What Really Happens When A Sub Catastrophically Implodes

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  • Опубликовано: 21 июн 2023
  • What exactly caused the tragedy that claimed the lives of the five people on board the Titan? Here's a quick look at how extreme conditions can destroy a submersible.
    #Submersible #Implosion #Explained
    Read Full Article: www.slashgear.com/1321221/wha...
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Комментарии • 817

  • @tomgrzywacz6135
    @tomgrzywacz6135 Год назад +377

    I'd rather die quick than being cramped up and crapped up with 4 others knowing we only had 96 hours of air left and chances were 1/1000 of rescue.

    • @Y0SK3
      @Y0SK3 Год назад +18

      To be honest if it was the full vessel they were searching for it probably would’ve been easier. I bet it’s a lot harder searching for a debris field, especially when that debris field is sitting on the ocean floor next to The Titanic’s massive debris field.

    • @jeannaimarre
      @jeannaimarre Год назад +11

      Same, not to mention they would've waited in a freezing dixie, while not even wearing shoes.

    • @powerstroke304
      @powerstroke304 Год назад +8

      I was thinking. If I was slowly suffocating, trapped on a sub with the person who built it AND my son.. idk

    • @tomgrzywacz6135
      @tomgrzywacz6135 Год назад +1

      Yea...great point!

    • @Passifloor
      @Passifloor Год назад +10

      I’d rather not die

  • @Gwydion_Wolf
    @Gwydion_Wolf Год назад +182

    It may be a bit morbid to think about, but would be interesting, from a learning perspective, to see someome build a 'scalled down' submarine model out of carbon-fiber, and stick it into a water-pressure chamber to see just how differently carbon-fiber implodes vs metal.

    • @theonewhoknows2
      @theonewhoknows2 Год назад +19

      Or better, build an exact replica of the titan made out of the same material and then it would be accurate

    • @tingles3091
      @tingles3091 Год назад +5

      This has already been done literally. It was done 11ish years ago or less there’s a RUclips video out there.

    • @tingles3091
      @tingles3091 Год назад +11

      ruclips.net/video/lwvUvIKhK1Q/видео.html
      Found it just for you buddy.

    • @Gwydion_Wolf
      @Gwydion_Wolf Год назад +4

      @@tingles3091 looks like it does what i'd expect.. 'snaps' rather than bends.... where metal might 'crinkle up' in an implosion, the carbon fiber would sheer off into strips/sections and look more like shattered glass.

    • @bonwrentaylor2743
      @bonwrentaylor2743 Год назад +3

      So, undertake just the sort of tests that should have been mandatory to pass before this death trap was ever allowed to carry humans, especially fee paying public ........ yes, I agree !!

  • @FIGHTTHECABLE
    @FIGHTTHECABLE Год назад +454

    The passengers were shredded apart and they didn't even know it was happening. They didn't feel a thing, but their bodies won't be found. Even the bones got shattered.

    • @SnowbordrWRX
      @SnowbordrWRX Год назад +46

      Yep... Maybe clothes, jewelry, and shoes. No flesh or bone

    • @OfficialTN_Edits
      @OfficialTN_Edits Год назад +67

      It sounds painful but I’m glad they felt no pain
      RIP

    • @cycloneaction2211
      @cycloneaction2211 Год назад +94

      Nope. They were turned to ash since an implosion at that depth would make the air in the sub as hot as the surface of the sun before crush.

    • @ojbeez5260
      @ojbeez5260 Год назад +45

      @@cycloneaction2211 Agreed...literally microscopic fish food pellets you feed the fish in your fish tank with.

    • @censura1210
      @censura1210 Год назад

      You are painfully stupid. Their bodies won't shreed at all,just like fish doesn't shred.

  • @crazymulatto8981
    @crazymulatto8981 Год назад +245

    The pressure at those depths is so immense that it would crush the entire human body like if your were crushing an egg with a tenderizing hammer, so yeah death would be pretty much instantaneous. Maybe they weren't the most sound people out there, but they're still people with families that love them, may they Rest In Peace🖤

    • @DDHDTV
      @DDHDTV Год назад +13

      @@F2PARTIESwell Imagine an egg inside a can, now crush the can with a hammer. what do you think will happen with the egg?

    • @DDHDTV
      @DDHDTV Год назад +8

      edit: myth busters actually have a test on this, check mythbusters compresed diver

    • @milanimorales2645
      @milanimorales2645 Год назад +6

      Sulaiman didnt even want to go💔

    • @edp3202
      @edp3202 Год назад +3

      ​@@F2PARTIESshredded

    • @evilarchconservative2952
      @evilarchconservative2952 Год назад +9

      ​@@F2PARTIESThe passengers went from 14 square pounds per square inch to 5200 pounds per square inch in 20/1000 of a second. They didn't feel a thing.

  • @billymccall5969
    @billymccall5969 Год назад +194

    It’s crazy how some fish and other underwater organisms can easily withstand that kind of pressure. Evolution is amazing.

    • @nicolcacola
      @nicolcacola Год назад +63

      God's creation is amazing.

    • @Danielc117
      @Danielc117 Год назад +4

      @@nicolcacola 💯💯🙏🏼

    • @Mossadwins
      @Mossadwins Год назад +6

      Not many though only a very very few fish and star fish

    • @maxamahnken7325
      @maxamahnken7325 Год назад +12

      Creation ----- not evolution.

    • @1emmajones
      @1emmajones Год назад +1

      I though that too.

  • @john8083
    @john8083 Год назад +106

    Great "implosion" explanation. Many people will be looking at how an implosion looks/works/feels in the coming days/weeks.

    • @Filthy_Larry
      @Filthy_Larry Год назад +3

      Leviathan 1989, The Abyss 1989

    • @Filthy_Larry
      @Filthy_Larry Год назад +3

      Deep Star Six 1989

    • @user-zw7xi2jd3q
      @user-zw7xi2jd3q Год назад +2

      There's no way anyone could ever know what it feels like. Just like those who jumped from the top floors of the WTC on 9/11, when they hit the ground below they wouldn't have registered any pain at all or even know they hit the ground. The only difference here is those jumpers would've had time to think on the way down. Not so with these people on the Titan. They would've had no clue what was about to happen. Therefore there was absolutely no mental anguish at all.

