@@ImNotLuthien you must be a English teacher lol, the sub was built specifically to check out the Titanic wreck but instead of just observing history, it ended up becoming part of it. So i would say that's pretty ironic in a sense, meanings of words evolve and becomes loose and that applies to the term "irony" too and how we use it in everyday talk.
@@AtomicGirlNYC-e2s buddy you won't get anywhere in life with such unnecessary pedantry, going on about this who knows who lol. I suggest you look up the overall blanket term that is the word irony, True irony typically involves an outcome that's the opposite of what was expected, often with an element of poetic justice or cosmic mockery. What i said here fits the definition of irony, it shouldn't even warrant any argument.
@@sushi-void The bow was probably much better. However, the size and the draft following behind it probably covered it in rock silt pretty quickly. The stern was already destroyed completely by the time it hit the bottom.
@@andrewcarlson3486We do, actually. We would have seen evidence of something bigger before we even made submarines. Just like how we knew giant squids existed even though we haven't actually seen them.
To those asking where the bodies are... The tin can you all call a submarine crushed them at such speeds it vaporized theirs bodies and practically liquefied their bones. They became part of the ocean water in milliseconds.
That’s not entirely true. Even with the strongest ocean you still would have mangled body parts and the clothes intact. Example the arms would have been intact. The limbs. Most of their bodies. They were wearing boots socks denim and sweaters and jackets so even if the sub imploded those items would be keeping them pancaked to some extent but for the most part Intact. As the strong hull broke to some pieces their bodies fell out and scavengers must of rushed in. I believe their clothes and even bones are still at the bottom of the ocean.
They weren’t vaporized. They would have been crushed but there would still be body parts. The reason you don’t see bodies here is easy. They could have drifted away from the wreckage and creatures would have eaten them by now.
@@woolymittens Thanks for clarifying that. I was confused by this video as i was told the best way to imagine the incident was like being inside a diesel engine on the compression stroke - everything inside the pressure vessel was incinerated in a few microseconds. Apparently it was definitely NOT like one of those WW2 submarine movies with water spraying in and creaking sounds!
It's not that surprising really. It's pretty much exactly where they expected it to be, as it was descending straight down, to a spot on the ocean floor where they would've then travelled horizontally towards the time Titanic's wreck. It's just it took them a few days to get a remotely operated submersible to the area, that was capable of going that deep, so it could go down and confirm what everyone already feared was true. Once they got that submersible down there, it quickly found the wreckage, which is what we're seeing in this video.
@@georgearthur205- not really, smaller debris like this will drift off instead of just completely sinking in a straight line. Large ships like the titanic though won’t drift with the current as bad. It is haunting though we’re looking at modern wreckage.
It sure is. I think what I find most scary is that if you take away the bright lights from the ROV then it is literally pitch black out there on the ocean floor. Can you imagine one minute existing then in a few milliseconds becoming fish food in the deepest darkest depths of the sea? It's a frightening thought. May all the victims of this terrible tragedy RIP. We can talk all we want about Stockton's mistakes and he made many, but we must also feel sorry for all the lives lost including Stockton Rush. Remember he left behind 2 kids.
@@Romulan2469whats scarier is theres not just fish down there but advanced beings that have existed before humans. The crushing pressure of the depths and the heat of the earths crust is nothing to them.
@@playsfromanotherdimension I would be curious to know what makes them "advanced" in your opinion aside from surviving the depths of the seas? I call that a natural evolution for survival and not an advance based on changes they have made for themselves.
@@Romulan2469 Depending on which perspective youd like to view this from, a basic view from almost any standpoint would argue that since the ability to withstand pressure and heat not even billion dollar submarines/vessels face is already much more advanced than humans already since it opens up the possibility that there has to be a significant technological or biological overlapping when compared to humans. In addition, it would give them some kind of protection against natural disasters that, if given chance to unfold, would wipe out most of modern civilization while these creatures would basically just see those events as another tuesday night. Not trying to be funny or stretch beyond imagination, there was and still is a specie(s) that exists that biologically was/is far superior to humans and thus would give them a level of access to technology that would mirror their capabilities that they naturally already possess.
