At least it was quick and painless. The passengers didn't even know what was wrong with the Titan, but the CEO did, and didn't follow rules and fired someone for calling the problems out. This is a sad story.
Quick but they knew something was going wrong so panic probably ensued and you’re in this tight space so that probably increases the anxiety which is not a good feeling.
The passengers actually did know it some people even refused to go on because they knew that it was crap because the cow didn't hide anything and he was fully transparent with thenfact thst ut wasnt certified
@@romanrules007Some reports say that the sub tilted vertically for almost a minute at some point. Everyone got pinned down on top of one another helpless on the window side of the sub. It must have been terrifying.
@@LittleLulubee I'm not sure he did, I think he just deluded and tricked himself with his own nonsense and bluster. He was trying to create a new business model in underwater tourism, probably hoping to make a lot of money in the process and believed he was Captain Kirk exploring new frontiers. Be he seemed to have a lot of arrogance and hubris not wanting to listen to those trying to warn him about the dangers of what he was doing. If he did want to die that way he was also extremely inconsiderate about the others he took with him, especially the poor young lad who didn't even want to be there by sounds of it.
Let's establish this before people forget and think this was just the price payed for innovation. 1. He was told multiple times that carbon fiber doesn't do well under compression. 2. Despite that, he still bought unserviceable and expired carbon fiber filament from the aerospace industry. 3. He then didn't properly do the resin injection likely resulting in voids in the casting. 4. He didn't mechanically interface the titanium with the carbon fiber. He literally just glued it in place. 5. He ignored all lisencing and certifications because he could not meet them. 6. Used a glass window only rated for 1,300 meters while travelling down over 3000. This is what happens when you have more money than good sense. Edit: please check legaleagle's video on the topic. It was *much* worse than I thought.
THEY DID PRIORITIZE SAFETY OCEAN GATE IS A BILLION DOLLER COMPANY! If you where a police officer and someone shot you in the head instead of your bulletproof vest doesn’t mean your safety wasn’t prioritized, it just means something “Happened” 💀
Edit: Everyone is correcting me in the comments saying that everyone knew, and they heard the submarine break apart. Thank you for the info, but that's not what I'm getting at. In the video, there's a part where they send their last message, the vessel on top responds but gets no answer. That part, that is spine-chilling. The fact that the sub imploded in 1 millisecond without anyone knowing is just spine chilling. They're down in the depths of the ocean, and at anytime the titan can just shrink in an instant without anyone at the vessel knowing...
@@SourceSFM your vision is about 13ms delayed, and the brain processes pain (and most things) at roughly 100ms. They did not feel a thing, and likely didn’t see anything either. This is the best way to die, but it really does suck they died such a preventable death (especially those unrelated to the company).
So if these messages are real, they knew for at least 18 minutes that something was terribly wrong 😱😱 Poor kid, who had already been terrified to go. He probably had a premonition. Imagine the sense of utter dread and panic, knowing you’re totally doomed 💔
@Ryan-qm3rm No, the father was the one who really wanted to go- he had been obsessed with the Titanic his entire life. The son went to please his father, because it was Father’s Day. But the boy’s aunt said he was terrified and didn’t really want to go 💔
This debate is most likely false, carbon fiber doesn't make cracking noises, when it weakens it almost immediately breaks into multiple pieces, and since the hull was made of carbon fiber, I'm pretty sure to say that ~20 minutes of 'noises' harassing the crew and passengers is a indicative of a false debate
With how sad this is it shows how stupid of an idea it was in the first place. Full sympathy to those involved except the CEO and company, they should've had to have the submarine regulated if its civilian made for private uses. Someone should be held responsible for not looking into the safety of this
what is said is how people are forgetting these were genuine human lives lost and the publicity surrounding this accident has cause millions of people to forget that and just joking around/ focusing on the specifics of it. Rest in peace.
@@gusmoment the only casualty i feel bad for is the teen who went cuz his dad wanted him too. Everyone else went on a stupidly unsafe thing and had to sign waivers saying they are ok with the state of the craft. I feel no remorse for someone who did something stupid
Every single person that warned the CEO was an "old white dude", and that is why he ignored them. Progressive mindrot at work, and sadly it led to the death of innocent people.
Yup they actually said even getting in your car is a risk so therefore its normal to sink down to Titanic depth in a squishy carbon fibre box 📦 that crackles and pops, cos life is a risk
He even fired the REAL engineer when he alarmed him about the flaw on that sub. Reason for fired because "he was old and slow". Then he hired 3 leftards for "young and fast" and this is the consequence of that action.
it’s very sad how the passengers passed because of the crackling in the rear and the drop of the landing gear thats how we found those pieces first before we found the imploded submarine
In Greek mythology titans lost the war and were vanquished to tartarus. Tartarus is the deep abyss that is used as a dungeon of torment and suffering for the wicked and as the prison for the Titans
@mamoonarshad304 apparently what he's trying to say is that the incident involving titan is quite similar to Greek mythology except Tartarus here, in this case, refers to the titanic wreckage site which also became the resting place of the titan.
2:03 the last message made by the submarine at 09:46:37. They were at 3,457 meters according to the message They didn't respond to the next message so they probably died within 2 minutes - but instantaneously. RIP, Titan sub and its occupants.
@Reddzion that's not what they said. They were just tracking the time until their oxygen would hypothetically run out and thus it would be impossible to save them. They only found out how they died a little bit later In truth they were there to confirm the deaths
@@Reddzion Rush’s partner is no less than a jerk. I think he was hoping against hope. Cameron said notes were being shared in their small community to understand what happened. I think it is this same script circulated. But their conclusions were not being heard.
If these messages are real, I'm glad we're finding out more information on what caused this terrible, terrible incident. Rest in peace the victims and condolences to the families. Must've been absolutely terrifying hearing the crackling sounds. -edit
The people on the sub all knew they were in huge trouble. They could all hear the crackling and crunching of the carbon fiber failing, all around them. They tried repeatedly to drop the frame from the sub before it dropped off and still the sub did not want to start surfacing. Somewhere on that sub, parts never meant to retain seawater were retaining sea water and therefore adding weight that was not allowing the sub to surface. It could have been battery cases swelling as sea water forced its way inside and blew them up like a balloon of weight. It could have been hose exteriors doing the same thing. Even worse, there could have been an exterior carbon fiber delamination that sea water was prying apart and creating a void that sea water was rushing inside to add weight to the sub and hold it down. Every person on that sub knew they were about to die. And they knew from before 9:28:16 to 9:46:37. Eighteen minutes is a long time to see death coming for you and to know you are in the very worst place you could ever be to meet it. You have no escape. This is the legacy of Stockton Rush and his statement, "Safety is relative." Safety is not relative anymore.