    • @brinkee7674
      @brinkee7674 Год назад +1

      @@user-zw7xi2jd3q well there could of been anguish if one of them had gas on the way down

    • @lateshiachilds3640
      @lateshiachilds3640 Год назад +1

      I know I am, it's scary I'm trying to and not imagine them on that sub in their final moments.

  • @Michiganders
    @Michiganders Год назад +12

    Passenger hull was made of carbon fiber instead of industry standard metallic. Bonded to titanium caps on both ends sealed via epoxy and galvanization prone bolts. Ocean Gate played Russian roulette with each dive. Not a matter of if but when.

  • @williamritson6357
    @williamritson6357 Год назад +23

    I know it sounds morbid but I'm glad this is actually what happened. I'm glad they didn't sit for 4 days in a tiny metal tube waiting to run out of air. I feel bad for the kid that didnt really wanna go... so sad

    • @wintercame
      @wintercame Год назад

      his Mom said he very much wanted to go and she gave up her seat to him.

    • @williamritson6357
      @williamritson6357 Год назад

      @@wintercame I heard he went because of father's day? I may be wrong though!

    • @wintercame
      @wintercame Год назад +1

      @@williamritson6357 He'd been wanting to go for some time his mother said, but he was underage at the time his parents first booked their own tickets so he couldn't legally. I think the Father's Day ended up being a coincidence of scheduling.

    • @missmissy_90
      @missmissy_90 Год назад

      William,
      Hi, I do not think your comment is morbid at all. A tragic accident occurred. I was relieved to learn it was quick and painless.
      My biggest fear is they came back up and bobbing along with no way to get out. Or down there in the dark. Hungry and terrified.
      Much respect 🙏🏻💕

  • @masiahsolo
    @masiahsolo Год назад +17

    I’m glad you mentioned the part about it not being like the movies with the window crack getting bigger.. no in real life at that depth it’s curtains if something goes wrong

  • @tieradlerch.217
    @tieradlerch.217 Год назад +47

    Who thought firing real expert engineer would be a good idea

    • @bajsapa3892
      @bajsapa3892 Год назад

      The rich 😂😂

    • @davidpar2
      @davidpar2 Год назад

      The woke ceo who valued virtue signaling over vessel safety and structural integrity.

  • @brooksiedoodle5087
    @brooksiedoodle5087 Год назад +235

    I'm waiting for someone to create an animation of what a catastrophic implosion looks like.
    I know we're all curious...

    • @freddibna4976
      @freddibna4976 Год назад +1

      Look up coke can de pressure, I expect its similar

    • @agustintorres2649
      @agustintorres2649 Год назад +8

      Look up byford dolphin accident it shows pictures of how they look

    • @lcogan65
      @lcogan65 Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/LEY3fN4N3D8/видео.html

    • @TheBestOfSweden
      @TheBestOfSweden Год назад +8

      @@agustintorres2649the people aboard the titan would look even worse as the pressure is even higher down there

    • @corrioliseffect
      @corrioliseffect Год назад

      @@agustintorres2649 I just read the story on Wikipedia. Holy crap that was gruesome. I’m too scared to view pics. 😳

  • @billymccall5969
    @billymccall5969 Год назад +35

    Prior to news of the implosion, I said a prayer for the 5 souls on board. I realized that they were projected to run out of air and I thought slowly suffocating to death cramped inside a tiny tube in complete abyssal darkness would be a terrible way to go.
    Although it’s sad that they died, I am grateful that the implosion was very sudden and that death was instantaneous. They were there one instant and then gone the next… that’s the best way it could have happened.

    • @Project_-jq7jw
      @Project_-jq7jw Год назад +1

      @@psykhs Do you mean that cause you wanted them to suffer less? Just wondering.

    • @ew374
      @ew374 Год назад +1

      Wow, weird conversation here👆

    • @vur0kii
      @vur0kii Год назад

      @@psykhsok? no one asked you and god doesn’t love you 🙏 do not stay safe 🩷

    • @Celtics_fan_08
      @Celtics_fan_08 Год назад

      Same here, going without oxygen and suffering is way worse, instant death when they wouldn’t know is better. Not that them dying is a consolation, Just knowing they didn’t suffer helps it a little bit.

  • @jackbarnes9728
    @jackbarnes9728 Год назад +95

    One of the many things that are bad about this is the CEO was supposed to be a billionaire yet he was cutting corners to save money and refused to have the Titan certified or tested at depth. It would have been illegal for the Titan to dive in US waters because of the lack of certification and testing. So that douchebag cutting corners to save money costed several folks lives who were unaware of the level of negligence there was from the CEO.

    • @JarethTheGoblinKingForever
      @JarethTheGoblinKingForever Год назад +11

      One of them was a 19-year-old who was allegedly terrified of the trip but wanted to make his father happy by going with him. It really is sad that it wasn't safer. A lesson for us all that money isn't the root of evil, but greed can be. The right allotment of money and time could have saved this submarine and the people inside it. Instead corners were cut, the science was ignored and people without the proper expertise tried to explore something dangerous. No matter how much money you've got, if you're an amateur, go visit a Titanic museum or something. Don't do this.

    • @adamg6643
      @adamg6643 Год назад +1

      @@JarethTheGoblinKingForever Awesome analysis.
      Also, slap that magic spell on me.

    • @hfarthingt
      @hfarthingt Год назад +3

      At least he went down with his ship. Honorable captain.

    • @cynthg9547
      @cynthg9547 Год назад +4

      @@hfarthingt He had no choice but to go down but he's a selfish person who killed 3 other people cause his greed and selfishness

    • @kbrizy7490
      @kbrizy7490 Год назад

      Family money, dude married into the Macy’s family.

  • @masterbullshitdo
    @masterbullshitdo Год назад +92

    They paid $250k each to experience death by implosion in the most expensive underwater coffin. This is History in the making.

