TITAN Sub implosion | Deep Dive animation explanation

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  • Опубликовано: 29 июн 2023
  • The Titan a submersible purpose built for diving the 12,500 feet to the Titanic wreck suffered a catastrophic implosion on Sunday Jun 18, 2023 at around 9:30am.
    This is a story of hubris when unforgiving nature of deep submergence required following the best engineering science.
    Here is a more recent video with a very short clip of the the newer Titan hull winding. • A visit to RMS Titanic
    Our thoughts go out to the family and friends of:
    Paul-Henri Nargeolet
    Hamish Harding
    Shahzada Dawood and his son Suleman
    Stockton Rush, Ocean Gate CEO and pilot
    Thanks to Marco A. for the Titanic model I used as my starter model. 3dwarehouse.sketchup.com/mode...
    Credit for video of pieces brought ashore : • Raw video: Wreckage fr...
    Credit for Ocean Gate footage of gluing the hull together: • Video
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Комментарии • 4 тыс.

  • @dotRB
    @dotRB Год назад +4739

    "The ocean does not care if you are rich. But it does favor those who respect engineering and science, ahead of hubris and gut feel innovation" Beautiful said!

    • @chengong388
      @chengong388 Год назад +80

      Problem is these guys aren’t rich, if they were rich they’d take the much more expensive but safer Russian subs James Cameron took.

    • @davidleary823
      @davidleary823 Год назад

      Ya but apparently the news and rescue teams do since they’ve spent countless hours looking and recovering while refuges on boats all over the world are drowning every day.

    • @Quest4Luv_
      @Quest4Luv_ Год назад +216

      @@chengong388no they were rich. The owner was just to irresponsible to take the necessary precautions he should’ve.

    • @gelo1238
      @gelo1238 Год назад +27

      @@Quest4Luv_ they should take their safety serious too

    • @cryptic7965
      @cryptic7965 Год назад +97

      ​@@chengong388yes they were rich, it cost 250k a person to go down there aren't you paying attention to the story?

  • @hagerty1952
    @hagerty1952 Год назад +289

    4:55 I did vacuum design and engineering for a couple of decades. I designed several chambers for the aerospace industry (for testing spacecraft components) that were roughly the size of the Titan's crew compartment. The hemispherical end caps were 1/8" thick stainless steel ("helmet heads" for those in the biz) while the cylindrical center section was 1/4" thick SST, seam welded inside and out. And this is to hold out only 1 atmosphere, not the 400+ at Titanic's depth!
    Any design engineer will tell you that a carbon fiber composite can never be used this way. It's not that they didn't overlap or bias-wind the structure, it's the material itself. The fibers in the composite are immensely strong in tension, but have zero strength in compression. That's why you can use it to make pressure tanks and vessels as the "hoop stresses" from the inside pressure cause the cylinder to try and expand, which is very efficiently resisted by the strength of the fibers. But when the forces are reversed, and the pressure is on the outside, the cylinder is compressed smaller, meaning that the fibers go slack, and provide nothing to the strength of the structure. The only thing holding the pressure is the matrix between the fibers (epoxy in this case). Epoxy is very strong in compression, but also very brittle. It will crack when flexed, meaning an absolutely guaranteed failure in a few cycles. I'm actually amazed they got that many dives out of it.
    There's a good reason that "the experts" were all warning him, and insisting on more and different testing, and it's not just that they were jealous of his innovative "free thinking" mindset.e

    • @seandelaney1700
      @seandelaney1700 Год назад +28

      Please do more of what you did here for it was perfect. You explained much of what I had heard before but more clearly and likely with a better understanding. It's not comparable to pressure tubes because the pressure in this case is outside and you can't push a string. I'm currently on a steel schooner but mostly familiar with fiberglass and Carbon Fiber and indeed epoxy is brittle which is why we add the fibers. Well done.

    • @Pw-f100
      @Pw-f100 Год назад +9

      Good explanation!

    • @claudiotostes5917
      @claudiotostes5917 Год назад +10

      Well, would be good to clarify some aspects related to composites:
      This kind of composite, carbon fiber & epoxy, presentes mechanical properties according to direction of the reinforcement:
      Considering fiber direction we can identify excelent mechanical resistence for tensile stress and less for compressive stress...
      Considering direction perpendicular to fiber...we have good mechanical resistance for compression and less for tensile stress....
      ...The mechanical resistance of the composite depends on the amount of plys, sequence of staking , direction of the reinforcement and the ratio, in volume: fiber / matrix And temperature and moisture (absorption of water ) as well...
      THUS, when working with composites, is very important to take these into account.
      ...Also, using shapes and wall thickness in such way that the stress will be reduced to a level that composite can" deal with".
      Anyway, fatigue is a very complex point to be considered , we can never close the eyes for fatigue
      ...the small damages caused each time, loaded x unloaded , are cumulative and after some point , the colapse will occur

    • @DeusMort
      @DeusMort Год назад

      Seems the Ocean gate owner was a di*k! Arrogant ass who killed 4 people. No murdured 4 people!

    • @daviddempsey8721
      @daviddempsey8721 Год назад +7

      @@Goddess-illias what a powerful analogy. Its actually a bit more like pulling a box with string - you can do that, but you can't push the box. If you put the string in a short, stiff hose, you can pull fine, push a little bit, but too much and the hose bends and eventually breaks with fatigue. Sort of. I'm reminded of the Segway inventor who took a metaphor a little too far and ended up going off the edge of a cliff.

  • @emmcee476
    @emmcee476 Год назад +336

    This was very nicely done. The demonstration with the soda can was both captivating and haunting

    • @monthekey9093
      @monthekey9093 Год назад +1

      And now I want a coke too

    • @DunkinBiscuits
      @DunkinBiscuits Год назад +1

      I hope its relatively safe to perform because i for one will be trying this

    • @Denozo88
      @Denozo88 8 месяцев назад

      ​@DunkinBiscuits its a simple experiment just wear some eye protection just in case.

  • @Elyse27
    @Elyse27 Год назад +246

    I’ve watched a lot of these informational videos on the titan and this is by far the clearest and best explained one. Thanks

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад +12

      Glad to hear it!

    • @sallywillis1448
      @sallywillis1448 Год назад +3

      I agree. Have just subscribed..

    • @Maxwells_Daemon
      @Maxwells_Daemon Год назад +4

      I agree; this is a succinct, clear explanation with exceptional graphics, and you maintained respectful commentary of this tragedy. Thank you so much!

    • @123antknee
      @123antknee Год назад +2

      With an example to add for understanding of how fast it happened.
      Not sure why Carbon Fiber was used.

  • @ElLuis1122
    @ElLuis1122 Год назад +473

    So, at the end it was pretty much just a gigantic soda can wrapped up with extra material, hoses and cables. No one can even call it a floating casket cause everyone inside just disintegrated. The implosion animation here gave me the chills. Great job! Amazing video.

    • @MikeBarbarossa
      @MikeBarbarossa Год назад +26

      It was a flaoting cremation unit

    • @RockNRollSurf
      @RockNRollSurf Год назад +30

      @@MikeBarbarossa Pretty much a manmade black hole cremation machine. CEO got proto-spaghettied.

    • @jimmyboy2778
      @jimmyboy2778 Год назад +10

      @@RockNRollSurf and the logitech controller?

    • @TheManWhoLaughs2008
      @TheManWhoLaughs2008 Год назад +8

      Instead of mostly being made of titanium, Rush decided to only have the front window part be made of titanium and the rest of it carbon fiber.

    • @rrokin
      @rrokin Год назад +10

      @@abdulSprucethey were 1hr45 into the 2hr journey down iirc, which would be approximately 2860m/9370ft depth. My personal guess is mostly juice but perhaps some part of the torso could remain. Would be a shame if it’s just reminants of some slime on the recovered debris

  • @Honestcritic79
    @Honestcritic79 Год назад +203

    This is the most accurate animation that I have seen. You kept the certain parts intact, while others usually have those crush as well.