@@yorick9874 This is what @ecsyntric said: the key is they could not ascend. it was very slow. normally once weights are dropped, all air tight capsules float to the top quickly nothing incompressible is affected even if water infiltrates into spaces with equipment even if the hull is delaminating, there is nothing to compress - doesn't add weight to the sub so nothing "blows up" in these conditions only thing pulling sub up is the thruster and the buoyancy from the air inside the hull only thing pulling it down is the total weight they jettisoned the weights/frame but still could not rise the only conclusion is either (a) they were overweight from the start (b) somehow slowly lost buoyancy which is hard to explain [c] thought they dropped weight as communicated but did not drop enough in reality
Even if that's not how physics work, you paint a haunting picture. I can imagine invisible hands slowly picking and prying at the hull of the sub. It's finger slowly slipping into cracks and pulling slowly, letting just that bit more water in. Eventually getting all the way through before suddenly ripping the sub in two and imploding on itself
James Cameron said he suspected the occupants would've heard the de-lamination of their carbon fibre hull before it imploded. A "crackling sound", I guess, would be how that sounded.
I still don’t get how anyone would dive to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean in this thing. If a group of my fellow engineering students had been given a task to construct a submersible that can bring about 4 people to the bottom of the local lake, on a 500€ budget and about 4 weeks time to do it, the solution we would come up with would look something like the Titan.
@@geoff-lukebihler6157 Are you telling me that hull is not even stell but some weaker material? That they would use at least steel, if not something stronger, I just took as an asumption when you're building a deep see submarine.
I always find the scariest stuff at 10 at night. I feel so bad for the loss of the families. Makes my skin crawl thinking of being down in the ocean and knowing you might not make it out.
Makes you wonder what the last thing they process is. They definitely feel fear, but then in the few seconds before failure did something happen that _could_ make them understand they're about to die. They have just a bit of hope they might make it out, but did something happen that made them understand their fate was sealed? Or did they only feel fear and vain hope before suddenly...
@@ihavekalashnikovyoudomath9275they at best might have see it's glass window start to crack before it the whole sub got crashed. But 8 times out of 10 it imploded without any warning.
I'm sure everyone on board was terrified in their last moments hearing the obvious sounds of the carbon fiber hull cracking knowing they were all doomed.
@@twobrosincorporated( opinion!!!!)yes they are people but (if am correct) for those who don’t care about them, don’t feel any connection to 5 rich billionaires that only wanted to have a knowing dangerous adventure to see…a boat. And also the only news I was getting was the billionaires but nothing (besides TikTok?) about the 750 refugees that were being refused help? (The people were moving because (reason why) to have a better life and yet men,women and kids drowned (What I learned: Sometimes having lots of money treats you more human compared to others. If the rolls were reversed ( 5 people that are not billionaire) the government would have not put so much effort on trying to help them) And finally (sorry for being this long) if you put your self in any avoidable,dangerous stupid situation or problem….we’re all going to make jokes 😂)
I think the saddest part is what the guy above me mentioned about the refugees, at least 80 died and there are 500 missing people but no one cares about that
That messages, if true, show many things. One is that panic might have occurred inside the sub, with all passengers so close to each other, they were all aware of the alarms and what the CEO was reporting to the ship above. The other is that oceangate knew right away that the sub had imploded. That was no way they would take so much time to report the missing sub, that disappeared sending distress signals, if they didn’t know they were done for. I mean, it was on everyone’s best interest to have the sub come back safely, so…
Honestly, at that depth and all the pressures involved, difficulty of even doing a rescue, etc. the second I first heard the report that the sub was missing I was immediately like "They're already dead."
They’re not real. This sounds like high school fan fiction to be honest, it’s inconsistent with transcripts we have from documentary recordings ( we know how Stockton communicates to surface)
It’s horrifying to know for a fair few minutes there they knew they were goners but the madness that would have followed that thought process will haunt that part of the ocean for quite some time😔
...as the Titan joins the Titanic down there, haunted by upwards of a thousand similar ghosts who had had even more time to reflect that "we are goners." ☠
@@elpersonpl576 they were a bunch of goons with how dumb it was to go into the ocean in that thing to begin with, tbh. Call me disrespectful all you want, but this is just a classic case of natural selection.
The Titanium end cap popped off aft. The carbon fiber was actually under 5 inches thick on both ends. The video of titans assembly clearly shows tapered ends for the titanium rings to be literally glued on. Stockton Rush actually says the fit must be uniform and small but not too small. The carbon fiber Epoxy was cracked enough for the vessel to lose the round shape or even a pin hole seal was enough to give way and boom! The ring and titanium cap came off aft following implosion and only caps left
for me it's the thought of sliding into death like it's a slipper. one second they're aware of their surroundings and the situation, and not even a millisecond later; nothing. sure, they didn't experience any pain but it's such a weird thought. no more different than going to sleep, but one they'll never wake up from.
well, all except the kid who was dragged kicking and screaming (literally) into his own tomb. He knew that this would be a horrible idea, yet just like always, nobody listened to the criticisms or analysis. If it wasn't for that innocent kid being taken with the crew, i'd have said good riddance to the lot of em. Sadly though, idiots always know the best ways to make those around them suffer for their ignorance.
these scripts already gave me goosebumps and it disturbs me imagine how those passengers felt during their time inside that sub, the cracking sounds, the panicking inside, the struggle to ascend, that terrified kid who doesnt want to go, and then suddenly lights out...brutal but a quick death...
@Ryan-qm3rm it wasn’t a false rumor his aunt said the opposite of what his mom said, either or could be true. The loss of life is sad though may he rest in peace
what i still find weird is that their death was instant, like no pain, just lights out. instantly, and its literally like you closing your eyes right now.
As sad as it is it is a pure example of physics. One second youre here exhisting on this earth and within miliseconds you cease yo exhist and are nothing more than particles in the ocean. Reduced to mere atoms.
1:55 This is where it happened. Their death must have been instant and painless, but I start to think that they must have figured out something was terribly wrong because they reported cracking sounds.
those final minutes prior to the implosion had to so gut wrenching. knowing something is going wrong and there isn't a single thing you can do about it other than cling to hope. at least the moment of death itself was instantaneous.
What's crazy is, I'm fairly certain the Titan sub made dives before and somehow didn't break, so the fact that something so shitty like this was able to happen multiple times is crazy
The 19 year old, breaks my heart. The adults, eyes wide open, knew what they were doing, proceeded anyway. But the 19 year old is never on this without his dad's input. As a father of 4 young men this one really hits me, I cried for this young man I never knew.
I feel bad for the kid but have absolutely zero sympathy for the CEO. He wasn't an innovator, he was a cheap liar. I hope the company gets sued to hell and sinks.
It gets me even worse because he was genuinely terrified and didn’t want to go according to one of his family members but was pressured into it to make his dad proud...
I feel most bad for the wife of the father and son that passed. She was supposed to go on the trip 2 years ago (i believe the article said) with her husband, but covid delayed it. Their son became old enough so he went instead. She probably feels terrible, I know I would. I feel bad for everyone involved, i just feel the most sympathy for her.
This is truly terrifying. They dropped the ballast and the frame and still could only ascend very slowly. That means they were probably taking on more weight somewhere in the form of water entering the hull under enormous pressure. If so the hull was already compromised. Death was only seconds away at that point.