    • @Dilithium1
      @Dilithium1 Год назад +2

      Truly terrible

    • @cz2301
      @cz2301 Год назад +7

      Better than assisted euthanasia in Switzerland, with all the interviews to take and forms to fill. Im in.

    • @jonathansaindon788
      @jonathansaindon788 Год назад +4

      The most expensive Darwin Award there is…

    • @reyduck7742
      @reyduck7742 Год назад +4

      At least they got the full titanic experience

    • @masterbullshitdo
      @masterbullshitdo Год назад

      I'm sry!! But this top the dumbest way to die. $250k to become fish food & probably $100k tax dollars to find the debris.

  • @markfournette2483
    @markfournette2483 Год назад +56

    Even if it started as a pinhole crack, the resulting needle jet of water would have cut everyone in half instantly.

  • @ricou3773
    @ricou3773 Год назад +23

    Imagine the pressure of the weight of a truck exerting on the surface of a fingernail. It's easy to imagine the remains of all five people filling a thimble. Dreadful indeed.

    • @joeshmoe7967
      @joeshmoe7967 Год назад +2

      Instant fish food...locals were dining well that day.....

    • @Project_-jq7jw
      @Project_-jq7jw Год назад +2

      Yeah but we're made mostly of water and water doesn't compress. So more likely, they were liquified and ended up squirting out in any available directions.

    • @ew374
      @ew374 Год назад

      @@joeshmoe7967 five people perished horribly!!! Stop the comedy central!!!

    • @Project_-jq7jw
      @Project_-jq7jw Год назад

      @@elroy-kq7we I'm trying to picture what the recently mentioned "human remains" must look like. I'm having issues here.

  • @MasterInHD
    @MasterInHD Год назад +17

    This comment section is filled with either savants or mentally handicapped individuals, no in between.

    • @edp3202
      @edp3202 Год назад

      😅😅😅😅😅😅

  • @ronaldedwards1022
    @ronaldedwards1022 Год назад +13

    I could only imagine what was going through the guy sons head knowing that he did not want too be there in the first place and was only doing it too please his dad for fathers day then realizing that they may never make it back up too the surface... so sad!...😢

    • @CameronRoser-Peet
      @CameronRoser-Peet Год назад +2

      That is very sad and would make for a great scene in a Hollywood movie but that's not how it happened. They were thinking about how they were almost to the wreck site..then they were gone. No time to process anything. At least according to science and case studies of other implosions

    • @user-zw7xi2jd3q
      @user-zw7xi2jd3q Год назад +1

      They wouldn't have had time to realize anything. They never knew what hit them. In a nanosecond they were monitoring the trip going down and then nothing. No lives flashing before their eyes, no warning something was wrong. They did not suffer in the slightest. Implosion is violent and certainly doesn't happen slowly, not with the amount of pressure pushing in on that vessel. They were dead the moment contact was lost.

    • @aClownBaby-
      @aClownBaby- Год назад

      @@CameronRoser-Peet But it is though? They knew and tried to get back up, James Cameron said they tried to drop weight and go up

  • @beauolivas7850
    @beauolivas7850 Год назад

    Thanks for the explanation and quick post turnaround on this video.

  • @kleepo7733
    @kleepo7733 Год назад +13

    Obviously these passengers knew something was going to happen because they released and dropped their bottom section in case of emergency so yes they did know what was happening.
    And I'm sure it was terrifying.

    • @kmix7928
      @kmix7928 Год назад +1

      They didn't know shit you don't know what they dropped commutations and tracking went out the same time only one thing explains that quick

    • @bubdolla
      @bubdolla Год назад +1

      @@kmix7928I agree they didn’t drop anything and didn’t realize anything they vaporized unfortunately…. They skid and other stuff was dropped because it imploded that other stuff was on the outside and didn’t

    • @coryleblanc
      @coryleblanc Год назад

      Thus not instant

    • @aClownBaby-
      @aClownBaby- Год назад

      @@kmix7928 They knew

    • @kmix7928
      @kmix7928 Год назад

      @@aClownBaby- I hope they did serves em right 🤷‍♀️

  • @marshamckennis5884
    @marshamckennis5884 Год назад +2

    It’s so crazy reading all this. Why don’t people value their lives more! Why do people do these crazy things!!! I mean send a robot instead!!!

  • @nishae7436
    @nishae7436 Год назад +46

    Losing power is enough to drive me crazy..under water in the dark even for 5 seconds then to be crushed is beyond …may they Rest In Peace

    • @joeshmoe7967
      @joeshmoe7967 Год назад +2

      The crushing was instant. Over 5000PSI at those depths. Think of the weight of a car on your big toe, and then the weight of a car on each and every square inch all at the same time.
      Grab and egg and crush it in your hand as fast as possible....like that only much faster.

    • @polarbearsrus6980
      @polarbearsrus6980 Год назад

      They were on the way down when it happened and they did have lighting. I don't think they even lost power, it just blew!!!😒

    • @landsgevaer
      @landsgevaer Год назад

      They surely Rest in Pieces.

  • @No-tc2bh
    @No-tc2bh Год назад +4

    ''Death is likely to happen before a human central nervous system can even register that something has gone wrong.''
    Thank god. I hope they were gone before they even had time to panic.

  • @gracemirandilla5128
    @gracemirandilla5128 Год назад +1

    the best explanation so far

  • @Jaeger713
    @Jaeger713 Год назад +28

    amazing how fish can live and thrive at those depths...

    • @Physics072
      @Physics072 Год назад +7

      Because they are not full of air like humans, they don't have eardrums lungs. If humans had lungs full of fluid along with sinus cavities and any air pockets we too could live like fish.

    • @Jaeger713
      @Jaeger713 Год назад +5

      @@Physics072 Thanks for that answer, but still the thousands of pounds of pressure imploding.... So those fish don't regulate oxygen through their gills like all the other fish? I don't know, I'm not an aquatic scientist, but it's still amazes me how they can survive in those below freezing temperatures and pressure.