I actually thought it was a Subnautica thumbnail at first glance until I remembered some goofballs decided to pay tons of money to go down there in a glorified soda can. What could go wrong?
*titanik sunk *Made a sub called titan *Sent it to titanikwrekage of titanic *Drown *Now titan wreckage that was sent for titanic wreckage can be scan to titanium
The way the camera just barely reveals the very clear logo is a haunting sight let alone being able to read that logo makes this discovery more sad and disturbing
@@generals.patton546I still think any kind of sadness is pretty justified considering how we’re still staring at the remains of what was decidedly the shared tomb, and final chamber of multiple people. Of course one of them was really negligent when it came to ocean gates safety, which absolutely lead to the deaths of the other causalities, but regardless we are undeniably staring at a recently made tomb, and the logo being so absolutely clear I think just adds to how eerie, and grim that certainty is.
@bigdongkong1854 Dude, the CEO literally said in an interview he didn't want to hire old white guys. I'm blaming him for having obvious bias towards minorities, like a lot of people do. Victimhood is strong with you.
Seeing a submarine wreck underwater with basically no light surrounding it is eerie, but knowing that the most famous ship in the world is only 1600 feet away makes it even more eerie.
It's a little ironic this camera was able to decend as far down as the submarine and capture in high depth everything they risk their lives trying to look at through a small blurry dome.
They wouldn't have even gotten a special experience from going down physically; the pod had no windows so it might as well have just been a drone with a camera feed for all it mattered.
I'm honestly impressed that much survived the force of the implosion. They really were in a little tube of death. This is a good example of why we use spheres for high pressure instead of cylinders
@@MB-nn3jw I would be interested to know what kind of material the external cladding was for the tail cone. Must have pretty strong compressive strength along with the titanium end caps.
To everybody saying they are surprised this much remains, keep in mind the equipment we see was already outside the pressure vessel, it was built to withstand the pressure on its own.
Exactly! Obviously it wasn’t a completely sealed vessel and the components on the aft had to function at high pressure environments. It’s just that the part that was to, you know, *house living people* was compromised very quickly.
Ngl, the poor son that tagged along to impress his father... my heart aches for him the most. A young man taken too soon. I dont even want to know the pain his mother is going through 💔
I'm a diver and when certifying, divers are treated to demonstrations of what happens when pressurization fails…and that at 60 feet. I'm shocked that there was anything left. I rather expected nothing more than something resembling a crashed beer can. It's utterly shocking that these experimental submersible are not properly regulated. It's like trying to climb Everest in a T-shirt, no oxygen and faulty climbing gear. When did they have the first inkling that the consequences might prove fatal?
That big piece is the part that wasn't pressurized because it isn't part of the cabin where the people were. It contained the parts used for navigation. You can't see the carbon fibre hull that made the cabin there because that was pressurized and it imploded.
I think you can use it to certain depths and only once or twice. They're essentially disposable. Carbon fiber hulls tend to develop stress fractures. Which over time results in well.... This..
Especially if it wasn't good enough for aircraft and was purchased at a discount........ oh and if you don't want to consult engineers because they're are too many white ones. Well I hope it was worth taking the risk...
The kid was the only smart one in the group because he was the only one that tried to get out and said no he didn't want to do this and it seems like a bad idea
I don’t; they knew what ‘’they were getting into”’. He didn’t have to go. Yeah, it’s sad what happened but they knew the risks of it. That submersible was janky and controlled by a Xbox controller. I wouldn’t have paid what they did to go!
12,300 feet down! holy smokes. I will never understand why people think they need to physically see that wreckage...send these cameras down and stay safe.
