Yungbeck
    @Yungbeck Год назад +2

    Here watching this after the Titan debacle.

  • @terra2805
    @terra2805 Год назад +2

    More men have walked on the moon (supposedly lol) than have been to the very deepest depths of the ocean. It's a sobering thought.

  • @evolanomrac9531
    @evolanomrac9531 2 года назад +3

    I wanna go there and never come back on land

  • @biplobprasad7354
    @biplobprasad7354 2 года назад

    31 mm watch liked Happy 2022* Our Rolex,

  • @jimfisk4474
    @jimfisk4474 6 месяцев назад

    Supposedly there's a hollow Earth that needs to be explored hundreds of miles down!

  • @louisfkoorts5590
    @louisfkoorts5590 11 месяцев назад

    I came back here... (Figuratively)
    After the Titan incident.
    But I was "here" a few days before it happened as well...

  • @barabolak
    @barabolak Год назад

    Great video!

  • @scarpography
    @scarpography 5 месяцев назад

    Love to see they used Trieste, my city's name for the sub

  • @mts7334
    @mts7334 Год назад

    Amazing Humans

  • @msl5253
    @msl5253 Год назад +1

    Looks like Ocean Gate, should of had a Trieste!!

  • @danilofelixxx
    @danilofelixxx Год назад +2

    Eu sou o comentário em português que você está procurando 😂 👏

  • @babyblu5590
    @babyblu5590 Год назад +4

    You need these guys to handle Titanic stuff.

  • @Zzenosg
    @Zzenosg 5 месяцев назад

    Not a single time Trieste was pronounced right, but still a good video

  • @md.muradhussainkhan592
    @md.muradhussainkhan592 28 дней назад

    many human fears just the water level above his own height, and where is 35000+ ft can anyone imagine.

  • @Phil.2-10
    @Phil.2-10 Год назад +4

    17:16 The crew maneuvered the Trieste only to 4 m above the seabed, which probably served as a safety distance. The Trieste did therefore not "settle" on the bottom of Challenger Deep.

  • @indahbarca2967
    @indahbarca2967 2 года назад +1

    🔥

  • @a1lady88
    @a1lady88 2 года назад +10

    6:40 that tan line 😍🥰🤣

  • @joefersonmendozaade1663
    @joefersonmendozaade1663 2 года назад +2

    👏

  • @burakakkas4745
    @burakakkas4745 Год назад +5

    Humans are not even this close to bravery with today’s technology now compared to 60’s stone age technology

    • @Just.A.T-Rex
      @Just.A.T-Rex Год назад +1

      A movie director did it.

    • @vishveshtadsare3160
      @vishveshtadsare3160 Год назад

      Y don u go then instead of blabbering

    • @schlomoshekelstein908
      @schlomoshekelstein908 Год назад

      @@vishveshtadsare3160 r u talking about the oceangate? you know there's people dying in a sub right now in the challenger deep?

    • @realmoonknight
      @realmoonknight Год назад +2

      @@schlomoshekelstein908 titanic didn’t sink in the challenger deep area, hell its a different ocean

    • @WutThaFuh
      @WutThaFuh Год назад +1

      Schlomo's a little bit slow.

  • @johanconradie2120
    @johanconradie2120 10 месяцев назад

    like the moon landing YOU CANT DISPROVE!tbey never went so deep no ways

  • @zuniga3692
    @zuniga3692 3 года назад +22

    I saw this for school and I got scared for those 2 people

    • @tvcchuck
      @tvcchuck Год назад

      I'm 74 and was scared for them... I was 9 when they made the dive... it was a big news story. The last big human achievements were happening... it was great !

  • @ws9304
    @ws9304 2 года назад +10

    That documentary was deep.
    Im not. Sorry.

  • @olive6534
    @olive6534 3 года назад +17

    omg i could never

  • @HerkDylanJr
    @HerkDylanJr 2 года назад +104

    Definitely more scary than going to space, it’s never been attempted again I assume

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 Год назад +5

      James Cameron repeated it a few years ago.

    • @chrissy9997
      @chrissy9997 Год назад +4

      There have been a lot of manned dives this past decade starting from 2012. These days more people have been down there than on the moon. One guy has been down there loads of times.

    • @DreamCatcher-wg1bk
      @DreamCatcher-wg1bk Год назад

      A guy in a submersible call DSV limiting factor has been diving into the deepest of all the ocean depths
      In the recent years.