    • @beachbliss9366
      @beachbliss9366 Год назад +7

      @@Jaeger713An expert was saying there’s no fish at that depth. Only Jellyfish type beings.

    • @TheTanniyn
      @TheTanniyn Год назад +1

      @@beachbliss9366 there are fish, you can see them in much of the footage around and in the Titanic wreck

    • @MsJubjubbird
      @MsJubjubbird Год назад

      @@Jaeger713 they just live in that pressure. Their bodies are used to it and the pressure actually keeps them together- just like the wreck of the Titanic is being held together by the pressure of the ocean. If you brought it up it would collapse. There is a fish called the blob fish that lives about 1km below the surface. It looks like a normal fish in the ocean. But if you take it out of the water it collapses into a blob.

  • @richardbilyansky4098
    @richardbilyansky4098 Год назад +4

    The titanium ring over the fibreglass hull were reacting to the same pressure differently and this caused the seam the bust. That’s why the rov found the ring because it blew off the fibre hill

  • @borntoclimb7116
    @borntoclimb7116 Год назад +1

    Very interesting

  • @dom2326
    @dom2326 Год назад +1

    You just learned that it's easier to go to outer space than go below our deepest seas.

  • @rubroken
    @rubroken Год назад +5

    In an aircraft, repeated flights cause metal fatigue over time, so planes are constantly inspected. Submersibles sound like they have tremendous forces constantly bombarding them. Are they inspected more often than aircraft?

    • @imho2278
      @imho2278 Год назад +1

      Yes. But this one wasn't.

  • @fluffypinkpandas
    @fluffypinkpandas Год назад +3

    Subnautica kinda holds your hand in that regard huh. it gives you a whole lot of telegraph to get out of crushing depths where as IRL its an instakill boundary.

  • @kristenmosley3446
    @kristenmosley3446 Год назад +4

    It just amazes me how perfect we are for our surroundings as opposed to being say living on another planet or in the areas in the lower oceans.. (I know I’m gonna get grief for my next comment by I’m fine with it) God knew what He was doing to provide the “perfect” pressure for our survival..

    • @singleservingjack4547
      @singleservingjack4547 Год назад +1

      The perfect pressure wasn't put in place for our survival, its the other way around.
      We had to adapt over millions of years so that our bodies had the perfect make up to survive the already existing pressure.
      Thats how evolution works

  • @xDaremx
    @xDaremx Год назад

    great video

  • @fridaycaliforniaa236
    @fridaycaliforniaa236 Год назад +2

    A sub implosion is like crushing an empty soda can by releasing a full fridge on it

  • @wheres_bears1378
    @wheres_bears1378 Год назад +3

    They died so fast they still think they are on the submersible

    • @edp3202
      @edp3202 Год назад +2

      Maybe their ghosts are meeting the ghosts of the Titanic

    • @MisterBigSniff
      @MisterBigSniff Год назад

      ​@@edp3202no, they're in hell

  • @mzbatonrougebeauty5267
    @mzbatonrougebeauty5267 Год назад +20

    They didn't feel anything but unfortunately they definitely know that something serious was wrong

    • @armi4276
      @armi4276 Год назад

      Yes the anxiety of knowing that something is wrong is terrifying

    • @coryleblanc
      @coryleblanc Год назад

      Well pick 1

  • @dh8312
    @dh8312 Год назад +7

    From what I've read they drop their weights so that they were on their way back to the surface. They must have heard some noises and seen some alerts on their instruments. I am very interested in what their mothership monitors have to say. I want to know what they know just before the implosion, before communications was lost. 🤔🤔🤔

    • @dennardglover2848
      @dennardglover2848 Год назад

      Naw the implosion caused that

    • @racquel127
      @racquel127 Год назад

      I haven't heard that at all. Which website/news station said that they realized something was wrong and so decided to turn back?

    • @joeytacey743
      @joeytacey743 Год назад

      ​@@racquel127I saw that a couple different places... The sub was equipped with some sort of alarm if the hull started to crack... So it was possible they were on their way back up

    • @foughtwolf
      @foughtwolf Год назад

      @@joeytacey743 The system was faulty, and it was a known issue. It would quite literally sense a failure immediately as the carbon fiber failed, so, yknow. Too late.

  • @gayleholmes9081
    @gayleholmes9081 Год назад +13

    What is so profound and so irey about all this.....the ghost of those that lost thier lives on the Titanic greeted the 5 in the after life......and wanted to send a message to those who will return someday.....PLEASE LET US ALL REST IN PEACE AND LEAVE US ALONE!!!!

    • @MsMaxinejoy
      @MsMaxinejoy Год назад +3

      The spirit of that 19 year old, must be terrified....😢

    • @imho2278
      @imho2278 Год назад +2

      Don't be silly.

    • @gayleholmes9081
      @gayleholmes9081 Год назад +1

      @@MsMaxinejoy One can only imagine the torment that occured in those final seconds....I'm just baffled by ppl with all the blessings life can give, ie being billionaires....and still that's not enough.

    • @alexanderwright1774
      @alexanderwright1774 Год назад +1

      Get out of fairy tail land bud

    • @gayleholmes9081
      @gayleholmes9081 Год назад

      @@alexanderwright1774 I was simply giving my interpretation of life after death, has nothing to do with fairy tails. And since none of us know what happens after we die, I'll stick my analogy, bud

  • @bbyevo8u
    @bbyevo8u Год назад +4

    I would think you would hear some sort of cracking noise before it actually implodes

    • @davidpar2
      @davidpar2 Год назад

      Possibly in the second before implosion

  • @danburch9989
    @danburch9989 Год назад +2

    "A chain is only as strong as its weakest link." It only took one tiny defect to cause a catastrophic implosion. Death was instataneous, didn't have time to say "What's that noise?" followed by "Oh, crap!"

    • @user-cm3kv4xd9z
      @user-cm3kv4xd9z Год назад

      Yes I agree. They were hearing cracks, loud bangs and the hull pushing in due to the pressure. They knew just before it imploded they would never make it back home.