@@archimetropolis totally diff't ballgame going to the extremely safe and above water grand canyon...so much risk to witness a wreckage that deep. nuts
If you think that is deep remember that Hamish Harding previously descended successfully to the Challenger Deep (35876 feet) of the Mariana Trench. Remember that deep sea diving submersibles are perfectly safe if the right approach is taken to the design and safety of the submersible. The Triton 36000/2 submersible, also known as the DSV Limiting Factor, has reached a depth of 10,928 meters (35,853 feet) in the Challenger Deep, which is the deepest point in the Mariana Trench.
My condolences to the families it’s hard to see the wreck where your loved one spent their last moments. My brother was lost when El Faro sank in 2015 near the Bahamas seeing footage of the wreck broke my father’s heart.
Imagine all the theories that life wouldnt be sustained at the point of the titanic wreckage. Imagine how terrifying it would be to just go down underwater then you see the Titanic, still in fresh paint.
Customer: "Yes yes make us a submarine so we can see a part of history with our own eyes" Sub devs: "1 submarine to be a part of history coming right up"
I think the cold war just accelerated that advancement, had it not been for the arms race it'd probably would've been a lot slower like how we handle ocean science (or more time and money would've been spent for ocean exploration actually. i wonder what that world looks like.) Make no mistake though, both space and ocean travel are major risks and not walks in the park fit for tourism projects. What happened with this wreck was a lack of safety regulations and one massive massive ego of a greedy rich man. a tragedy made from hubris, not from a lack of technological advancements. The rocket explosion from the 60s was a similar situation, lack of proper regulations
Once Musk makes it to the moon you wait, there’ll be our first lunar disaster. It’s got nothing to do with risk, has more to do with billionaire idiots not all having rocket tech to die trying in space.
This was emotional to watch knowing that 4 unsuspecting and trusting people lost their lives. The owner knew the risks in his head but was motivated by his ego. This is truly sad and my heart goes out to the families who having to relive the horror as they search for answers.
@@phantumbelly1319 ~ I do agree with you that Paul-Henri should have known better. He had decades of experience on and under the water. How Stockton was able to convince him to dive to those depths is going to remain a mystery. I can’t find the original video, but the person made comments about him wanted to die with the Titanic. He was all things Titanic and does make for a romantic story… provided it’s true. We’ll never know.
this starting to feel like Illuminati stuff like the sacrifice them because who in there right mind would go down there knowing eat just happen to people in the titanic
this starting to feel like Illuminati stuff like the sacrifice them because who in there right mind would go down there knowing eat just happen to people in the titanic
"If this test comes back red the hull would break and everyone dies" "oh look, it is red" "well anyway, tell the marketing team it is safer than crossing the street"
Istg the world could end in WWIII tmrw & the only things left to remember humanity would be Twinkies, Roaches & a roll of duct Tape that randomly defies physics
@@Ariana_Swift13i don't think so. The moment you're exposed to the space environment, you're gone. Just like this submarine killed those people. Too quick to feel
Crazy to think how much time, effort, and ungodly amounts of money go into people going 2 miles under the ocean….when obviously the technology is there to do it from above. This video is proof. Makes no sense to me, but what do I know…..
Actually no because the submersibles goal was to reach the Titanic and we know the exact location of the Titanic and therefore it was very obvious that the wreckage of the submersible must've been somewhere in the proximity of the Titanic and it was. The search area was very small and the remains if the sub were found very quickly.
this starting to feel like Illuminati stuff like the sacrifice them because who in there right mind would go down there knowing eat just happen to people in the titanic
They did indeed find remains. Not sure what the condition of the bodies were, but given that they stated needing a DNA test to identify them, I imagine there wasn't much left of them. Maybe just bits of flesh and bone. They probably weren't found in the location shown in this video either. The Titan imploded a couple of hundred meters above the sea floor, so a lot of its parts were scattered to form a debris field. The object we see here is the tail cone. The rest of the wreck is probably somewhere else.
They sure did but it's literally fragments of bone at best. At that kind of pressure an implosion turns the human body into tomato paste. Fortunately they died without feeling anything.
@@LowTierHuman-10 Of course. The implosion happened within a few milliseconds, considerably faster than the brain would have time to process before being rendered into atoms.