@@leolen8029 My guess is that the ballast didn't drop as intended. Likely only lost a portion of it, and the system failed afterwards. They mentioned multiple attempts at disconnecting the frame, so it's likely there were other failures as well.
The sub would have survived if the entire hull was made out of titanium which would have cost much but much more than the lives of those onboard. Another thing is they should have cancelled the hole thing the moment RTM sign went red and alert. Recovery and aborting of the mission at that point could have possibly saved them.
@@mikhailvasiliev6275 few layers of reinforced glass with the minimum opening so that the pressure on the surface area is equally compensated also if that hinters the sight multiple cameras all round could be used.
Honestly, I find it highly unlikely for this to be real. There is no way they wouldnt ascend with a normal speed after jettisoning the ballast, because thats not how physics work. That would mean the sub is either smaller than usually or significantly heavier, which could only be explained by water leaking inside, which at these depths isnt possible. Its either no leaks or implosion. It would also mean they would have descended significantly faster than usual, which they would have noticed.
They did notice the faster decent. That's why topside asks if they need to adjust velocity. Also, iget what you're saying about it is either no leaks or an impossible but seems water may have been leaking in to the exterior of the sub, between the outermost layers of the hull. That would explain the reduced buoyancy and a descent rate that kept climbing as they went deeper
The USS Thresher had a similar issue but had a completely different ballast system. The Titan ballast, while ridiculous, is pretty basic. Drop heavy thing, heavy thing no longer weighing you down. And even further, drop frame, frame no longer holding you do. Pretty simple. This leak doesn’t seem true. But only the NTSB knows for sure right now.
@Ryan-qm3rm OceanGate was obviously image-conscious. Maybe security on the Polar Prince prevented it from being exported at first and it wasn't possible to leak initially for some reason we arent aware of. Or I suspect it was leaked more or less initially and we are only seeing it now.
@Ryan-qm3rm I'm not saying it is necessarily real, tough to say at this point. I'm just saying the timing of the publication of it is actually totally consistent with a realistic leak. So timing alone is not a good reason to discount it.
"Gosh! Maybe we made a mistake getting into a sub held together with glue. How could I have been so stupid?!" In the words of Mr. Miyagi - "Squish, just like grape."
Watching this at quarter past 2 in the morning 💀 seriously tho at least they werent terrifyed for hours and their transition was quick, rest in peace, may safety be the top top priority for any such vessels from now on!
One of the prime reasons regulations like OSHA exist yet people still treat it as some joke until tragedy strikes. Humanity being the best competitor at the darwin awards as always.
Too many people to blame. But Rest their souls. I don’t understand why there was so many warnings and yet this sub WAS STILL continuing to operate despite how dangerous it was.
RIP to those people. And thank u for not making a meme about it or something. People who laugh and make memes about it are just monsters. Imagine being their families and having to see a bunch of people making fun of their death. I'm so glad there's still a lot of people who are nice about it like you, and most people in this comment section ❤️ 🕊️
Allegedly, these detailed conversations were impossible, and only single words were possible. If that is true, the above conversations are a fraud. I guess we should be careful what we believe. Sanjosemike (no longer in CA)
It's spine-chilling !! So technically the implosion may have happened at around 09:46:37 (about 1h 45) into the dive, however, the trouble started at around 09:28. So, 18 mnts of trouble-shooting and uncertainty......Gosh that's hard to imagine !! 😢😢
Holy f*** that's so creepy, is like... everything is going wrong and any attempts to reach the surface again are in vain... and then the silence, the spine-chilling silence...
They were descending too fast because they were too heavy, as evidenced by the fact that dropping their ballast did not cause the vessel to rise as it should have. Even after dropping the frame, it was still rising too slowly. Combine this with the use of carbon fibre and you have a recipe for disaster.
My take is Rush pushed for a fast descent to maximize time at the Titanic. If they can only be under for a set number of hours, why waste more of it with the trip down. Then he could also brag about how his "innovative" design allows passengers more time at depth.
I'm late to comment but from a dissection by someone that knows about submersibles A) They were descending too fast B) They weren't communicating back enough info to the top, CEO thought it was annoying to do so C) They couldn't ascend because sea water was rushing in where sea water has no business being in D) As soon as the cracking started, their fate was sealed, they died in about 1 milisecond and couldn't even register what happened
the cracks started and ended before they died, not saying its not related to the final implosion, but that the cracks you are refering to were not the exact cause of the implosion.
I’ve heard that (what I guess is) stock background music/sound in dozens of these videos now and it’s still as creepy as the first time I heard it. It only adds to the real life dire and unfortunate situation that this crew found themselves in. The ocean is a demonic place.
Note at 2:15, the texts from the sub have bad grammar, and are short and lowercase, this indicates rush was probably panicked and urgent to fix the problem
there was one video where the late CEO said that they "would hear noises LONG before there was a problem".....well, they likely were leaking water but at that depth that was a death sentence. When the sub imploded, the force was stronger (and faster) than if they had 30kg of TNT go off in front of their face. They all died so fast that the would never have seen or felt anything. I suppose that would be "better" than freezing to death in the depths or suffocating on the surface since the sub had to be opened from the outside and they had no way to exit themselves.
I guess that he had such a ghoulish love for the Titanic wreck that he became part of it. Sad - and even more tragic is that he took four unwitting souls with him…
The only silver lining to this entire situation was it happened so quickly that they were dead before their brains could even register something was happening
The horror building up to the imposition must’ve been horrible. The quiet noises becoming loud and soon shaking,it’d be horrible. May those 4 men and that innocent boy rest in heaven. ❤
Some people keep implying that because it was an instant (and painless) death then the passengers were blissfully unaware of their impending doom. Maybe. But a lot of articles on the subject indicate there were sensors in the hull meant to give warning, that the ballast and landing frame had been jettisoned suggesting they urgently wanted to surface, a supposed transcript of the final communications in which the crew reported problems has been passed around, and it seems reasonable that unexpectedly loud cracking due to the upcoming implosion and pressure would have given everyone on board reason to think they were in extreme danger. No one can say for sure what happened as no one on board survived. OceanGate cannot be trusted to accurately report on their mistakes and they apparently declined to immediately admit that there was a problem ... they delayed. The Coast Guard may choose not to pass along information that will not contribute to a positive outcome and only upset the families. I do think a reasonable deduction (taking known facts and reasonable assumptions given those facts and then deriving a conclusion using known laws related to said facts) involves the idea that they knew they were in serious trouble. Damn. 😔
Yeah I think basically they knew death was coming but it happened so fast they didn’t even have time to process it. One second crackling noises and alarms and the next second darkness. At least it was painless but damn what a way to go. Several minutes of pure terror and then nothing.
My favorite photo to come out of this was the side by side comparison of James Cameron's submersible, which is crammed wall to wall with technical equipment, versus the Oceangate submersible which is an empty tube with an Xbox controller.