    • @rrocketman
      @rrocketman Год назад +1

      Agree

    • @Physics072
      @Physics072 Год назад +12

      People just wanted clicks and made up videos based on fuzzy logic. The end caps were titanium. One person was inside the front end cap. There would have been remains such as legs arms. The end caps were not crushed just most likely the tube failed. Those in the tube section would likely have been pancaked.

    • @Seashellsbytheseashore21
      @Seashellsbytheseashore21 Год назад +2

      @@Physics072Stockton was at one end, I am sure. And the other end, perhaps the youngest was giving the window seat…

    • @Imnotplayinganymore
      @Imnotplayinganymore Год назад +6

      @@Physics072 It's my understanding all organic matter would have been pulverized, as in, turned to dust.

    • @brennymcphees7557
      @brennymcphees7557 Год назад +6

      @@Imnotplayinganymore Water would immediately dissipate the intense heat (14,000 degrees F) generated by the implosion of the air's immediate compression to about 0.00253 its original volume, although there would be surface scorching. The compression of the collapsing steel can inside the compromised titanium shell would provide the physical force to immediately crush its contents much like a trash compactor, but there would likely be identifiable remains.

  • @andrewtabaka6793
    @andrewtabaka6793 Год назад +72

    I am an engineering student that literally has just taken a class on carbon composites and one of the main things I learned about pressure vessels is that layup should be around 55 degrees from horizontal to maximize strength. If they didn't even put that kind of consideration into the orthotropic nature of carbon fibers I don't think they put much thought into the design of this vessel. It is such a shame.

    • @LEXXIUS
      @LEXXIUS Год назад +7

      They should've made a sphere out of metal instead of a giant brittle soda can. Would be less compact for the same amount of passengers, but much safer.

    • @seandelaney1700
      @seandelaney1700 Год назад +3

      Gas cylinders are made of composites and as far as I know they use the angled layups, not as a spool of thread seen here.

    • @NewYorkNadia
      @NewYorkNadia Год назад

      Hubris; pride comes before the fall, a lesson for us all. Rush was a criminal and a massive POS. Many warned him, including a man on Rush’s own team; his response? He fired then sued him: ruclips.net/video/pE_NY8tf5tU/видео.html

    • @halominder
      @halominder Год назад +2

      i mean look at it.. it looks like a make-shift space ship made to sit in a kids playpark.. i know functionality trumps presentation, but it didn't even had that.

    • @Al-Gorithm
      @Al-Gorithm Год назад +6

      The most important thing for me in a vessel like that is a comfortable flushing toilet because i would have been farting ginormous gas bubbles.

  • @-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.-
    @-.._.-_...-_.._-..__..._.-.-.- Год назад +70

    Whoever's idea it was to look in the area below the sub's last known location is a genius.

    • @colinsteam
      @colinsteam Год назад +18

      Probaby some geezer with a doctorate in search and rescue...

    • @susanruck9197
      @susanruck9197 Год назад +11

      James Cameron said that he knew all along. He said he should have said something earlier.

    • @ChristopherSmith-tf4nr
      @ChristopherSmith-tf4nr Год назад +4

      Lmao....ya think

    • @Devo_UTFR
      @Devo_UTFR Год назад +6

      I'd never of thought of that, But the sub I build will be better than this 😂

    • @beezilneverleft3176
      @beezilneverleft3176 Год назад +5

      @@susanruck9197 Yes, he questioned why they went outward on the search. Some people were ragging Cameron like he was somehow a part of this. But no, he was just as puzzled and confused as the rest of us on that one. I'm not so sure him saying something would have changed the odd search decisions. It seems like common sense, and if they weren't listening to common sense, they weren't going to listen to him either!

  • @crazyfutureradio
    @crazyfutureradio Год назад +393

    This is the most accurate animation of what happened. All the others are so slow.

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад +36

      Thanks. Glad you agree.

    • @mazzugara
      @mazzugara Год назад +3

      How do you know that?

    • @equalizers8190
      @equalizers8190 Год назад +4

      @@mazzugaraputting coke can in cold water ring pull first shows ring pull let go, so assume window did the same

    • @anitanoterajes
      @anitanoterajes Год назад +10

      It's not that they were too slow, it's slowed down for the human eyes, but this is the closest animation correspondent to the debris found. The other ones had every bit shredded to pieces or the carbon fiber caving in and remaining intact.

    • @thedarkinboythe
      @thedarkinboythe Год назад +2

      @@anitanoterajesno they are taking about stuff like that popular tiktok video showing the ocean gate completely crushed no pieces left turns out the owner of that account was a jack 🫏 and posted weird stuff

  • @SYLperc
    @SYLperc Год назад +643

    that implosion. It's really hard to grasp how violent and quick it must have been. under 6000psi, the volume of air in the pressure tube would have compressed to something like 1/500th its original size, at supersonic speeds, igniting the air, and pulverizing anything within it.

    • @rankcolour8780
      @rankcolour8780 Год назад +84

      It's kind of like a bullet shrimp/mantis shrimp punch (extreme pressure, supercavitation, pressure heating, atmospheric oscillation) but on a much larger, terrible scale.
      Ignoring whether they had any forewarning, as a "way to go" total, instant obliteration like that is relatively humane as you aren't aware it happens, the off switch is just pressed with instant effect.
      We can only hope they were relatively unstressed before it happened as that would be the truly harrowing part.

    • @keithdf2001
      @keithdf2001 Год назад +95

      It is a great way to die because it is completely instant. People are gone out of existence before they have time to think about it

    • @Trigger200284
      @Trigger200284 Год назад +55

      Just watched another video talking about a sub that imploded a few years ago. They were at a depth of about 1200-1300 feet, so approx 1/10 the Titan sub, and when it collapsed the hull (at 550-600psi) would of collapsed at 1500 MPH which is somewhere close to Mach 2.
      The Titan was much closer to 6000 psi.

    • @casualmmafan4258
      @casualmmafan4258 Год назад +8

      @@Trigger200284same one I watched 2mins before this one

    • @lottatroublemaker6130
      @lottatroublemaker6130 Год назад +9

      @@Trigger200284 Which other sub was it that imploded? Was it a military sub? If so, from where?

  • @DrBilly619
    @DrBilly619 Год назад +89

    When you design with carbon fiber, most times you end up chasing away its shortcomings until its benefits have been nulled. Weight is often the biggest advantage of CF but as soon as you need metal doubler plates, and joint reinforcement, and end fittings, you’ve introduced so much complexity that machining and iso grid structure makes more sense. CF is a material you use with great intention and foresight/testing.

    • @AgentWest
      @AgentWest Год назад +15

      While CF (the fiber itself) is very strong in tension, it becomes practically useless because it is flexible by nature. Under these kinds of loads it might as well have been just cast resin.

    • @tomgray7179
      @tomgray7179 Год назад

    • @jackhammer078jack4
      @jackhammer078jack4 Год назад

      We get already😮

    • @faku2l154
      @faku2l154 Год назад +10

      I think we should send more rich folks down

    • @willwilliamson2814
      @willwilliamson2814 Год назад

      I don't care how many are killed, we must save the planet!

  • @mikewebber7553
    @mikewebber7553 Год назад +88

    The carbon wrap process was shocking, I initially thought it was a demo. I've worked in F1 and Aviation on the 787's wing. So, I have a background in this field. There are many air gaps in the wrap that can be compressed, with stored energy with an uncontrolled release.

    • @Smannellites
      @Smannellites Год назад +29

      I could not believe what I was seeing. The entire hull was CF wrapped circumferentially, so there were no fibres in the longitudinal direction. It was not done in a clean environment and there was no process to remove air bubble inclusions. Clearly OceanGate had not the faintest idea what they were doing.

    • @paulweston285
      @paulweston285 Год назад +3

      @@Smannellites Then how come it had been to the Titanic several times ?

    • @mikewebber7553
      @mikewebber7553 Год назад +2

      As per your response, there was clearly an excess of " micro porosity"

    • @Smannellites
      @Smannellites Год назад +17

      @@paulweston285 Fatigue damage is progressive, and grows after each pressure cycle. The Titan's hull would have been weaker after each dive. As someone else said, it was an accident waiting to happen.