  • @seanemma9559
    @seanemma9559 Год назад

    Titian should’ve watched this video before heading down😊

  • @jimreplicant
    @jimreplicant Год назад

    From what I’ve read, the general consensus is that they did not see a fish swimming down there.

  • @lmbruguera
    @lmbruguera 3 года назад +13

    Rolex could spend some money and put subtitle on this video

  • @kamilebrahimoff3589
    @kamilebrahimoff3589 2 года назад +21

    A very good documentary on the deepest dive.

  • @PautaMusical
    @PautaMusical 2 года назад

    Woooooooow

  • @Ezekiel903
    @Ezekiel903 Год назад +5

    The Trieste was a bathyscaphe designed by Auguste Piccard and Giuseppe Buono, a submarine built specifically for deep sea exploration. Piccard first developed plans for this underwater vehicle in 1952, it was manufactured in Italy and launched on August 1, 1953

  • @derricksmith1140
    @derricksmith1140 3 года назад +80

    This is so awesome... My daughter is 11 an the mariana trench is all she talks about!

  • @gh00stbeard
    @gh00stbeard Год назад +1

    They were NOT the last. Go Navy!

  • @matthewmccracken5179
    @matthewmccracken5179 Год назад +1

    This is going to inginte the next gen of explorers 🎉

  • @Matt2chee
    @Matt2chee 2 года назад +5

    Honorable commitment to quality. I've always wanted one.

  • @botezsorinconstantin
    @botezsorinconstantin 3 года назад +29

    Breathtaking images!!! Thank you Rolex! 🙏

  • @indahbarca2967
    @indahbarca2967 2 года назад

    🙏

  • @y9oooo6149
    @y9oooo6149 Год назад +1

    You can tell its 1960 when their out to discover new life but thier sub dumps aviation fuel all over them before they leave 😂

  • @msl5253
    @msl5253 Год назад

    Looks like Ocean Gate, should have drove a Trieste!!

  • @chloe-hc3lg
    @chloe-hc3lg Год назад +2

    A balloon that goes down. It’s beautiful. It’s poetic. It’s not ran by touchscreens and Bluetooth.

    • @Tempusverum
      @Tempusverum Год назад

      Everything was manual, and the calculations mostly done by human computers

  • @SheffieldRock
    @SheffieldRock 6 месяцев назад

    12 People walked the moon, only 3 reached the bottom of the Challenger Deep. As evidenced by the OceanGate implosion, it is far more difficult to withstand 1100 bar than zero bar. A Rolex Deepsea watch will easily withstand it's 487.5 bar test pressure: The way it is engineered, increasing the pressure on the Ringlock assembly will actually improve waterproofness.

    • @dansv1
      @dansv1 5 месяцев назад +1

      22 people have descended to Challenger Deep. Victor Vescovo has made 15 descents.

    • @SheffieldRock
      @SheffieldRock 3 месяца назад

      It still remains way more challenging to engineer for reaching the deepest ocean. A perfect sphere rated at 12,000 bar would require titanium of 50-100 mm thick. The Apollo moon lander needed to withstand just 1/3rd bar...tin can aluminium did the job.

  • @1SpudderR
    @1SpudderR 10 месяцев назад

    Can That Fish survive at our surface level with Time phasing adjustments to atmospheric pressure! Go get that fish for Real life Comprehension!?

  • @moniqueisqueen8330
    @moniqueisqueen8330 Год назад +3

    Who else watching stuff like this after seeing the billionaires got lost in a sub

  • @shishi_anne
    @shishi_anne Год назад

    Hello everybody, I knew this information from the The Deep Sea website and i wanna go back this stuff cause of course its 2023, things didn't go well for that submarine. If only those billionaires could go submarine diving like these guys in the 60s

  • @1SpudderR
    @1SpudderR 10 месяцев назад

    The amazing thing is the camera (?) following the Flat fish at 30,000+ feet!? Get that fish and discover something amazing, would be to recognise LIFE- “Free from Artificial Survival technology’s!? NOW THAT’S THE REAL OVERLOOKED STORY!?

  • @tomnguyen3305
    @tomnguyen3305 2 года назад +22

    i thought outer space is scary, hell the ocean looks more terrifying

  • @morbidsasquatch9640
    @morbidsasquatch9640 Год назад +2

    These are the kinds of people that need to be on mount rushmore. Not presidents

  • @mydude3254
    @mydude3254 Год назад

    The Trieste had NO OUTSIDE imaging equipment. The story of the flat fish is a tall tale. There has been no evidence of any bony type of fish down at full ocean depth. Look it up.