I imagine there were huge arguments that erupted when those cracking sounds happened, with the CEO assuring them it’s fine and then when they couldn’t ascend
CEO knew the risks of this happening… im just thinking he was doing this on purpose, 4 specific people were invited and yet the CEO took them down with him :(
If the RTM actually worked and they heard crackling, that hull was WAY more stable than I thought. I was under the impression any crack would instantly destroy the hull.
This whole tragedy is a cautionary tale for people to listen to their instincts and speak up at the first sign of trouble. Even before the trip in the titan, why weren’t there bells going off when Rush was showing everyone the kiddie gadgets he was using to run the sub? He was playing toy ship instead of properly handling a sub and it got himself and four others killed because of the negligence.
It's also a cautionary tale for people to ditch a progressive mindset when people's lives are on the line. Rush fired experienced Navy safety officers because they were "old white dudes" and weren't "inspiring" enough. Rush intentionally ignored legitimate safety concerns due to who was saying it and that negligence resulted in innocent people dying.
People are like "so glad it was instant, they never knew". Lmao. They were in panic mode for 20 minutes at least before contact was lost. Mounting panic as they struggle to try to ascend. It was hell in that sub, trust me. Trapped at the bottom of the ocean, hearing the hull crackling...
They obviously knew there was a problem and we're trying to work the problem out for about 20 minutes so that must have been terrifying hearing those sounds cracking their last 20 minutes must have been torture this is really awful news
I love how it just goes straight into the point of the video apart of explaining the story because mostly everyone should know it by now.
Yeah I hate when videos say what you already know like it’s not common knowledge
No, I wanna hear them tell me about the history of the Titanic that I’ve heard in these Titan videos again and again.
i guess so yeah
They do that so they can get past the 10 minute mark which = more 💰
@@clickbaitpolice1750 or they want to stay relevant 2 yrs from now when ppl who didn't watch this unfold live stumble on it. neither way is bad.
At least it was quick and painless. The passengers didn't even know what was wrong with the Titan, but the CEO did, and didn't follow rules and fired someone for calling the problems out. This is a sad story.
The death was quick but it sounds like the CEO knew exactly what was happening
Quick but they knew something was going wrong so panic probably ensued and you’re in this tight space so that probably increases the anxiety which is not a good feeling.
They probably didn’t feel any pain I agree. But there is no way to say that they didn’t know what was wrong.
The passengers actually did know it some people even refused to go on because they knew that it was crap because the cow didn't hide anything and he was fully transparent with thenfact thst ut wasnt certified
@@romanrules007Some reports say that the sub tilted vertically for almost a minute at some point. Everyone got pinned down on top of one another helpless on the window side of the sub. It must have been terrifying.
The thing that gets me is that the CEO totally believed this was safe
He did, he just didnt care.
I honestly think he wanted to die that way
Glorified hydraulic press video but without the video part
@@LittleLulubee I'm not sure he did, I think he just deluded and tricked himself with his own nonsense and bluster. He was trying to create a new business model in underwater tourism, probably hoping to make a lot of money in the process and believed he was Captain Kirk exploring new frontiers. Be he seemed to have a lot of arrogance and hubris not wanting to listen to those trying to warn him about the dangers of what he was doing. If he did want to die that way he was also extremely inconsiderate about the others he took with him, especially the poor young lad who didn't even want to be there by sounds of it.
@@IdiotWithaMultimeterexactly
If it succeed he woud win big money
Hi probably dis anyways
Let's establish this before people forget and think this was just the price payed for innovation.
1. He was told multiple times that carbon fiber doesn't do well under compression.
2. Despite that, he still bought unserviceable and expired carbon fiber filament from the aerospace industry.
3. He then didn't properly do the resin injection likely resulting in voids in the casting.
4. He didn't mechanically interface the titanium with the carbon fiber. He literally just glued it in place.
5. He ignored all lisencing and certifications because he could not meet them.
6. Used a glass window only rated for 1,300 meters while travelling down over 3000.
This is what happens when you have more money than good sense.
Edit: please check legaleagle's video on the topic. It was *much* worse than I thought.
Other people's money. 50 mill in donations, they even took a covid payroll loan for 500k that was forgiven.
God it kept getting worse.
He will receive the 2023 Darwin Award
There was some innovation, and some cut corners too.
I think the glass rating was for a previous model.
We need to stop naming aquatic vessels "Titan“
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This is why we need to prioritize saftey on any kind of vessels travelling in high pressure areas.
I heard that the creator of ocean gate was bragging that he purposely ignored some safety rules because he deemed the whole thing “too safe”
@@giovannicarrillo4967safety standards stifled his inventions he said. He found loopholes, cheap alternatives but paid the ultimate price
its the titanic all over again 😭
THEY DID PRIORITIZE SAFETY OCEAN GATE IS A BILLION DOLLER COMPANY! If you where a police officer and someone shot you in the head instead of your bulletproof vest doesn’t mean your safety wasn’t prioritized, it just means something “Happened” 💀
He even said that if you wanna be safe then stay in bed
Edit: Everyone is correcting me in the comments saying that everyone knew, and they heard the submarine break apart. Thank you for the info, but that's not what I'm getting at. In the video, there's a part where they send their last message, the vessel on top responds but gets no answer. That part, that is spine-chilling.
The fact that the sub imploded in 1 millisecond without anyone knowing is just spine chilling. They're down in the depths of the ocean, and at anytime the titan can just shrink in an instant without anyone at the vessel knowing...
30 milliseconds
@@Barry.B.Benson someone did the math and concluded 1 millisecond, but yeah under a second would KIND of be an instant
It was the same with the USS Thresher and that was a nuclear fast attack submarine on a shakedown cruise.
@@SourceSFM your vision is about 13ms delayed, and the brain processes pain (and most things) at roughly 100ms. They did not feel a thing, and likely didn’t see anything either. This is the best way to die, but it really does suck they died such a preventable death (especially those unrelated to the company).
@@pjdjhi
So if these messages are real, they knew for at least 18 minutes that something was terribly wrong 😱😱 Poor kid, who had already been terrified to go. He probably had a premonition. Imagine the sense of utter dread and panic, knowing you’re totally doomed 💔
@Ryan-qm3rm No, the father was the one who really wanted to go- he had been obsessed with the Titanic his entire life. The son went to please his father, because it was Father’s Day. But the boy’s aunt said he was terrified and didn’t really want to go 💔
@@LittleLulubeeA later report from the mother contradicts that and says he was excited to go.
This debate is most likely false, carbon fiber doesn't make cracking noises, when it weakens it almost immediately breaks into multiple pieces, and since the hull was made of carbon fiber, I'm pretty sure to say that ~20 minutes of 'noises' harassing the crew and passengers is a indicative of a false debate
@@MrNaesmemore proof
Please....they wouldn't be thinking they're gonna die. If anything I'm sure rush downplayed it and tries to keep them calm.