    • @uclajd
      @uclajd Год назад +7

      @@paulweston285 I played Russian Roulette several times and lived. Did I know what I was doing? Was I being safe just because I lived?

  • @sigurdkaputnik7022
    @sigurdkaputnik7022 Год назад +223

    Thanks Mike. Now that's what i call an informative, understandable and educational presentation of what happened. No unnecessary dramatization or boring fillers. Just pure on-point information.

    • @suzannedaniels3526
      @suzannedaniels3526 Год назад +3

      I couldn't agree any more.. This illustration is the most indepth yet simple enough for the layman to grasp...

    • @kslinaz5668
      @kslinaz5668 Год назад +2

      Exactly! Very interesting.

  • @nevasoba5953
    @nevasoba5953 Год назад +58

    In an interview one of Rush's friends said that in a previous dive they heard a cracking noise during the decent. I believe the friend told him after that they shouldn't dive in the Titan again.

    • @PInk77W1
      @PInk77W1 Год назад +20

      Captain Obvious was his name

    • @TheFutureLooksGrimm
      @TheFutureLooksGrimm Год назад +2

      Aren’t sounds of steel compressing under immense pressure normal to hear while in submarines? Pipes makes tons of sounds as they expand and contract under hot and cold temperatures, as anyone who’s experienced old heating systems knows. This is a question I’ve not seen answered yet.

    • @angelofthegrove9574
      @angelofthegrove9574 Год назад +6

      @@TheFutureLooksGrimm Perhaps if the central structure was made of metal. But it wasn't.

    • @user-bl1pw2th4l
      @user-bl1pw2th4l Год назад +2

      ​@@TheFutureLooksGrimmit wasn't made of steel. Did you have the video on mute???

    • @TheFutureLooksGrimm
      @TheFutureLooksGrimm Год назад +5

      @@user-bl1pw2th4l you misunderstood my question. Read slowly. I know the hull of the Titan was made out of carbon fiber. I’ve read a everyday about this. Normal submarines are made of steel and they do indeed compress and make sounds. Therefore we can assume that a certain amount sound of the submersible’s carbon fiber hull compressing would be normal. Anything compressing makes a sound normally.
      I just read that military sub personnel do a little fun test, they put tape or a line from one side to another, and as the submarine dives deeper (nowhere near crush depth) it line or tape begins to drape. Visual confirmation of the steel compressing. James Cameron said his vessel compressed at least 3 inches. Steel, Titanium, Carbon fiber, it all is going to make a sound when being subject to compression. Sound alone is not an indication of failure.

  • @TBone14159
    @TBone14159 Год назад +51

    Excellent video! Thanks for the most detailed and no-nonsense explanation I've seen on this event. Like you, I sort of knew when the last signal received from Titan was an hour and forty-five minutes into the dive, something catastrophic had happened right then. There was absolutely no need for the days of news reports telling how much air they supposedly had left. Again, thanks for a great video.

  • @rva
    @rva Год назад +13

    Superbly clear

  • @randomvintagefilm273
    @randomvintagefilm273 Год назад +67

    Rush actually said that safety standards get in the way of innovation. Wow!

    • @meganruchwatercolors7186
      @meganruchwatercolors7186 Год назад +8

      I heard him say that, too, that safety was a waste of time. Unreal!!!

    • @wadeprice67
      @wadeprice67 Год назад +1

      It's Rush saying let the hair go with the hide.

    • @grantm6514
      @grantm6514 Год назад +20

      He also committed an astonishing 'face palm' error of logic/deduction when he said that 'over engineering' was unnecessary because most accidents weren't caused by structural failures, but by operator error! - um, no, it shows that the 'over engineering' has WORKED to remove structural failure as a cause, not that it isn't necessary.

    • @nm9412
      @nm9412 Год назад +1

      Innovation was just another word for money.

    • @terminalfrost3645
      @terminalfrost3645 Год назад +3

      @@nm9412 he wanted to change things and make a lot of money, or die, he didn't care and selfishly took others with him.

  • @carmenhemet3590
    @carmenhemet3590 Год назад +519

    This is by far the best illustration and demonstration of exactly what happened. Really nice job! My condolences to the families of the passengers in the submersible.

    • @grahamf695
      @grahamf695 Год назад +8

      We don’t know exactly what happened yet. The window had also come out of the end cone, as we can see from videos of what the recovery team brought back, so that may have been the component that failed.

    • @scootergeorge7089
      @scootergeorge7089 Год назад +19

      @@grahamf695 - Or it could have been blasted outward in the implosion of the main hull.

    • @grahamf695
      @grahamf695 Год назад +9

      @@scootergeorge7089 the window is one candidate, because it was certified to only a much shallower depth. Still, I agree that it is too early to know. No doubt there are many broken pieces and they won’t have been able to recover all of them, so it will be a challenge to work out which piece broke first.

    • @slickchick5811
      @slickchick5811 Год назад +3

      the families had to have been terrified the entire time.

    • @zarrow50
      @zarrow50 Год назад

      @@grahamf695 Maybe someone wanted to open the window, maybe someone let one

  • @punxsutawneyphilofficial
    @punxsutawneyphilofficial Год назад +16

    Thank you for taking the time to make this reconstruction. It demonstrates the crush pressure so well, especially with the addition of the soda can. Your models are really clean and well made.

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад +1

      Glad it was helpful! More like this to come

  • @MrOgrizek
    @MrOgrizek Год назад +25

    Wow man, well demonstrated. The sound that you've chosen for the implosion is so perfectly scary... chills.

  • @wrayday7149
    @wrayday7149 Год назад +48

    There are a few reasons the sounds of the implosion weren't released sooner.
    1 - The DOD - Military picked up the sound but didn't know what it was. It could of been a cargo container falling off a ship imploding, a depth charge or other military exercise, one of the tanks on the vessel, or many other things. They just knew they heard something and reported that up DOD/Mil channels.
    2 - 2hr's later, an emergency call was issued on Civilian channels that contact was lost. Assistance needed. No one would have checked for a possible implosion because they think it is still intact and suffered a power failure.
    3 - At some point in time, the sound was passed to rescue crews to help them better search.
    4 - This is the important part. - Searches are not called off because someone thinks something happened. You need to verify. Upon verification, and due to the unique situation (implosion), rescue was impossible and it then switched to a recovery and families and press notified.
    Nothing occurred in the SAR portion that is out of the ordinary. No major conspiracy, it was put into the press because it was a modern day kid fell down well story that captivates people. The press came up with their theories because they run a 24/7 news cycle and they need something. As it takes time to get rescue ships to the area, and the press then starts filling time by calculating how much air they have left..... this helps them generate interest and views. Yes this causes anguish towards the family waiting to hear the fate of their loved ones however..... you cannot put it the press that you heard an implosion before you verify. It looks bad, but it's oh so much worse if you tell someone their loved ones are dead but they aren't because you haven't verified.

    • @GrayEyesWorld
      @GrayEyesWorld Год назад +4

      This very much. Society owes every lost person a proper search. Imagine if the National Park rangers decided to not look for a missing hiker because they saw that a pack of wolves they were tracking were in the same area and just assumed the hiker was eaten... Only for their dessicated body to be found uneaten at the bottom of a ravine a year later.

    • @DS-lk3tx
      @DS-lk3tx Год назад +2

      Right.. the noise coincided with the loss of communication with the sub. The sub was made from plastic.
      But a propagandists must keep its flock in line, right? 😂😂😂

    • @wrayday7149
      @wrayday7149 Год назад +1

      @@DS-lk3tx I have no idea what you are trying to say.

    • @seandelaney1700
      @seandelaney1700 Год назад

      I can't imagine anyone has ever seriously suggested to call off the search. I believe his point was repeating James Camerons who had this info and knew it was finished. When I learned the controversial construction and the point at which it lost communication I too assumed it was lost. It was indeed a compelling news story and that fact alone would have had editors holding off on presenting facts which made the search seem more like one of recovery. If Cameron knew, others knew, ie. any journalist that had reached out to Cameron or any of his colleagues, so yeah it is most likely a bit of a conspiracy.