  • @Gung_Ho_Vids
    @Gung_Ho_Vids Год назад +35

    It would be the mercy of God if they imploded. They would feel no pain. It would happen so fast that their brains could not understand. On the other hand, if they were trapped in a can on the bottom of the ocean and waiting for air to run out... that would be hell.

    • @joeshmoe7967
      @joeshmoe7967 Год назад +7

      or just the mercy of 5000PSI at that depth, and the over all physics of the craft and forces. 'God' is not merciful, or if 'he' is, very very selective....

    • @sylwialesniak4335
      @sylwialesniak4335 Год назад +1

      @@kaya856 shut up for what? For speaking facts? Millions innocent people, children die from atrocious deaths all the time and suddenly these 5 would be spared from suffering? It was pure coincidence or "luck" they didn't feel anything , a combination of various factors

    • @landsgevaer
      @landsgevaer Год назад

      Oh great, five peeps die and we credit god for being "merciful"!? Credit him for killing five people first please...
      If there were a god, and he could prevent this, then he is a psychopath for not doing so.

    • @Gung_Ho_Vids
      @Gung_Ho_Vids Год назад

      @@landsgevaer God gave humans free will. He didn't force those people to go on that dive. God did not kill those people.

    • @landsgevaer
      @landsgevaer Год назад

      @@Gung_Ho_Vids God could have created a world where people have free will but where he knew that they were going to chose differently, right...? So I maintain that either he didn't have the power to do things differently, or he didn't care to.
      Btw, until I see evidence for free will and for god, both go in the same basket as the loch ness monster for me.

  • @timothyjerry1177
    @timothyjerry1177 Год назад +2

    The owners fault. He was a real idiot for not following basic safety protocol with inspections.

  • @isaiah2536
    @isaiah2536 Год назад +89

    My heart breaks only for the son and the families of the deceased, not the 4 billionaires who were stupid enough to pay250k to see the titanic in the honda civic of submarines. The poor kid was absolutely petrified of the trip and only went because he wanted to appease his dad for father’s day. Tragic.

    • @edp3202
      @edp3202 Год назад +21

      Hey, don't put down Honda Civics.

    • @Chris_FigTV
      @Chris_FigTV Год назад +10

      Yea Hondas are actually very expensive now. Lol maybe a ford focus

    • @xyo1337
      @xyo1337 Год назад

      I hope karma meets you one day :)

    • @zZrEtRiBuTiOnZz
      @zZrEtRiBuTiOnZz Год назад +6

      Yeah, I mean you're a billionaire and you can't spend a little more for a safer submersible? Paid a pretty heavy price in the end though.

    • @robertgroves5630
      @robertgroves5630 Год назад +2

      @@ScottSavageTechnoScavengermore like a Audi or bmw

  • @jimross9178
    @jimross9178 Год назад +4

    Seen some back and forth on bodies 'vaporizing' or 'disintegrating'. Disregarding the material debris compression mutilations, does bone and tissue actually liquify at instantaneous 5500 psi burst?

    • @natalyawoop4263
      @natalyawoop4263 Год назад +2

      The energy released on implosion is equivalent to several kilograms of TNT, so basically liquefied.

    • @edp3202
      @edp3202 Год назад +2

      ​@@natalyawoop4263Jesus

    • @MeastrasElKachelino
      @MeastrasElKachelino Год назад +2

      45 million kilograms or 100 million pounds of water above you at that depth would blast the cabin into a furnace, within milliseconds.

    • @davidpar2
      @davidpar2 Год назад +2

      @@MeastrasElKachelinoyes, a friction furnace

  • @DarkAtHearts
    @DarkAtHearts Год назад +1

    I just want to see a simulation of what happens to the human body at that depth

  • @SealAngel
    @SealAngel Год назад

    The soda can with Quint crushing it explains it perfectly.

  • @Arturest
    @Arturest Год назад

    This amateur video could somehow bring hundreds of experts in the comment section. That alone is a great achievement. Thank you sirs for all your expertise.

  • @zedovski
    @zedovski Год назад +15

    Another morbid possibility is that the central carbon fibre portion of the sub disintegrated, and the two titanium spheres instantly collapsed on each other forming a tight sphere, turning the inside of the sub into the area between the two hemispheres for moments before the pressure equalized. That means the 5 occupants would have been squeezed into a very tight and mangled state, recognizing their predicament for possibly a few moments before dying.

    • @JMalikZ
      @JMalikZ Год назад

      No. The implosion would have caused extreme heat due to oxygen present in the chamber. Oxygen is made of water. Extreme pressure would have vaporized that in nanoseconds due to extreme heat, the blood in the vessels made of water would have also vaporised in nano seconds and oxygen in the lungs would have vaporized everything would compress and nervous system wouldn’t even be able to send signals to the brain in that time. Death in nanoseconds

    • @ew374
      @ew374 Год назад +1

      Anymore painful insight😒?

    • @dogbirdgun
      @dogbirdgun Год назад

      Horse shit

    • @davidpar2
      @davidpar2 Год назад +4

      They wouldn’t have had seconds. They were liquefied from the heat and pressure and ejected out of the wreckage before they knew what happened to them

    • @brinkee7674
      @brinkee7674 Год назад

      wrong as they would of imploded themselves before those ends ever came together. It would of been over before the millisecond it took for a vision or feeling reached the brain. The human body becomes part of the sea, a cloud. Which is quicker than a vision or feeling can be processed

  • @mohamedabdalhafiz5570
    @mohamedabdalhafiz5570 Год назад +46

    That's Terrible.