With how sad this is it shows how stupid of an idea it was in the first place. Full sympathy to those involved except the CEO and company, they should've had to have the submarine regulated if its civilian made for private uses. Someone should be held responsible for not looking into the safety of this
There was an employee who warned his boss that it wasn't safe yet. He was FIRED.
The person responsible is the CEO, who was on the sub when it imploded
The CEO was an idiot, a logitech controller, really? And that's only one of the crappy things about that submersible
what is said is how people are forgetting these were genuine human lives lost and the publicity surrounding this accident has cause millions of people to forget that and just joking around/ focusing on the specifics of it. Rest in peace.
@@gusmoment the only casualty i feel bad for is the teen who went cuz his dad wanted him too. Everyone else went on a stupidly unsafe thing and had to sign waivers saying they are ok with the state of the craft. I feel no remorse for someone who did something stupid
What's so frustrating is that so many people sounded the alarms about how terrible the design was and yet the CEO and other higher ups ignored them.
They didn't ignore them. They boasted about how unsafe it was, laughing in the face of critics.
Every single person that warned the CEO was an "old white dude", and that is why he ignored them. Progressive mindrot at work, and sadly it led to the death of innocent people.
Yup they actually said even getting in your car is a risk so therefore its normal to sink down to Titanic depth in a squishy carbon fibre box 📦 that crackles and pops, cos life is a risk
He even fired the REAL engineer when he alarmed him about the flaw on that sub. Reason for fired because "he was old and slow". Then he hired 3 leftards for "young and fast" and this is the consequence of that action.
@@superspies32
Politics over business is never good. Especially just for licking the boss shoes.
it’s very sad how the passengers passed
because of the crackling in the rear and the drop of the landing gear thats how we found those pieces first before we found the imploded submarine
In Greek mythology titans lost the war and were vanquished to tartarus. Tartarus is the deep abyss that is used as a dungeon of torment and suffering for the wicked and as the prison for the Titans
@@ullah8334ctrl+c,ctrl+v
@@ullah8334what does that have to do with this?
@mamoonarshad304 apparently what he's trying to say is that the incident involving titan is quite similar to Greek mythology except Tartarus here, in this case, refers to the titanic wreckage site which also became the resting place of the titan.
@@ullah8334
The bottom of the Atlantic Ocean is basically an abyss. The Titanic has “Titan” in its name, and now it’s slowly decaying in the depths.
2:03 the last message made by the submarine at 09:46:37. They were at 3,457 meters according to the message They didn't respond to the next message so they probably died within 2 minutes - but instantaneously. RIP, Titan sub and its occupants.
Rip to everyone on that ship except the ceo. He deserved to be tormented for his stupidity and deaths of innocent people
makes me question why the news reported and coast guard etc took 8 hours to find them with the claim of "they're alive with low oxygen".
@Reddzion that's not what they said. They were just tracking the time until their oxygen would hypothetically run out and thus it would be impossible to save them. They only found out how they died a little bit later
In truth they were there to confirm the deaths
@@viefcheesecake here in australia it is what our news were reporting.
@@Reddzion Rush’s partner is no less than a jerk. I think he was hoping against hope. Cameron said notes were being shared in their small community to understand what happened. I think it is this same script circulated. But their conclusions were not being heard.
If these messages are real, I'm glad we're finding out more information on what caused this terrible, terrible incident.
Rest in peace the victims and condolences to the families.
Must've been absolutely terrifying hearing the crackling sounds. -edit
Rest in piece?
U mean rest in peace?
That’s so sad tho yea rip
An incident thats completely preventable
@@Beerky_ well i mean they are in pieces
@@PhoenixT1953 nah u did them dirty💀💀
@@chonkerturtle8127 yas
The people on the sub all knew they were in huge trouble. They could all hear the crackling and crunching of the carbon fiber failing, all around them. They tried repeatedly to drop the frame from the sub before it dropped off and still the sub did not want to start surfacing. Somewhere on that sub, parts never meant to retain seawater were retaining sea water and therefore adding weight that was not allowing the sub to surface. It could have been battery cases swelling as sea water forced its way inside and blew them up like a balloon of weight. It could have been hose exteriors doing the same thing. Even worse, there could have been an exterior carbon fiber delamination that sea water was prying apart and creating a void that sea water was rushing inside to add weight to the sub and hold it down. Every person on that sub knew they were about to die.
And they knew from before 9:28:16 to 9:46:37.
Eighteen minutes is a long time to see death coming for you and to know you are in the very worst place you could ever be to meet it. You have no escape.
This is the legacy of Stockton Rush and his statement, "Safety is relative."
Safety is not relative anymore.
absolutely wrong .. read my comment
@@ecsyntric And what does your comment say? Because i'm not gonna search through 400+ comments.
@@yorick9874 This is what @ecsyntric said:
the key is they could not ascend. it was very slow. normally once weights are dropped, all air tight capsules float to the top quickly
nothing incompressible is affected even if water infiltrates into spaces with equipment even if the hull is delaminating, there is nothing to compress - doesn't add weight to the sub so nothing "blows up" in these conditions
only thing pulling sub up is the thruster and the buoyancy from the air inside the hull only thing pulling it down is the total weight
they jettisoned the weights/frame but still could not rise
the only conclusion is either (a) they were overweight from the start (b) somehow slowly lost buoyancy which is hard to explain [c] thought they dropped weight as communicated but did not drop enough in reality
"Safety is relative"? 🤨 Sounds like something a guy who didn't want to hire "old white men" to virtue signal would say.
Even if that's not how physics work, you paint a haunting picture. I can imagine invisible hands slowly picking and prying at the hull of the sub. It's finger slowly slipping into cracks and pulling slowly, letting just that bit more water in. Eventually getting all the way through before suddenly ripping the sub in two and imploding on itself
James Cameron said he suspected the occupants would've heard the de-lamination of their carbon fibre hull before it imploded. A "crackling sound", I guess, would be how that sounded.
I still don’t get how anyone would dive to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean in this thing. If a group of my fellow engineering students had been given a task to construct a submersible that can bring about 4 people to the bottom of the local lake, on a 500€ budget and about 4 weeks time to do it, the solution we would come up with would look something like the Titan.
Except made out of a old large propane tank made of steel
@@geoff-lukebihler6157 Are you telling me that hull is not even stell but some weaker material? That they would use at least steel, if not something stronger, I just took as an asumption when you're building a deep see submarine.
@@neptun2810 Well a 5" carbon fiber tube wrap was the hull.
@@neptun2810It was made of carbon fiber, (proven not to be safe for submersibles) not steel.
@@kingofthekoopas8857 In that case, I'm surprised it didn't implode on it's first dive. Carbon fiber can be quite strong, but not that strong.
I always find the scariest stuff at 10 at night. I feel so bad for the loss of the families. Makes my skin crawl thinking of being down in the ocean and knowing you might not make it out.
yeah its ao creepy. zi want to die like them though. its so peaceful down there.
@@nat0106951 they where probably shittin there pants though
@hudsonheck3190
you might as well be on the surface of the Moon in terms of rescue.