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад +1

      Thanks great explanation

  • @Machete90210
    @Machete90210 Год назад +322

    This is a very respectful video on such a terrible incident. Thank you.

    • @THEONEANDONLYJOSEPH
      @THEONEANDONLYJOSEPH Год назад +12

      It is but close to the day of the incident close to 500 immigrants died that day in a boat but nobody is really taking about it rip 505 dead people

    • @frutt5k
      @frutt5k Год назад +7

      @@THEONEANDONLYJOSEPH yes but these were 5 billionaires of which one was a stark craving lunatic.

    • @THEONEANDONLYJOSEPH
      @THEONEANDONLYJOSEPH Год назад +1

      @@frutt5k Fr Xd

    • @quantumleap359
      @quantumleap359 Год назад

      @@frutt5k What was the lunatic craving? I think he was more an arrogant, flawed individual. Either way, he's dead now, and his limited engineering education died with him.

    • @skiddo1243
      @skiddo1243 Год назад +5

      @@Joe-by8jh Those were 500 people just like you escaping their country in hopes of a better life

  • @conkerN6428
    @conkerN6428 Год назад +6

    Thank you for explaining everything in a more understanding way

  • @user-iv1yu4ug6c
    @user-iv1yu4ug6c Год назад +3

    For me it is always a red flag when a new guy comes in and declares that he knows better than the entire industry.

  • @garyreid6165
    @garyreid6165 Год назад +152

    I remember reading a book when I was a little boy about ships. In the chapter on submarines, the book showed a page on the submarines that dived down into the deepest depths. Two of them were the Alvin and the other was the Trieste. Both of these vessels were built to handle the pressures of the ocean. The Titan disaster was trying to use the less is more philosophy in construction of this submarine. The lesson learned is that for any environment that is to be explored, always listen to others who have gone before you.

    • @dogechrist
      @dogechrist Год назад +24

      This incident made me research deep sea diving. It was surprising to learn that the Trieste dove to the deepest place on Earth over 60 years ago, and since then there's been no major accidents or fatalities in this field. This tragedy was completely avoidable if they followed industry standards.

    • @mygunisinnocent8028
      @mygunisinnocent8028 Год назад +17

      Instead of learning from past subs like you said, Stockton tried to reinvent the wheel and make it square. "My square wheel is better, I'm an innovative genius" KAABBOOM

    • @patrickhorvath2684
      @patrickhorvath2684 Год назад +10

      I think the Trieste was rated to go half again deeper than the Marianas Trench.
      127mm thick Titanium sphere.
      50% reserve of safety at the deepest point in the ocean.

    • @duketoofor3098
      @duketoofor3098 Год назад +3

      “If I had gone further, it was by standing on the shoulders of giants”. Sir Isaac Newton when asked by his assistant, how he had accomplished so much.

    • @111smd
      @111smd Год назад +3

      @@patrickhorvath2684 and the Trieste still had an accident
      "One of the Plexiglas windows in the outer layer of Trieste's "eye" had cracked. The two men inspected the crack, and with approximately another two kilometers to go to the bottom, decided to press on."

  • @sirblebington
    @sirblebington Год назад +52

    This is exactly the video I was hoping someone would make. Thank you.

  • @DEP717
    @DEP717 Год назад +10

    This is an excellent analysis.
    I am no expert, but I am reminded of the difficulties experienced with the early Comet jetliners. That was also a situation where repeated cycles of compression and decompression caused fatigue over time in a way that engineers had not anticipated. The Comet was operating under stresses that passenger aircraft had not yet operated under.

    • @uclajd
      @uclajd Год назад

      The problem with that analogy is the designers of the Titan had generations of engineering history to look back upon (much of which they disregarded), unlike the Comet engineers. The analogy would be proper if the Comet were designed today with all its flaws!

  • @philallsopp42
    @philallsopp42 Год назад +21

    Nicely done. As a fellow architect, my interest and deep respect for engineering and science mirrors yours. It took my career into the field of complex adaptive systems & simulation technologies. When I saw the video of them smearing glue (epoxy presumably) on the inside of the Titanium collar I was flabbergasted at the loose dimensional tolerances that enabled the ring to slip over the carbon fiber tube with ease. Surely, I thought, they aren’t relying on hand-smeared epoxy to seal the gap. Also I did a few bending moment calcs which I then rotated 360 degrees and wondered whether bending stresses and shear forces at the glued titanium rings from the enormous uniform loading had ever been simulated or tested with different carbon fiber weaves…..a sad loss for sure but, aside from the panic over the emergency, the implosion would have happened far faster than any awareness would have been possible.

    • @jnavonoD
      @jnavonoD Год назад +8

      Astonishing, that glueing bit...no squeeze out, and just what, 2 inches of contact area between ring and tube. I'm nowhere near an engineer, but mixing some epoxy in a scadgy bucket then scraping it on like that didn't look like the sort of precision engineering where you need it most on a submersible...yeah, I know, everyone's an expert in hindsight!

    • @daviddempsey8721
      @daviddempsey8721 Год назад +3

      @@jnavonoD I agree and had similar thoughts - surly they weren't relying on *that* to keep out 370 atmospheres...no, they are.

  • @GMarieBehindTheMask
    @GMarieBehindTheMask Год назад +122

    Best Example I've seen so far! Not being overly complicated simply put, to the point!

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад +6

      Glad you appreciate my approach 😃

    • @thinkabouthelogic
      @thinkabouthelogic Год назад

      @@Mike-Bell 110% agree. This was incredibly helpful with the schematic. Clear, straightforward, no BS, not tilted to any one side, and refreshingly short. Thank you!

  • @edsedlak6827
    @edsedlak6827 Год назад +216

    This is the best analysis that I have seen. The animation is particularly illustrative. Before now, I did not know that they dropped their weights, which clearly indicates that they knew that they were in trouble.

    • @TheCandiceWang
      @TheCandiceWang Год назад +30

      Yep - it's been found now that they did try to get back up to the surface before the implosion. I just pray they didn't know for long. What horror 😢😢

    • @michaellavery4899
      @michaellavery4899 Год назад

      It's probably safer to wait for the results of the inquest. Until such times all theories are just speculation.

    • @SamSam77771
      @SamSam77771 Год назад +1

      @@TheCandiceWang

    • @mousetreehouse6833
      @mousetreehouse6833 Год назад +7

      Edsedlak6827,
      My thoughts exactly. Don't know if this information was brought up elsewhere, and if so, this is the first I've heard about it...and which actually makes the whole thing even more tragic...and creepy.

    • @2thumbtommy484
      @2thumbtommy484 Год назад +9

      There was a guy from I believe Discovery channel that was sent to do a story when Oceangate was in the Bahamas and he said they heard loud cracking sounds coming from the hull and Rush would try to explain it away..😬

  • @carolpray9816
    @carolpray9816 Год назад +5

    Thank you for explaining what happened so clearly. The soda can demo was an extremely powerful demonstration.

  • @astaraoneill9166
    @astaraoneill9166 Год назад +3

    Comunications between Titan and Polar Prince have been released (not vetted). Titan apparently was descending much faster than it should have. There was an alarm and crackling noises. They began to ascend, but had trouble doing so.

  • @aliseiler6251
    @aliseiler6251 Год назад +315

    Presentation on point with dynamic graphics and illustrations. Well done!

    • @MikeBurns-bi5xj
      @MikeBurns-bi5xj Год назад +8

      Very good presentation and information

    • @cynthiahusband106
      @cynthiahusband106 Год назад +5

      Presentation excellent a layman can follow just how this tragic event came to an end. RIP to the 5 gentleman who perished.

    • @delayedcreator4783
      @delayedcreator4783 Год назад

      @@cynthiahusband106 one of them was an idiOt

  • @williamhoward7121
    @williamhoward7121 Год назад +140

    I was involved in some early research of using carbon fiber to make scuba diving tanks. This turned out to be an excellent fit for carbon fiber and it does help to alter the direction of the fiber application. However carbon fiber only works with internal pressure which puts the fibers under load which prevents the epoxy, which it is layered with, from bursting. With oceangate the exact opposite happened. Basically you can think of every bit of their structure being nothing more than an epoxy shell as the carbon fiber does very little when external forces are pushing inwards.