    • @botpro160
      @botpro160 Год назад +1

      Nope, thats phisics

    • @user-is4dp4bw6o
      @user-is4dp4bw6o Год назад +3

      It’s a horrible thing that they died however at least they were not in pain

    • @botpro160
      @botpro160 Год назад +2

      @@user-is4dp4bw6o they were just stupid i think, most the ceo of oceangate

    • @kingcurrent6054
      @kingcurrent6054 Год назад +3

      @@botpro160The utter lack of empathy that the internet has caused is a marvel to see

    • @botpro160
      @botpro160 Год назад

      @@kingcurrent6054 if I had billions i wouldnt pay 250k to die

  • @senilestix
    @senilestix Год назад +5

    Just for explanation...at that depth of 40MPa the speed of implosion would be over 2200 feet per second, or around Mach 2.. Then because of massive compression of the atmosphere inside the sub, the atmosphere along with all the passengers body fats and tissues would have detonated...YES 'detonated' in an almighty outward explosion, turning everyone to ash n dust in a ball of plasma! There was no leaking water, most probably no creaking, no warning what so ever! In fact without a high speed camera, you couldn't distinguish the transition from implosion to explosion, as it happened in a couple of milliseconds. Sorry to be graphic...but peoples explanations are bugging me...There's nothing to recover!

    • @edp3202
      @edp3202 Год назад

      We recover ghosts

    • @senilestix
      @senilestix Год назад

      @@edp3202 good for you Egon

  • @lyndapussell6749
    @lyndapussell6749 Год назад +1

    I’d like to know if the sub had any pressure reading instruments on board and if so wouldn’t the pilot have noticed anything that was seriously going wrong?

    • @foughtwolf
      @foughtwolf Год назад

      It had a failure warning system for the carbon fiber, but it was repeatedly noted as being moot as it would have sensed trouble right as the craft imploded and not before. Carbon fiber is a great pressure retaining compound, but it does NOT resist pressure well. It cant flex, it just shatters suddenly and violently.

  • @sallystege7163
    @sallystege7163 Год назад +3

    Think thst crack was the 7 inches of plexiglass window. Accompanied by a sheared bolt. Imo

    • @Stayceltic
      @Stayceltic Год назад +1

      The ceo said in an interview that the plexiglass flexed in about 4" every dive. That is terrifying in itself.

  • @4af
    @4af Год назад

    Video didn't mention if there were tell tale noises that the crew could have heard before the implosion? if the crew heard noises of impending structural failure they would have been terrifying.

  • @zorilaz
    @zorilaz Год назад +24

    Hmmm i don’t think so. It might’ve been quick but you never know. It might’ve been an implosion and blow everything apart in half a second or it might’ve taken a few seconds and everyone was aware of what was happening. We don’t know how that material reacts to extreme pressure . It shatters ? it bends ? Maybe the sub structure started bending and making weird noises before the implosion.

    • @sarac1118
      @sarac1118 Год назад +4

      I was thinking the same. Maybe they folded first? Nuts

    • @eddieludwell1866
      @eddieludwell1866 Год назад

      so they new somthing was going wrong but they kept going deeper,,,
      ruclips.net/video/cz9fw5lrLBo/видео.html

    • @dannywilliamson3340
      @dannywilliamson3340 Год назад +16

      @@sarac1118 At Titanic, the sea pressure is near 6500 pounds per square inch. Multiply that by the total surface area of a pressure vessel and you're talking hundreds of thousands of tons of force. The first point of failure of a submersible's hull would be like the cracks propagating through a shattering window....essentially instantaneous. They never knew what hit them.

    • @tmoney1876
      @tmoney1876 Год назад +15

      Firstly, composites don't tend to fail like that. They don't bend. When they reach their stress limit, they tend to fail completely.
      Secondly, at these kinds of forces, a progressive failure like this isn't going to happen. The speed that literally any point of failure would progress to a total collapse would be unimaginable. Small forces can cause cracks to propagate over time because the force is concentrated at the tips of the cracks. That's why drilling out the end of a crack can make it stop propagating, it increases the area where the force is acting and thereby reduces the stress concentration. In this case, the forces would be so great that the stress concentrations at the ends of a crack would approach infinity.
      James Cameron said on CNN that the company knew that the submersible dropped its ballast (which he says they only would have known if the pilot had relayed that information to the surface ship.) If that's the case then they were trying to head back up. It may be the case that they heard noises that told them that the hull was going to fail, which would be terrifying.
      They may have had an idea that it was coming, but once the failure actually started, it would have been effectively instantaneous.

    • @zorilaz
      @zorilaz Год назад +3

      @@tmoney1876 The forces gradually increased as the sub went down . The forces were greater and greater . How do you know the sub did t first bend and they weren’t able to go to the surface and as they kept on going down it eventually imploded ? How do you know titan and carbon fibre reaction to pressure ? You all think it’s instant, it could be but the sub was not dropped at 13000 ft , it went slowly to that depth . Sorry you’re not convincing try again. After graduating from The Naval Academy i have a hard time letting myself taught by a youtube comment . Unless it makes sense, you on the other hand don’t understand that it was going down slowly and you’re not an expert on titan and carbon fibre composite. Can you prove they didn’t drown at 5000 ft underwater then the sub imploded at 12000 ? noup . It’s about the evidence . The evidence is the Titan was destroyed due to pressure from the outside . What happened before that moment is unknown .

  • @josemoreno3334
    @josemoreno3334 Год назад +1

    May all five Rest In Peace.🙏

  • @hsmathis
    @hsmathis Год назад +2

    No amount of money can buy common sense!

  • @peterborg3340
    @peterborg3340 Год назад +7

    Let s face it: while people spent a lot of money to find the SUB and people pray for them etc......
    But every single day many more people starve to death around the world.........

  • @CazzaSecombe
    @CazzaSecombe Год назад

    Rest in Peace those who perished. I am glad they did not suffer. x

  • @KeepingTheFaith123
    @KeepingTheFaith123 Год назад +1

    Irony is, the cause of deaths in Titan boiled down to same reason for cause of deaths in Titanic. Cutting corners to save money and greed to make money. Titanic used cheaper rivets instead of the stronger, safer ones which wud have been more expensive. Also not enough life boats as they didn't want the deck "cluttered" up and preventing first class passengers looking out to the ocean

  • @henri-fillipbauer6579
    @henri-fillipbauer6579 Год назад +5

    Usually they build spheres the shape of that thing was weird.