Legit I just found this and it’s 10 pm for me too
literally 1am here
It imploded in like 1 fraction of a second and it takes like 10 times that long to process pain, sight, and hearing.
Makes you wonder what the last thing they process is. They definitely feel fear, but then in the few seconds before failure did something happen that _could_ make them understand they're about to die. They have just a bit of hope they might make it out, but did something happen that made them understand their fate was sealed? Or did they only feel fear and vain hope before suddenly...
@@ihavekalashnikovyoudomath9275they at best might have see it's glass window start to crack before it the whole sub got crashed.
But 8 times out of 10 it imploded without any warning.
@@stephenbrown2785 you're a leat fingy
100 times longer to feel pain, iirc, that's how fast they died.
I'm sure everyone on board was terrified in their last moments hearing the obvious sounds of the carbon fiber hull cracking knowing they were all doomed.
What a sad way to go
Atleast the poor souls didn't feel a thing
@@danax6653u could've worded that nicer
@@danax6653wth these people just died what is wrong with you?
@@twobrosincorporated( opinion!!!!)yes they are people but (if am correct) for those who don’t care about them, don’t feel any connection to 5 rich billionaires that only wanted to have a knowing dangerous adventure to see…a boat.
And also the only news I was getting was the billionaires but nothing (besides TikTok?) about the 750 refugees that were being refused help? (The people were moving because (reason why) to have a better life and yet men,women and kids drowned
(What I learned: Sometimes having lots of money treats you more human compared to others.
If the rolls were reversed ( 5 people that are not billionaire) the government would have not put so much effort on trying to help them)
And finally (sorry for being this long) if you put your self in any avoidable,dangerous stupid situation or problem….we’re all going to make jokes 😂)
I think the saddest part is what the guy above me mentioned about the refugees, at least 80 died and there are 500 missing people but no one cares about that
@@giovannicarrillo4967 To be honest its just the prospect of it, the cramped submarine it is a pretty scary concept especially when you see the POV
That messages, if true, show many things. One is that panic might have occurred inside the sub, with all passengers so close to each other, they were all aware of the alarms and what the CEO was reporting to the ship above. The other is that oceangate knew right away that the sub had imploded. That was no way they would take so much time to report the missing sub, that disappeared sending distress signals, if they didn’t know they were done for. I mean, it was on everyone’s best interest to have the sub come back safely, so…
Honestly, at that depth and all the pressures involved, difficulty of even doing a rescue, etc. the second I first heard the report that the sub was missing I was immediately like "They're already dead."
They’re not real. This sounds like high school fan fiction to be honest, it’s inconsistent with transcripts we have from documentary recordings ( we know how Stockton communicates to surface)
@@pcdeltalink036 same
@@diverman1023Titan could only Communicate to the Outside World with Texts
They waited the exact amount of time that it should have taken the titan to resurface on its own, just in case it did survive.
They knew for 19 minutes.
Sheer horror.
It’s horrifying to know for a fair few minutes there they knew they were goners but the madness that would have followed that thought process will haunt that part of the ocean for quite some time😔
...as the Titan joins the Titanic down there, haunted by upwards of a thousand similar ghosts who had had even more time to reflect that "we are goners." ☠
i read "goners" as "gooners"
@@elpersonpl576 they were a bunch of goons with how dumb it was to go into the ocean in that thing to begin with, tbh. Call me disrespectful all you want, but this is just a classic case of natural selection.
The Titanium end cap popped off aft. The carbon fiber was actually under 5 inches thick on both ends. The video of titans assembly clearly shows tapered ends for the titanium rings to be literally glued on. Stockton Rush actually says the fit must be uniform and small but not too small. The carbon fiber Epoxy was cracked enough for the vessel to lose the round shape or even a pin hole seal was enough to give way and boom! The ring and titanium cap came off aft following implosion and only caps left
The fact that at first these crew are being happy and enjoying the ride makes this even more terrifying.
for me it's the thought of sliding into death like it's a slipper. one second they're aware of their surroundings and the situation, and not even a millisecond later; nothing. sure, they didn't experience any pain but it's such a weird thought. no more different than going to sleep, but one they'll never wake up from.
well, all except the kid who was dragged kicking and screaming (literally) into his own tomb. He knew that this would be a horrible idea, yet just like always, nobody listened to the criticisms or analysis. If it wasn't for that innocent kid being taken with the crew, i'd have said good riddance to the lot of em. Sadly though, idiots always know the best ways to make those around them suffer for their ignorance.
@@beelzebub7221poor kid
these scripts already gave me goosebumps and it disturbs me
imagine how those passengers felt during their time inside that sub, the cracking sounds, the panicking inside, the struggle to ascend, that terrified kid who doesnt want to go, and then suddenly lights out...brutal but a quick death...
@Ryan-qm3rm it wasn’t a false rumor his aunt said the opposite of what his mom said, either or could be true. The loss of life is sad though may he rest in peace
At least it was quick enough that their eyes couldnt even register their death, and neither would their brains.
@@tylerthomas7763aybe the mom was scared and let the kid go instead and he acted happy to not worry her and told his aunt that he was actually scared?
@@bugsbunnypoogood point
Dude had a 6th sense something bad was gonna happen, but ignored it for his pops. At least he didn't die alone. Good son. Very unlucky.
what i still find weird is that their death was instant, like no pain, just lights out. instantly, and its literally like you closing your eyes right now.
As sad as it is it is a pure example of physics. One second youre here exhisting on this earth and within miliseconds you cease yo exhist and are nothing more than particles in the ocean. Reduced to mere atoms.
"Enjoy the ride"... That's ominous
It's so funny that you said that because When I heard them say we're enjoying the ride. I absolutely thought oh, something about that isn't good.
Jigsaw and his new implosion trap.
"the controller died"
Top 10 famous last words
Hey thats controllers chillin with the titanic, definitely noteworthy.
Last message from the Titan Sub "Controller disconnected"
Omg noooo 😭
The fact it got there even once was miracle in it's own right
1:55 This is where it happened.
Their death must have been instant and painless, but I start to think that they must have figured out something was terribly wrong because they reported cracking sounds.
Like the CEO said he’ll be remembered by the rules he broke
Scary fact: Mrbeast was invited on the Titan submarine but luckily he rejected
Who?
He said he was invited in early June but this happened like ending or mid june
@@somethingyoudontknow5788 thats cuz hes got people watching out for him to yank him tf outta there. Always do your own research
@@roguekurosakislibrary478 this does not even relate to what I said 💀
@@teamplasmacolresstpc8234 What do you need to "imagine" here? Had he said yes, he would have been a passenger... nothing to imagine here.
those final minutes prior to the implosion had to so gut wrenching. knowing something is going wrong and there isn't a single thing you can do about it other than cling to hope. at least the moment of death itself was instantaneous.
What's crazy is, I'm fairly certain the Titan sub made dives before and somehow didn't break, so the fact that something so shitty like this was able to happen multiple times is crazy
worse, the hull wasn't inspected after each dive.