    • @judyofthewoods
      @judyofthewoods Год назад +20

      If anything, the fibre would weaken the epoxy. Now you only have thin layers of it, interspersed with the fibres which would simply slump without an internal force with substance to keep them in place. Think of it like a sausage shaped balloon inflated to the point where it holds its shape, wrapped in bands of fibre. If you tried to inflate it further, the bands would keep it from expanding. Now put the balloon in a vacuum chamber, suck the air out of the chamber (under-pressure), and the balloon with fibre wrap would collapse.

    • @oftin_wong
      @oftin_wong Год назад +11

      I would've thought a titanium sphere was a good material and shape ...but I'm no engineer
      Give me a certificate

    • @roberta5292
      @roberta5292 Год назад +19

      At this point I am astounded as how the implosion didn't occur on their very first trip to the bottom of the ocean.

    • @Drycleanerguy
      @Drycleanerguy Год назад +17

      Carbon fiber is also used to hold tanks for CNG (compressed natural gas), which is about 3-4000 psi, from my recollection. Again, the pressure is from the inside out, not the reverse. I had been wondering how they put the carbon fiber under tension in a compressive situation, and I am shocked to learn that they didn't even try. I can't imagine how it made 23 prior dives without imploding.

    • @G1NZOU
      @G1NZOU Год назад +4

      Indeed carbon fibre works well for aircraft that need to pressurise because the carbon fibres work well under tension, they're not quite as effective under compression, still better than regular polymer but still not ideal.

  • @Patrick90
    @Patrick90 Год назад +35

    This is probably the best video I've seen yet that covers the implosion aspect of this tragedy. The reenactment using CGI and the Coke can experiment really wow'd me. Great content.

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад +2

      Come back for more 😀

    • @SD-vj8vq
      @SD-vj8vq Год назад

      The best video ? Son of the bitch…

    • @hopsiepike
      @hopsiepike Год назад +1

      Yup, the main difference is that the aluminum can merely crumpled, while the carbon fiber shell apparently shattered into tiny pieces. Any recovered parts are are probably adhered to the metal frame, among with bits of flash-cooked human remains.

    • @pollystyrene99
      @pollystyrene99 Год назад

      @@hopsiepike flash cooked? the implosion generated heat?

    • @benp3485
      @benp3485 Год назад

      @@pollystyrene99 like the surface of the sun, instant vaporized

  • @Styxswimmer
    @Styxswimmer Год назад +13

    When you're dealing with extreme conditions like the deep ocean, you NEVER cut corners. If you want to innovate (which I'm all for), get your invention tested and certified. Never assume it will be fine.

  • @catherineboorman326
    @catherineboorman326 Год назад +97

    Thank you for a very clear, informative explanation as to what happened to Titan.

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад +1

      I appreciate your comment.

    • @kanpurunplugged9970
      @kanpurunplugged9970 Год назад +1

      @@Mike-Bell I also like the animation but I feel that there's room for more information about the pattern of scattering of the debris field of the submersible as it can indicate details on the implosion depth and other data an animation about it would have fancied but good job .. altogether

    • @kanpurunplugged9970
      @kanpurunplugged9970 Год назад

      I know that the rescue team didn't release the ROV videos of the submersible debris field .

    • @ChloAbssz
      @ChloAbssz Год назад

      You're welcome.

  • @xxfalconarasxx5659
    @xxfalconarasxx5659 Год назад +26

    I like that the implosion sound effects used in this video is an actual sound recording of an imploding submersible. Luckily in that case, it was an unmanned vehicle, the ROV Jason.

  • @devlonlyam7084
    @devlonlyam7084 Год назад +10

    After inspecting the titans stress tests in 2014 i had to walk off. Its amazing how no one went through with putting an end to this. I guess im included in it but we need more regulation

    • @seandelaney1700
      @seandelaney1700 Год назад +1

      Or just more whistleblowers.

    • @kenthompson5723
      @kenthompson5723 Год назад +3

      "we need more regulation"
      -------------------------------------------
      Oh horror of horrors. Don't you know that more (government?) regulation would be catastrophic to human invention and evolution? Capitalists and entrepreneurs are way too superior to be hindered or restricted by such ponderous procedures.

  • @ruthcrist5983
    @ruthcrist5983 Год назад +3

    I’ve been waiting for a clear description of what happened thank you Mike

  • @AlpControl
    @AlpControl Год назад +14

    As a carbon fiber specialist, I bet on the same scenario from the first day.
    The weak point is neither the carbon or the tinanium, but the carbon/titanium interface.
    If water seeps between the two, the resistance of the carbon winding is useless and the pressure will crush the inner titanium tube.
    But it started slowly, depending on the infiltration rate, it seems to have taken more than 15 minutes before deformations accelarated the infiltration rate and then the final collapse occurred.

    • @kimjay481
      @kimjay481 Год назад +5

      I think you are absolutely right. The three elements simply moved differently and independently of each other.

  • @redhelmet8
    @redhelmet8 Год назад +35

    5:59 There was a brief statement given that there was explosion heard. The reason for not immediately saying they imploded is that it is better to continue searching and find out later that the ship was long gone. Had they called off the search and an intact hull with bodies was later found, there would be serious repercussions to any leadership of the rescue as well as public backlash.

    • @Patate7Frite
      @Patate7Frite Год назад +3

      Also, the sound was plausibly an implosion, but not guaranteed to be.
      Also, and most importantly, the first ROV that could go as deep as 4000m was immediately called upon and was mobilized from buffalo to the wreck site within 4 days. 32 tons of delicate equipment, plus the crew, plus all the installation of the equipment. they immediately went down and searched for the probable site of implosion debris and found it within a few hours. It's unbelievably fast. like above-all-expectations fast.
      Every expert speculated on the implosion because it was the most likely scenario, but it was unproven before the debris were found. You couldn't even hope for the debris to be found as fast as they were.

    • @KebabMusicLtd
      @KebabMusicLtd Год назад

      I think it has as much to do with throwing a few red-herrings to the media to keep them from descending on the search site whilst the search was still in progress. Also, I am sure the US Navy would want to confirm what they believed they were hearing before making any bold statements.
      I am 99% certain most of us knew that the submersible was gone as soon as they heard that contact had been lost.

  • @gagaplex
    @gagaplex Год назад +6

    I really like your use of your own animations, nicely done

  • @lvbdevinelove2329
    @lvbdevinelove2329 4 месяца назад +1

    This channel is the absolute real deal. So much so that it's the only one that gave me continuous chills and goosebumps throughout

  • @cymbala6208
    @cymbala6208 Год назад +86

    I'm very grateful for your conclusion at the end. We have become so saturated with all kinds of progress and convenience that we just take it for granted. We should all be more humble and thankful for the possibilities we have nowadays.

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад +7

      I’m so glad you agree with sentiments.

    • @boomerangsruckflug8513
      @boomerangsruckflug8513 Год назад +1

      We should be more suspicious and not take science as the new religion.

  • @sophieh9387
    @sophieh9387 Год назад +55

    Incredible illustration of what most likely occured to the Titan.. I cant thank you enough for your time in putting this together, giving us, a visual. My thoughts and prayers go out the the family, friends and colleagues of the submersible. ❤

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад +4

      Glad it was helpful 😊

    • @wilspu5590
      @wilspu5590 Год назад

      @@Mike-Bell 👍🙏🏽🙏🏽👍👍🙏🏽

  • @lildoobers
    @lildoobers Год назад +7

    Thank you for this. The demonstration at 3:15 was excellent

  • @musicjunk8266
    @musicjunk8266 Год назад +3

    Subbed for the animation. Also I agree, most things work all the time and no one notices.