    • @fluffypinkpandas
      @fluffypinkpandas Год назад +1

      its almost like spheres handle compression better than cylinders.

    • @leso204
      @leso204 Год назад

      Dead right' they only had a big Pringles tube ........................

  • @MeastrasElKachelino
    @MeastrasElKachelino Год назад +1

    Imagine carrying 45 Million Kilograms of weight on your back... That's the weight of water above you at 4km below the sea level, the titanic depth, from all directions.

  • @thomasbrunn4182
    @thomasbrunn4182 Год назад +3

    guess in 111 years from now there send people down to look at this wreck!

  • @siggyretburns7523
    @siggyretburns7523 Год назад +21

    In short, submersibles dont spring leaks when they've reached their max depths. They just fold.

  • @jamesharris184
    @jamesharris184 Год назад +1

    It was over before it even began

  • @JP-ub3iv
    @JP-ub3iv Год назад +11

    Don’t want to sound like I’m joking on people’s lives but would this go on Guinness world record for the death occurring as close to the earths core?

    • @ojbeez5260
      @ojbeez5260 Год назад +8

      Most instantaneous death ever in recorded history...probably in ALL history (since cavemen I don't think had submarines etc.)

    • @Moneymyke357
      @Moneymyke357 Год назад +2

      @@ojbeez5260 No that occurred at Hiroshima.

    • @davidpar2
      @davidpar2 Год назад

      @@Moneymyke357the speed of the deaths of those in the submersible would rival that of those at ground zero Hiroshima. Both instantaneous

  • @MyGamekiller
    @MyGamekiller Год назад

    Wow that’s scary

  • @mdibound
    @mdibound Год назад +25

    Such an extreme change in pressure would instantly vaporize all organic matter. The enormous amount of water pressure unleashed would compress the hull's gas column and everything within it down to the size of a tennis ball. This super-heated gas would have a temperature exceeding the sun. We've seen remnants of liquified steel with Implosions at far less depth. As the compressed column cools, material would be ejected.

    • @dimalecherdavidson1826
      @dimalecherdavidson1826 Год назад +3

      Can you help me understand why we can still see China plates next to Titanic, would they have imploded and vaporized? And this would mean their bones had imploded and vaporized? But why not China plates?

    • @eustab.anas-mann9510
      @eustab.anas-mann9510 Год назад

      Exceeding the _surface_ of the sun. Not the core.

    • @edp3202
      @edp3202 Год назад

      Vaporize 😮😮😮😮😮😮😮

    • @williamstaib4623
      @williamstaib4623 Год назад +6

      The pressure is only a problem when not in equilibrium. The inside of our bodies is exerting 1 ATM of pressure on the surface. So when you go over a hill and your ears pop, your internal pressure is adjusting to match external so you no longer feel the pressure, because there's no longer a differential. Because those people in the sub were "calibrated" to 1 ATM, just like the inside of the sub was at 1 ATM (not sure about this part, the sub may have been pressured a bit to help withstand the depth) , this meant the hull was taking on the full job of resisting the pressure. Once the hull failed, the sub crushed immediately. Think of a balloon being dragged to the bottom of the ocean, at sea level it would be of normal size, but at the bottom (assuming it doesn't pop) it would be miniscule. Same goes for the sub except instead of a rubbery material that deforms, it needs to stay rigid.
      So as for plates, I am just guessing here, but I'd say the reason they don't shatter is because they are a relatively solid object. Especially the silverware at least. Gasses expand and contract readily with pressure changes, but a solid can handle it because it acts on all surfaces of the object. If there was an air bubble in one of the ceramic plates, perhaps that would shatter?
      I think the bone shattering comments are a little misleading. I would think any bone shattering would be from hull impolsion, not the pressure difference.

    • @dimalecherdavidson1826
      @dimalecherdavidson1826 Год назад

      @@williamstaib4623 thank you! This really helped me picture and understand the difference, yes I am assuming about bones exploding going by what has been said that they vaporized so I assumed bones were included. Even going by your explanation would it make sense that bones could shatter as well since they are hollow with marrow, an almost liquid substance? But now I can see why plates and other solids would not have shattered on the way down with the Titanic.

  • @unknownknown7427
    @unknownknown7427 11 месяцев назад

    It is merciful the best outcome in the worst possible situation solace and peace they did NOT suffer or even felt any suffering or pain only pain left behind is loss to their families

  • @beansgas6821
    @beansgas6821 Год назад +7

    The original reports of 96 hours of remaining oxygen and time running out to mount a rescue, so the fact that it was an implosion resulted in a instant and merciful death.

  • @jackwoods9604
    @jackwoods9604 Год назад +1

    The Thicker The Steel The More Pressure it Can Take?

  • @kevinburke6055
    @kevinburke6055 Год назад +3

    No pain u just disappear essentially.

  • @thelighthousefjcproduction5597
    @thelighthousefjcproduction5597 Год назад +1

    It implodes?

  • @ottomatic8097
    @ottomatic8097 Год назад +1

    Tremendous mistake using carbon fiber in the pressure chamber. Carbon fiber is very brittle. The Russian Sub uses 4.5 inch titanium for the pressure chamber.

  • @jeffsaxton716
    @jeffsaxton716 Год назад +4

    Another factor is the rapid compression of the air in the vessel creating tremendous heat, like the compression stroke of a diesel engine, but much more extreme.

  • @thomasdykstra100
    @thomasdykstra100 Год назад

    LOLLYGAG! You're taking absolute LIGHTYEARS and using visual drivel to run out my clock... I overstayed my reason and left at 3:20!

  • @robfadelle5613
    @robfadelle5613 Год назад

    ANybody remember that grade school science experiment where the teacher heats a 1 gallon can with a torch till it is red hot, then screws the cap on and tosses some cold water on it? That!

  • @lolotaeja3911
    @lolotaeja3911 Год назад

    That type of incredible pressure literally changes molecuar and atomic structure. There's probably nothing left of them.

  • @panchogonzales6409
    @panchogonzales6409 Год назад +2

    In fewer words a coke can smashed by an 18 wheeler.