That's because the previous dives were causing structural damage every time they went down. These folks just lost the lottery on when it would fail.
The 19 year old, breaks my heart. The adults, eyes wide open, knew what they were doing, proceeded anyway. But the 19 year old is never on this without his dad's input. As a father of 4 young men this one really hits me, I cried for this young man I never knew.
I feel bad for the kid but have absolutely zero sympathy for the CEO. He wasn't an innovator, he was a cheap liar. I hope the company gets sued to hell and sinks.
4 billionaires in hell lmao rip bozo 1 lost innocent soul may he rest in peace
It gets me even worse because he was genuinely terrified and didn’t want to go according to one of his family members but was pressured into it to make his dad proud...
@@Lekjih Exactly why it bothers me do much. That beautiful young man should still be here. Breaks my heart 😥😢
Why do everyone just feel for the kid? The other people(besides that moronic CEO) did nothing wrong beside being rich.
Rest in peace. I hope their family’s can rest easy knowing they’re in a better place.
Let’s hope so
I feel most bad for the wife of the father and son that passed. She was supposed to go on the trip 2 years ago (i believe the article said) with her husband, but covid delayed it. Their son became old enough so he went instead. She probably feels terrible, I know I would.
I feel bad for everyone involved, i just feel the most sympathy for her.
The bottom of the ocean is definitely not a better place. They were on the land earlier, which I'd say is a much better place
@@FirstLast-ms4yl i meant spiritually, not physically
the ceo probably not
This is truly terrifying. They dropped the ballast and the frame and still could only ascend very slowly. That means they were probably taking on more weight somewhere in the form of water entering the hull under enormous pressure. If so the hull was already compromised. Death was only seconds away at that point.
You don’t take on water at that depth, if water got in its at the implosion.
@@user-tj9ks1zv7kMaybe there were components outside the main pressure seal that got flooded, just trying to think what the cause could have been.
@@leolen8029 My guess is that the ballast didn't drop as intended. Likely only lost a portion of it, and the system failed afterwards. They mentioned multiple attempts at disconnecting the frame, so it's likely there were other failures as well.
@@Rogan_Dorn Makes sense. How much you want to bet they didn't do any proper high pressure tests on the equipment before launching?
That fact that the main communications system failed and then the backup system failed is because the backup antenna was *not* waterproof….
It seems they knew something was wrong for about 15 mins, they must have been so scared….really sad 😢
Short, sweet and to the point. No fluff in this video.
Stockton Rush has a very likely and deserving 1st place in the upcoming 2023 Darwin Award, congratulations to him.
The sub would have survived if the entire hull was made out of titanium which would have cost much but much more than the lives of those onboard. Another thing is they should have cancelled the hole thing the moment RTM sign went red and alert. Recovery and aborting of the mission at that point could have possibly saved them.
What about the viewing glass at the front?
@@mikhailvasiliev6275 few layers of reinforced glass with the minimum opening so that the pressure on the surface area is equally compensated also if that hinters the sight multiple cameras all round could be used.
That’s actually terrifying
Honestly, I find it highly unlikely for this to be real. There is no way they wouldnt ascend with a normal speed after jettisoning the ballast, because thats not how physics work. That would mean the sub is either smaller than usually or significantly heavier, which could only be explained by water leaking inside, which at these depths isnt possible. Its either no leaks or implosion. It would also mean they would have descended significantly faster than usual, which they would have noticed.
They did notice the faster decent. That's why topside asks if they need to adjust velocity.
Also, iget what you're saying about it is either no leaks or an impossible but seems water may have been leaking in to the exterior of the sub, between the outermost layers of the hull. That would explain the reduced buoyancy and a descent rate that kept climbing as they went deeper
The USS Thresher had a similar issue but had a completely different ballast system. The Titan ballast, while ridiculous, is pretty basic. Drop heavy thing, heavy thing no longer weighing you down. And even further, drop frame, frame no longer holding you do. Pretty simple.
This leak doesn’t seem true. But only the NTSB knows for sure right now.
@Ryan-qm3rm and why is that
@Ryan-qm3rm OceanGate was obviously image-conscious. Maybe security on the Polar Prince prevented it from being exported at first and it wasn't possible to leak initially for some reason we arent aware of. Or I suspect it was leaked more or less initially and we are only seeing it now.
@Ryan-qm3rm I'm not saying it is necessarily real, tough to say at this point. I'm just saying the timing of the publication of it is actually totally consistent with a realistic leak. So timing alone is not a good reason to discount it.
"Gosh! Maybe we made a mistake getting into a sub held together with glue. How could I have been so stupid?!"
In the words of Mr. Miyagi - "Squish, just like grape."
How can you glue a hull together and go to those depths? Insanity!
You can't
it worked a few times. carbon fiber didn't like the wide temp range.
The violence of implosion is unimaginable. Just shattered to bits in an instant! RIP explorers, Godspeed
"Hey, the 'you're fucked' alarm is blaring "
R.I.P the people who died in the submerine, may they rest in whatever afterlife they may or may not believe in
there is no afterlife bro
@@strikerbowls791😂
@@strikerbowls791 I believe in afterlife
@@truck_dude Believing in it doesn't make it real
It exists
It happens even when some people went to the brink of death
Watching this at quarter past 2 in the morning 💀 seriously tho at least they werent terrifyed for hours and their transition was quick, rest in peace, may safety be the top top priority for any such vessels from now on!
They died at 9:47 of that message. these people KNEW and still put those families thru the hope. So sad.
Damn, I feel bad.
One of the prime reasons regulations like OSHA exist yet people still treat it as some joke until tragedy strikes.
Humanity being the best competitor at the darwin awards as always.
The same people that will tell you government regulations aren't needed and corporations can always be trusted to do the right thing.
Too many people to blame. But Rest their souls. I don’t understand why there was so many warnings and yet this sub WAS STILL continuing to operate despite how dangerous it was.
RIP to those people. And thank u for not making a meme about it or something. People who laugh and make memes about it are just monsters. Imagine being their families and having to see a bunch of people making fun of their death. I'm so glad there's still a lot of people who are nice about it like you, and most people in this comment section ❤️ 🕊️
I know, I’d be crushed if that happened to me.
@@classarank7youtubeherokeyb63NAH BRO XD
It did die right after they died so yep
Hahaha, i didn't pay $250,000 to get turned into a human-gel
@@classarank7youtubeherokeyb63 Low blow man. Low blow.
Allegedly, these detailed conversations were impossible, and only single words were possible. If that is true, the above conversations are a fraud.
I guess we should be careful what we believe.
Sanjosemike (no longer in CA)
This sent chills down my spine
It's spine-chilling !! So technically the implosion may have happened at around 09:46:37 (about 1h 45) into the dive, however, the trouble started at around 09:28. So, 18 mnts of trouble-shooting and uncertainty......Gosh that's hard to imagine !! 😢😢
Holy f*** that's so creepy, is like... everything is going wrong and any attempts to reach the surface again are in vain... and then the silence, the spine-chilling silence...