  • @allusernamesweretaken
    @allusernamesweretaken Год назад +22

    thank you for demonstrating how the submersible could have collapsed. i started to get annoyed seeing the one tiktok animation over and over again and it was the only one i kept finding. i honestly wanted to see different possibilities how it couldve looked like and your video is one of those.

  • @fistpunder
    @fistpunder Год назад +313

    I find it incredible that they were able to not only locate, but recover so much of OceanGate.

    • @terminalfrost3645
      @terminalfrost3645 Год назад +40

      it was found under where tracking was lost.

    • @animula6908
      @animula6908 Год назад +5

      Tells you those espousing about it don’t know wtf they speak of

    • @tur74d56
      @tur74d56 Год назад +22

      Goes to show anything can be lifted from the ocean floor if it wants to be

    • @jacksons1010
      @jacksons1010 Год назад +29

      @@terminalfrost3645 And the implosion occurred only 300m above the ocean floor, so there was relatively little scattering of the debris.

    • @KaleSchlegel
      @KaleSchlegel Год назад +9

      They had to clean up the evidence . 😅

  • @blackfishblues
    @blackfishblues Год назад +2

    Belated thanks, you've earned a subscriber! Very clear and respectful explanation, without gore and sensational headings. I followed the search for the Titan live on WFLA (I'm not even from the US) and I watched the final announcement by the Coast Guard. I was thinking, "I may throw up, but this is history". I feel the same now that they are beginning to study the remains of the Titan. I hope you follow up on this story. Meanwhile I'll binge your videos: I'm no architect or engineer, but Chernobyl and Fukushima have become part of our history, not to mention more recent events. Cheers from Europe!

  • @sebastian0107
    @sebastian0107 Год назад +3

    This is the best explanation I've seen so far. Interesting about the last text signal; that there already was a known problem. Thanks and very well done!

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад +1

      Glad it was helpful! I wouldn't take "the transcript" seriously. It fails the common sense and physics test and is just a cruel cynical fake in my mind.

  • @ecomotive6158
    @ecomotive6158 Год назад +18

    My imagination of the implosion was that the carbon fiber tube gave-in to the pressure and instantly went from a round cross section to a flat cross section, like a cardboard toilet paper tube between two clapping hands. This would have jellified everything inside and blown out the two relatively intact titanium ends in opposite directions, possibly blowing out the porthole too.

  • @OrionSYoung
    @OrionSYoung Год назад +20

    "None of this seamless operation would be possible without the unsung heroes: our army of brilliant scientists and engineers quietly and unseen. Making sure everything functions effortlessly. Our reliance on them is undeniable. The ocean does not care if you are rich. But it does favor those who respect engineering and science, ahead of hubris and gut feel innovation."
    Well said, sir. I will remember this quote for the rest of my life. We will do better, I believe in us.

    • @willcollins9470
      @willcollins9470 Год назад

      Keeping this quote, thx

    • @benp3485
      @benp3485 Год назад

      This quote hits different, i choked when I heard it.

  • @shuaibsampson1130
    @shuaibsampson1130 Год назад +2

    Thank you for this informative video. Straight to the point and spot on.

  • @ToNoodleOrNotToNoodle711
    @ToNoodleOrNotToNoodle711 Год назад +2

    Wow. Every time you showed the model of the implosion I get goosebumps and I jump. It’s so simple but powerful. I pray it was faster than a blink of an eye for those men so they weren’t afraid or didn’t feel anything. Especially that young boy who said he was afraid before he got the submersible. Wow😳

  • @LukeMaximoBell1
    @LukeMaximoBell1 Год назад +100

    You animation skills are insanely good! And a good easy to understand explanation.

  • @eikopoppy29
    @eikopoppy29 Год назад +27

    A loud bang on hydrophones + loss of comms is a pretty bad sign, but doesn't prove conclusively that they imploded. From the PoV of the search team, if that scenario happened, then the crew were dead. In that case, they didn't need to confirm that fact quickly. But at that time, it was still possible that the sub had lost power but successfully executed an emergency ascent. In that case, they would have been floating on the surface, unable to open the hatch to get access to air (plus that would have caused them to sink anyway). That scenario was the only one possible where the crew might have survived in the end. So it made sense to focus on that until time ran out for the air supply.

    • @nafmtigia
      @nafmtigia Год назад +4

      yeah but they also definitely heard the bang. unfortunately they were probably in denial about what the sound was. but they used sonar technologies to communicate, there's no way they didn't hear a loud noise at the same time

    • @surf2257
      @surf2257 Год назад +2

      They had the comms but also the transponder which failed at the same time of comms so they knew even without the sound that it imploded. Losing comms was pretty common with Titan.

    • @Scribblersys
      @Scribblersys Год назад +3

      I heard it just took that much time to even get underwater search vehicles out to the wreck site to look for debris and confirm it really imploded.

    • @richardpenny3973
      @richardpenny3973 Год назад

      ..
      P😊😊😊😊😊

    • @kencadby6586
      @kencadby6586 Год назад

      @@nafmtigia The point still is to focus on hoping to save life instead spending time looking for dead bodies. Are you actually calling that "denial"? That's "triage".

  • @hjjjjjjjjzk8914
    @hjjjjjjjjzk8914 Год назад

    THIS is the video I’ve been searching for. Well done 👍

  • @chrono9503
    @chrono9503 Год назад +2

    I feel so bad for the kid who didn’t want to go

  • @MajorCaliber
    @MajorCaliber Год назад +251

    Stockton Rush struck me as one of those subtly charismatic "old money" WASPs who become minor cult leaders, to both their employees and their -dupes- customers... but most ruinously, to themselves... "up his own arse" as the Brits say. Apparently for every paying customer that made the dive, 2 or 3 others came, saw... and wisely backed out, with raised eyebrows. At least one couple had to sue to get their deposit back.

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад +21

      💯

    • @PeregrineFisher
      @PeregrineFisher Год назад +4

      He wasn’t rich.

    • @onlyme9262
      @onlyme9262 Год назад +16

      a grifter and a chancer.

    • @jd70HJ19
      @jd70HJ19 Год назад +1

      I can agree with with you Practically about every characterization of RUSH you give except one . and it it the ONE really creates a problem for me about WHITE APOLOGISTS OAFS like you. OLD MONEY WASP.
      To begin with RUSH was a Christian ...not a protestant and second , his type of attitude is found in every GODDAMENED RACE on this planet . If you are ashamed of your own white skin change it , paint yourself any damned color you like , but do the white race a favor ,do not mention WHITE ...you give the race a bad name and we have nothing to apologize for . Perhaps 45 to 55 years spent reading history from end to end will teach you something about the human race and how each color is as bad or good as the other ..

    • @MissMy5.0
      @MissMy5.0 Год назад +1

      ​@@PeregrineFisher
      How so?

  • @funasylumstudio
    @funasylumstudio Год назад +11

    This story is unreal no matter how much I read or watch about it. There is a Mexican RUclipsr who went down on the sub and saw the Titanic. Just watching that alone is unreal.

  • @camdix3250
    @camdix3250 Год назад

    Thank you for this. Very clearly and concisely told - and told with sensitivity.

  • @annqueenqueen7211
    @annqueenqueen7211 Год назад +2

    Great! gives us such a good understanding of why and how it happened, thank you so much

  • @daviddempsey8721
    @daviddempsey8721 Год назад +46

    Thank you Mike…
    I’ve often heard “Academics learn in order to do, while entrepreneurs do in order to learn” and “fail fast” as better ways of innovating.
    It’s rare to get a shout out for scientists engineers and techs who focus on not only reliable design but manufacture, economy, testing, maintenance, lifetime reliability and safety. We also work to carefully experiment with new materials and techniques as we build a safety case. Being accused of analysis paralysis often by entrepreneurs…I hope they consider collaborating with those who know, to help them do new things and live.

    • @DrDeuteron
      @DrDeuteron Год назад +6

      Scientist this out side the box, engineers think inside the envelope, and entrepreneurs think about their wallet

    • @matthewlongstaff3112
      @matthewlongstaff3112 Год назад +2

      Had there been actual research into alternative materials for deep sea vessels, which had come to nothing?