    • @T800-theRealOne
      @T800-theRealOne Год назад +1

      Flatter than a pancake

    • @fifiwoof1969
      @fifiwoof1969 Год назад

      Yes it can - something they should have thought of in advance!

    • @ZilogBob
      @ZilogBob Год назад

      The President used to drive one of those.

    • @fifiwoof1969
      @fifiwoof1969 Год назад

      @@ZilogBob hi 5?

  • @lyndapussell6749
    @lyndapussell6749 Год назад

    The dead spirits of the Titanic had something to do with this tragedy.

  • @caribbeanchild
    @caribbeanchild Год назад +1

    ...and everybody turns to jelly. Ho hum.

  • @neiladlington950
    @neiladlington950 Год назад +1

    The universe allows us to survive and even thrive but only on its terms which can be harsh for those of us made of flesh. Flesh is weak, nature, unforgiving.

  • @sonyamotley1131
    @sonyamotley1131 Год назад +1

    The sea will give up it's dead first on that great day. 🙌🏾🙌🏾🙌🏾🙌🏾

  • @rosalinalopez4431
    @rosalinalopez4431 Год назад

    Unfortunately these poor souls became ground beef.!!😪

  • @seinfan9
    @seinfan9 Год назад

    This idea that they didn't even realize what was going on before they died keeps getting repeated and may actually be incorrect. Does anybody actually know what exactly your conscious being is still able to experience when the physical body gets suddenly liquified?

  • @audsk9953
    @audsk9953 Год назад +3

    You wouldn't think out of such a tragic incident there would be a blessing...thats they didn't suffer and went very quickly....thoughts are with the familys ....R.I.P to all 5

  • @popqueens8251
    @popqueens8251 Год назад

    Anyone every llayed squash the lemon on the slide imagine everyones bidy weight pushing towards the glass in the way down 9-14 hrs of being uncomfortable n worried

  • @PROJECT-de9pd
    @PROJECT-de9pd Год назад

    Like hagfish tearing at a whale fall. Quite natural but grotesque to behold.

  • @Tristtix
    @Tristtix Год назад +1

    Water pressure main reason why it
    imploded

  • @clownnworldorder
    @clownnworldorder Год назад

    250k to go thousands of meters down in a carbon fiber "submarine" with video console controllers, and has never been tested? Sounds like a bargain to me.

  • @Mr.Robert1
    @Mr.Robert1 Год назад +1

    TRYING TO MAKE EVERYONE FEEL BETTER. EVEN IF IT WAS A SLOW EVENT DON'T EXPECT TO HEAR IT.

  • @neckarsulme
    @neckarsulme Год назад

    I'm just wondering if OceanGate is going to get a refund for all the parts purchased at Harbor Freight?

    • @richstex4736
      @richstex4736 Год назад +1

      Only if they bought the extended warranty.

  • @dom2326
    @dom2326 Год назад

    That's why those deep-sea fishes die soon as they go up near the surface

  • @daggyag9613
    @daggyag9613 Год назад

    At that depth, the sub just imploded like a balloon bursting faster than the blink of an eye. I would rather be in the Titan submersible than be in the USS Thresher.

  • @user-cm3kv4xd9z
    @user-cm3kv4xd9z Год назад +3

    For those of you who claim they didnt feel a thing, you are wrong. They knew the submersible was being crushed at that depth at least a minute before it imploded. When a sub imploded it doesnt just implode out of nowhere. There are warnings. First you hear a sharp crack and the sub hull "moaning" as much pressure and weight is applied to it. You can physically see and feel the hull pushing in. You are terrified. Seeing this could lead to cardiac arrest, stroke or shock. Im sure there was panic going on. The temp of the sub gets to around 10,000 degrees. I hope they died of heatstroke before the sub imploded. But yes they felt terror in their final moments. An implosion doesn't just happen.

  • @CrazyHustlerTV
    @CrazyHustlerTV Год назад +4

    Money is the root of all evil

    • @T800-theRealOne
      @T800-theRealOne Год назад +1

      1 Timothy

    • @maxamahnken7325
      @maxamahnken7325 Год назад +1

      The love of money ----- to being the root of all evil. Not money of and by itself.

    • @CrazyHustlerTV
      @CrazyHustlerTV Год назад +1

      @@T800-theRealOne facts

    • @CrazyHustlerTV
      @CrazyHustlerTV Год назад

      @@maxamahnken7325 facts

    • @maxamahnken7325
      @maxamahnken7325 Год назад +1

      @@CrazyHustlerTV The love of money ----- is the root of all evil.
      Is this what you are referring to?
      Please, specify.

  • @nelsons1129
    @nelsons1129 Год назад

    So frigin sad.

  • @davesmith9844
    @davesmith9844 Год назад

    you never mentioned the 10,000 degrees of heat...

  • @Deidra4truth
    @Deidra4truth Год назад

    At least they did not die by a painful lasting drowning death

  • @herrunsinn774
    @herrunsinn774 Год назад +4

    The maxim of all good RUclips creators: "Never let a good tragedy go to waste."

    • @T800-theRealOne
      @T800-theRealOne Год назад +2

      Always sensationalize and profit from recent events. It's essential.

    • @SamW-jp3bc
      @SamW-jp3bc Год назад

      So why are you here?

    • @danstrayer111
      @danstrayer111 Год назад +1

      @@T800-theRealOne " we got a bubble headed bleach blonde
      comes on at five.
      She can tell you about the plane crash,' with a gleam in her eye.
      It's interesting when people die.
      Give us dirty laundry"

    • @T800-theRealOne
      @T800-theRealOne Год назад

      @@danstrayer111 That stuff gives them their ratings. You can't blame them for wanting to be the number one source for reliable and trustworthy news.

  • @Roach9882
    @Roach9882 Год назад

    Would they have not felt unbarable heat before it imploded

    • @wintercame
      @wintercame Год назад

      Too fast for perception. It was a millisecond or less.

  • @Hartleymolly
    @Hartleymolly Год назад

    I uploaded a video of Stockton talking about what happen.