The CEO was living proof "it's easy to be an ideas guy"
The ceo was afforded a quick death that he didn’t deserve, instead of the public shame and prison time he should have faced.
They were descending too fast because they were too heavy, as evidenced by the fact that dropping their ballast did not cause the vessel to rise as it should have. Even after dropping the frame, it was still rising too slowly. Combine this with the use of carbon fibre and you have a recipe for disaster.
My take is Rush pushed for a fast descent to maximize time at the Titanic. If they can only be under for a set number of hours, why waste more of it with the trip down. Then he could also brag about how his "innovative" design allows passengers more time at depth.
too many fat billionaires
I guess the CEO forgot about the 5 hazardous attitudes during his flight school. Macho, check. Anti-Authority, check. Invulnerability, check.
Can't believe they used the cheapest materials to make the damn thing too 😐🤦♂️
"Change the world, my final message, goodbye"
The death of all members on board is freaky, sad and haunting. Hearing the cracking must have been nerve-wracking
Another thing to add to our history books.
I'm late to comment but from a dissection by someone that knows about submersibles
A) They were descending too fast
B) They weren't communicating back enough info to the top, CEO thought it was annoying to do so
C) They couldn't ascend because sea water was rushing in where sea water has no business being in
D) As soon as the cracking started, their fate was sealed, they died in about 1 milisecond and couldn't even register what happened
the cracks started and ended before they died, not saying its not related to the final implosion, but that the cracks you are refering to were not the exact cause of the implosion.
I’ve heard that (what I guess is) stock background music/sound in dozens of these videos now and it’s still as creepy as the first time I heard it. It only adds to the real life dire and unfortunate situation that this crew found themselves in. The ocean is a demonic place.
Note at 2:15, the texts from the sub have bad grammar, and are short and lowercase, this indicates rush was probably panicked and urgent to fix the problem
This gave me chills. Hella creepy.
I got a subway ad before this ☠️💀
the best sub
lol
there was one video where the late CEO said that they "would hear noises LONG before there was a problem".....well, they likely were leaking water but at that depth that was a death sentence. When the sub imploded, the force was stronger (and faster) than if they had 30kg of TNT go off in front of their face. They all died so fast that the would never have seen or felt anything. I suppose that would be "better" than freezing to death in the depths or suffocating on the surface since the sub had to be opened from the outside and they had no way to exit themselves.
They knew they were doomed. That fly by night rig was squeaking, creaking and leaking...
this is truley heart breaking to listen too
Rich doesn't equal smart...nor wisdom...in fact wisdom is priceless
Mrhamez I hope that your channel grows 🙏
Risking your own life in a sub you know isn't safe is one thing but putting 4 other lives in danger is straight up devious.
I guess that he had such a ghoulish love for the Titanic wreck that he became part of it.
Sad - and even more tragic is that he took four unwitting souls with him…
The only silver lining to this entire situation was it happened so quickly that they were dead before their brains could even register something was happening
They knew something was happening that’s the scary part
they knew they were going to die for over 18 mins
The horror building up to the imposition must’ve been horrible. The quiet noises becoming loud and soon shaking,it’d be horrible. May those 4 men and that innocent boy rest in heaven. ❤
That sub was like a hydraulic press. But way stronger. I feel bad for the family. 😢 ❤
At least they knew they were screwed and tried to make it back up
Agreed. But the sub just didn't rise back up. So they were just sitting there. In darkness. Pitch darkness.
I don't really think that makes it better
Some people keep implying that because it was an instant (and painless) death then the passengers were blissfully unaware of their impending doom. Maybe. But a lot of articles on the subject indicate there were sensors in the hull meant to give warning, that the ballast and landing frame had been jettisoned suggesting they urgently wanted to surface, a supposed transcript of the final communications in which the crew reported problems has been passed around, and it seems reasonable that unexpectedly loud cracking due to the upcoming implosion and pressure would have given everyone on board reason to think they were in extreme danger. No one can say for sure what happened as no one on board survived. OceanGate cannot be trusted to accurately report on their mistakes and they apparently declined to immediately admit that there was a problem ... they delayed. The Coast Guard may choose not to pass along information that will not contribute to a positive outcome and only upset the families. I do think a reasonable deduction (taking known facts and reasonable assumptions given those facts and then deriving a conclusion using known laws related to said facts) involves the idea that they knew they were in serious trouble. Damn. 😔
Been thinking this myself. 😢
Yeah I think basically they knew death was coming but it happened so fast they didn’t even have time to process it. One second crackling noises and alarms and the next second darkness. At least it was painless but damn what a way to go. Several minutes of pure terror and then nothing.
The thing that gets me mad is that we ignored 500 other deaths and payed so much attention to Titan
My favorite photo to come out of this was the side by side comparison of James Cameron's submersible, which is crammed wall to wall with technical equipment, versus the Oceangate submersible which is an empty tube with an Xbox controller.
I think the frame was what holding the whole thing together. Then they released all the weights too. With the shoddy engineering.. 😢
That’s why holding frame is important…. Just hold frame bro.
Did not heard this idea before but it actually makes sense.
DONT. USE. A. BOOTLEG. CONTROLLER
except it isn't even the controller that malfunctioned??
I imagine there were huge arguments that erupted when those cracking sounds happened, with the CEO assuring them it’s fine and then when they couldn’t ascend
Cool Video, Everything is explained in a simple way!!!
CEO knew the risks of this happening… im just thinking he was doing this on purpose, 4 specific people were invited and yet the CEO took them down with him :(
the audio for this when its leaked(if it is) is going to be apollo 13 levels of unnerving.
Given how many corners were cut I'd be surprised if they had a mic on board
If the RTM actually worked and they heard crackling, that hull was WAY more stable than I thought. I was under the impression any crack would instantly destroy the hull.
It's so sad that asked if they wanted to come back up, if they said yes, they'd probably still be alive if they got to the surface safley.
This whole tragedy is a cautionary tale for people to listen to their instincts and speak up at the first sign of trouble. Even before the trip in the titan, why weren’t there bells going off when Rush was showing everyone the kiddie gadgets he was using to run the sub? He was playing toy ship instead of properly handling a sub and it got himself and four others killed because of the negligence.
It's also a cautionary tale for people to ditch a progressive mindset when people's lives are on the line. Rush fired experienced Navy safety officers because they were "old white dudes" and weren't "inspiring" enough. Rush intentionally ignored legitimate safety concerns due to who was saying it and that negligence resulted in innocent people dying.
That is so sad. They were trying to get back to the surface and died.
People are like "so glad it was instant, they never knew".
Lmao. They were in panic mode for 20 minutes at least before contact was lost. Mounting panic as they struggle to try to ascend.
It was hell in that sub, trust me. Trapped at the bottom of the ocean, hearing the hull crackling...
They obviously knew there was a problem and we're trying to work the problem out for about 20 minutes so that must have been terrifying hearing those sounds cracking their last 20 minutes must have been torture this is really awful news