    • @CupidStunt-fs7ie
      @CupidStunt-fs7ie Год назад

      @@matthewlongstaff3112 Yes, the navy has done so.....

    • @KebabMusicLtd
      @KebabMusicLtd Год назад +1

      Academics learn from experience and past mistakes. Developing anything will require many evolutions to make the item as safe as is practical to use. (Mark I, II, III etc)
      You start with the simplest idea and find the right ways to make it work. It could be argued that many tragedies have led to a more safety conscious approach to development.
      RMS Titanic is a good example of this. By the time of her launch, steam power was thought of as a modern wonder but little thought had been given to the use of rockets at sea being used distinctly for distress reasons. There were no regulations controlling the use of wireless meaning ships with powerful antennas could send messages all over the ocean with little thought to the fact that their 'commercial messages' might be interfering with messages relating to safety, and of course, 16 lifeboats and four collapsible’s should be more than enough to cater to the needs of 2,240 souls at sea.
      I dare say the first caveman only needed to put his hand in the fire one time to make up his mind not to do so again, after which point he warned others not do so.

    • @daviddempsey8721
      @daviddempsey8721 Год назад +1

      @@KebabMusicLtd yes… and we already have a reliable, safe way of bringing on new materials and designs through an established certification process and System Engineering Design and Test & Evaluation This CEO chose to avoid it.

  • @matrixfull
    @matrixfull Год назад +16

    I heard someone saying that problem with Titan's design was that carbon-fibre has limited lifespan on so many dives. If you want to make carbon fibre sub you need to completely replace it every few dives. I'm surprised that was 24th dive. That was extremely greedy. Another good insight was provided by you: "Fillaments were rolled in one direction only". Maybe if they rolled it in all directions this wouldn't happen or would happen after many more dives instead. But seriously..they didn't test how many dives can this carbon-fibre structure survive to cut costs. Now instead of dollars they payed with lives.

    • @rejuvenatingsoul3498
      @rejuvenatingsoul3498 Год назад +2

      No it wasn't the 24th dive, it was 7th dive with that exact hull.

    • @elpadrinobaby1902
      @elpadrinobaby1902 Год назад +1

      Not sure if it’s true but I heard that last time they were on this same submersible it was giving problems and still ignored the signs 🤦🏽‍♂️

    • @texasbella576
      @texasbella576 Год назад

      Rush purchased the carbon fiber from Boeing - which boeing had “retired” bc of its age and stored in a warehouse for quite some time

    • @HansensOfficecom
      @HansensOfficecom Год назад +2

      @@rejuvenatingsoul3498 I've seen different numbers . 9 for instance, but I don't know where the maker of the video got 24 from.

  • @Tuflov
    @Tuflov Год назад +1

    So this big enough hull that can contain 5 people took the blink of an eye to become one clump of metal the size of a bag of basketballs. That's truly terrifying!

  • @OceanSwimmer
    @OceanSwimmer Год назад

    First time viewer of your channel, Mr. Bell.
    Well done.
    The demo with the soda can is impressive.

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад

      Welcome aboard! Lots more good stuff to come...

  • @nm9412
    @nm9412 Год назад +64

    Thank you for explaining how this sub looked and worked. I can’t believe it could get so close to Titanic.

    • @turtlejeepjen314
      @turtlejeepjen314 Год назад +6

      Same here…. The Titan wreckage ALMOST LANDED on TOP of the the actual Titanic… I wonder what everyone’s reaction would have been if it HAD done so…🤔🐢

    • @FatalFist
      @FatalFist Год назад +3

      It has done previous dives and that was Rush’s biggest mistake. His arrogance got them all killed. After each dive, the submersible’s life expectancy was being shortened. The wear and tear, which was neglected, became its doom.

    • @GrahamMasters87
      @GrahamMasters87 Год назад +2

      @@turtlejeepjen314 Not even close.... 1600ft away. That is like 3 football fields.

    • @PatoChu
      @PatoChu Год назад

      The government even advised them that the Titan shouldn't even reach a 3rd of the depth where the Titanic is, but due to the CEO's arrogance, they all unjustifiably died in a very gruesome but quick way

    • @frutt5k
      @frutt5k Год назад

      It was essentially a brick that sometimes could be made to surface.

  • @americandream7419
    @americandream7419 Год назад +51

    Just like that, the titan crumbled to the mighty sea and forever lost the souls that were inside it, families of those lost will forever be changed, and as for the ocean, it continued to forever sparkle under the sun and be just as powerful as it has always been. The ocean is nothing to be careless with.

  • @user-be8ox2yd4i
    @user-be8ox2yd4i Год назад +2

    Why the delay in releasing the information to the public concerning the possible detection of the implosion of the Titan? 1) The event was probably detected by a classified Navy passive undersea surveillance system, so the information would have to be declassified for public release. 2) The classified information was probably released to the Coast Guard, but was of no practical use until assets with the capability to confirm the destruction of the Titan were on site. The search could not be aborted until the destruction was confirmed, and the Coast Guard didn't want to cause the families to loose hope until it could. 3) There was no benefit to anyone to release this information.

  • @tejana971
    @tejana971 Год назад

    Thank you. This was very informative!

  • @davidely7032
    @davidely7032 Год назад +21

    A search of "Did Titan try to surface? " results in an article (Insider) that notes the ballast had been released prior to implosion ... suggesting the passengers knew something was wrong and prompted them to urgently try to surface. Sadly, the idea that they died in blissful ignorance may not be wholly accurate.

    • @FabledGentleman
      @FabledGentleman Год назад

      Yeah they likely would hear cracking noises as the hull started caving in, but once it finally did. They died in about 0.01 seconds, or even faster even.

    • @PInk77W1
      @PInk77W1 Год назад

      @@FabledGentlemanmy guess is
      It takes much longer than .001 seconds to make a thought

    • @FabledGentleman
      @FabledGentleman Год назад +1

      @@PInk77W1 Well at least thoughts don't hurt. Might have been scary down there for a few seconds.

    • @mando686
      @mando686 Год назад +1

      @@FabledGentlemanthe Pakistan businessman’s son did not want to go down and only did it for his dad. He would have been terrified the whole time.

    • @tboneforreal
      @tboneforreal Год назад

      Yeah, that's why the engineer Oceangate fired said that Rush's acoustic monitoring system was worthless because by the time it would warn you that something is wrong it was likely too late to save you.

  • @K1OIK
    @K1OIK Год назад +11

    They used Elmers's glue and Super Glue from the Dollar Store.

    • @joels3659
      @joels3659 Год назад

      I've seen better GIJOE toys then that pos.

  • @Mike-Bell
    @Mike-Bell  Год назад +15

    The "leaked transcript" is clearly fake. The long messages and language style do not match an emergency situation. They would never have had 19 minutes warning of hull failure. The descent speed doesn't tie up with physics.
    The number of dives is difficult to get accurate information on. The best I can tell Titan imploded on its 5th mission to the Titanic in FB post by Hamish Harding facebook.com/ActionAviationChairman/posts/674126021392828?ref=embed_post It had a total of 24 dives according to David Pogue ruclips.net/video/O-8U08yJlb8/видео.html If you have more conclusive information please leave a comment.
    The video of the hull winding shown here is from an earlier hull. Here is a short video clip of the winding of the newer hull that imploded. It appears this hull was also only wound in the hoop direction. ruclips.net/video/29co_Hksk6o/видео.html The axial movement of the head is likely just a repositioning of the head and not an axial weave.

    • @heinrichollbers
      @heinrichollbers Год назад +2

      Mike, pin this comment to the top of comment section so that everyone could see it.

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад +4

      @@heinrichollbers thanks for alerting me. I tried to pin earlier but it did not register it had not worked. Will make sure it does this time.

    • @boulderup9c
      @boulderup9c Год назад +1

      Are you referring to the shot in the video where the head traverses to the end of the winding? If so, I don't think this is an axial lay. I don't think any fiber is being laid in that move, mainly because it has nothing to attach to at the beginning of the move, and it moves way too fast. I think the head is just being repositioned.

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад +2

      @@boulderup9c Thanks for confirming what didn't quite make sense to me. I also wondered how the ends would have been attached but gave them the benefit of the doubt because a single direction lay seemed just too basic a mistake to make.

  • @kskrastins30
    @kskrastins30 Год назад

    I did enjoy the video. Well done. Thanks

  • @user-us4yc9ki6j
    @user-us4yc9ki6j Год назад +29

    Your synopsis is spot on, and thank you for your time and integrity. During our human experience, we constantly allow ego to crash endeavor. This is our insanity.

  • @Blessedbeyond.
    @Blessedbeyond. Год назад +47

    I worked with this composite material for years for use in dead tank circuit breakers on a global scale. These parts undergo unbelievable amounts of pressure and heat during use in the Interrupter. At one point, Inventory was mistakenly providing production with expired parts as they have a shelf life to abide by. This caused the breakers to fail tests. I understand Stockton purchased outdated material for the hull. If this is true, this submersible was a ticking time bomb based on that alone.

    • @TheCandiceWang
      @TheCandiceWang Год назад

      🙏🏼😞

    • @TheCandiceWang
      @TheCandiceWang Год назад +2

      IIRC he purchased outdated carbon fiber from Boeing(?) and iirc, this video said that the CF was used for the cylindrical body part (5 inches thick)

    • @gailmcn
      @gailmcn Год назад +4

      From other RUclips sites, where materials engineers have comments, it's my understanding that the carbon fiber composite has great tensile strength, but low compression strength, that it is difficult to diagnose failure until it does fail, at which time it shatters.

    • @weiwu1442
      @weiwu1442 Год назад +4

      @@TheCandiceWangBoeing commented that OceanGate or Stockton Rush never approached them at all.

    • @gailmcn
      @gailmcn Год назад +4

      @@frogmen6105 your English is fine!

  • @isaboteur2562
    @isaboteur2562 Год назад

    This story is pure YT gold rn. I should create and upload my own. That being said this was the best explanation ive heard yet,

  • @JuliusCaesar888
    @JuliusCaesar888 9 месяцев назад +1

    This is a really good channel man.

  • @justathumb
    @justathumb Год назад +25

    so exceptionally well-made and respectfully explained, thankyou!

  • @andyranimations
    @andyranimations Год назад +22

    Cool video, it will be interesting to see the details that will come out of this from the investigation. Keep up the good content Mike!

  • @kenf6294
    @kenf6294 Год назад +3

    What you say at 6:10 is so very true. Nicely said. We do tend to take so much for granted in life.

  • @Promise2018
    @Promise2018 Год назад +1

    It’s so sad to think they died. But knowing it was instant and painless is so much better than thinking of suffering.

  • @caravanlifenz
    @caravanlifenz Год назад +27

    Awesome video. Great ending commentary about the ocean not caring if you are rich. I grew up in NZ where many people have drowned in the sea, so our teachers constantly reminded us how dangerous it was. I'd never get in a sub like that one.

  • @errorsofmodernism7331
    @errorsofmodernism7331 Год назад +54

    Excellent graphics and analysis

  • @fieldadmiralspartanryseb-8293
    @fieldadmiralspartanryseb-8293 Год назад +2

    This guy deserves a huge boost in subscribers

  • @BetheLight-BetheLove
    @BetheLight-BetheLove Год назад +1

    Nicely done! Thanks!

  • @jetlag1488
    @jetlag1488 Год назад +8

    I really appreciate the last bit of the video where you talk about the experts, the scientific minds who we should all listen to. This disaster could've been prevented if it weren't for the hubris and arrogance of one individual against centuries of knowledge and experience.

  • @outdoorvideoswithbrad
    @outdoorvideoswithbrad Год назад +28

    This was really good, I just can’t believe how something thrown together cheaply even made it to those depths a couple time before, you said trip 24? I heard they only went to the Titanic like 3 times, if the guy just retired it after a couple dives and built another probably would of worked, it’s just crazy that military subs or submarines in general can’t go that far, but that guy basically used a “water heater” and made it to the bottom of the ocean

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад +24

      Titan was by no means cheap. It was just cheaper. But when you are already spending big sums of money saving a few bucks is so dumb. If the main centre body had been titanium too I suspect some other non redundant system would have inevitably caused a disaster. Quite bizarre the way he dissed safety.

    • @outdoorvideoswithbrad
      @outdoorvideoswithbrad Год назад +1

      @@Mike-Bell ya that’s what I was thinking, the guy had money so why not make it perfect? Thanks for replying, I just keep seeing this stuff pop up but you’re video was the best one

    • @terminalfrost3645
      @terminalfrost3645 Год назад +7

      it has many trips yes, but there have been hull replacement in those. this current hull had made about 7 trips before the implosion, about 3 or so were manned.

    • @outdoorvideoswithbrad
      @outdoorvideoswithbrad Год назад +1

      @@terminalfrost3645 ok cool thanks for the information

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад +5

      @@terminalfrost3645 Thanks for the important information and that sounds a lot better. Do you have the source.

  • @rennmaxbeta
    @rennmaxbeta Год назад +1

    It was said the underwater sound detected by the Navy was, at the time, classified, and Incident Command continued to treat the situation as a search and rescue. Once the debris field was located, the information was declassified.

  • @luvbig41
    @luvbig41 Год назад +1

    The CEO "dismissed these warnings as getting in the way of innovation"......That's insane.

  • @robertbolivarr8363
    @robertbolivarr8363 Год назад +4

    That can of COKE demonstration was pretty accurate that happened to the Titan in my opinion.

  • @AWildBard
    @AWildBard Год назад +11

    Great video. I especially liked the coke can heated and then placed in ice. Best demonstration I've seen so far. Good animations, too.

  • @spencerwhitney3175
    @spencerwhitney3175 Год назад +1

    Mr. Bell, you are an extremely likable guy. Thank you so much for making this video.

    • @Mike-Bell
      @Mike-Bell  Год назад

      So nice of you! I value facts, accuracy and credibility and more to come. Welcome aboard.

  • @samangaofrancis5622
    @samangaofrancis5622 Год назад +1

    This video is very crystal,unlike all other videos.excellently done❤

  • @taraswertelecki3786
    @taraswertelecki3786 Год назад +41

    Carbon fiber is far stronger in extension than compression. That fact alone makes it a lousy choice for any sort of pressure hull. It weakens with each dive because stresses build up and then dissipates with each dive due to fractures within the material forming and joining with others until eventually it fails suddenly.However, this was not the only deadly flaw lurking in the Titan submersible. The view port was only rated for 4,000 feet, not 13,000 feet. If it failed the result would have still been an immediate implosion. The bond between the carbon fiber center section and one or both of the end rings could have also failed because they were inherently flawed to begin with. I suspect the Coast Guard will find conclusive evidence of what caused Titan to implode and how.

    • @asiffrq2003
      @asiffrq2003 Год назад

      100% agree, with the fact that Carbon fiber are excellent against tensional stress rather compressive stress.... Good to make its use in space where internal pressure is more than outside but not for under water with high pressure outside.....

    • @gavinjenkins899
      @gavinjenkins899 Год назад

      Tension can resist crushing though, in a circle. For the circle to go out of round requires one part to compress but ALSO requires another part to stretch.

    • @lionheart4552
      @lionheart4552 Год назад +5

      Wow ! Suddenly everyone Is an expert on the appropriate material composition to construct a deep sea submersible

    • @PInk77W1
      @PInk77W1 Год назад

      @@lionheart4552at least everyone who hasn’t kllld 5 people

    • @gordonwelcher9598
      @gordonwelcher9598 Год назад +1

      All they needed was a couple of cans of Flex Seal

  • @bardofarmagh
    @bardofarmagh Год назад +4

    splendid work ! It's great to see a less dramatised perspective on this, just what actually happened, as it happened. and that brief monologue at the end sums this up beautifully.

  • @jvheck
    @jvheck Год назад

    Thank you for making this.

  • @DesertRunner602
    @DesertRunner602 Год назад +2

    Nice to know some of the most crucial parts were simply GLUED to each other.