Realistically, if mankind were as self-hating as you, the titanic would get the plaque. "unsinkable" is pretty arrogant especially when it claimed 1500 lives and sank on its first voyage.
no it doesnt, all you said is defamation. from someone else who doesnt know what theyre talking about, its probably there to hold together something flimsy that never required bolts
@@nuguns3766 LOL, strapping together something that's flimsy yet supposed to go nearly four kilometres down to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, way to illustrate the guy's point.
@@Zenith292 I have seen enough comments from people to indicate that the wreck site should never be visited by anyone as it is considered a grave site, that's why I asked the question. Also OceanGate referred to Titan's passengers as mission specialists not tourists, even though that is exactly what they were.
What is "funny" is that Titanic 's name was to make justice to its side, a very large ship. Titan, on the other hand, is a pathetic submersible. They named that to visit Titanic, but the choice of the name is horrible
Don't go to the bottom of the ocean in a pringles can
yo 🤣🤣🤣
@@jayha7071 In a $250K Pringles can
😂😂😂😂😂😂
Man this is worse than a saw death trap
Make sure the cardboard doesn't go off😅
Its so ironic because that sub was made to visit the titanic wreckage and now the sub itself is part of the wreckage
Thats not what irony means but yea I get it.
@@ImNotLuthien you must be a English teacher lol, the sub was built specifically to check out the Titanic wreck but instead of just observing history, it ended up becoming part of it. So i would say that's pretty ironic in a sense, meanings of words evolve and becomes loose and that applies to the term "irony" too and how we use it in everyday talk.
@@ImNotLuthienit’s situational irony. i learned this in high school… there are different types of irony used in english
Like those road markers at everest. It stopped being an achievement and today is more about personal ego and showing off
@@AtomicGirlNYC-e2s buddy you won't get anywhere in life with such unnecessary pedantry, going on about this who knows who lol. I suggest you look up the overall blanket term that is the word irony, True irony typically involves an outcome that's the opposite of what was expected, often with an element of poetic justice or cosmic mockery. What i said here fits the definition of irony, it shouldn't even warrant any argument.
Another haunting (and ironic) example of why safety regulations exist and why you can't buy your way out of them.
You can…but you shouldn‘t.
Safety rules are written in the blood. In this case, the blood of those who followed a fool.
sheriff mao-mao pfp talking about safety regulations. checks out lol
Fools need to exist to teach us what not to do. That was very necessary. Now I don't think anyone will try anything similar to this, ever again.
and why rich ppl aren’t invincible
Im so used to seeing historical wreckages that are degraded or covered in silt. Thats a hauntingly fresh one
It makes a part of the mind wonder what the titanic looked like 😢
@@sushi-void When fresh, Titanic was probably just as beautiful as it was on the surface.
@@sushi-void The bow was probably much better. However, the size and the draft following behind it probably covered it in rock silt pretty quickly. The stern was already destroyed completely by the time it hit the bottom.
fresher than my stepsister at 3 am
@@E.V.A.N-COProductions Yeah, that’s true. Watching the animation of Titanic hitting the sea floor is both amazing and terrifying.
Knowing that the Titanic is a few hundred meters away from this makes it all the more eerie.
Whats more scary is that most of the ocean is unexplored makes u wonder what lurking in those depths
@@andrewcarlson3486nothing's lurking, fortunately
@@extremepower5765 we don't know tho
@@extremepower5765 well they find alot new creatures almost everyday, maybe read a book or newspAPER ?
@@andrewcarlson3486We do, actually. We would have seen evidence of something bigger before we even made submarines. Just like how we knew giant squids existed even though we haven't actually seen them.
To those asking where the bodies are...
The tin can you all call a submarine crushed them at such speeds it vaporized theirs bodies and practically liquefied their bones.
They became part of the ocean water in milliseconds.
damn thats like your whole existence being erased in the face of the earth in just an instant
its like when Thanos snapped.
At least they won't be able to feel the pain
That’s not entirely true. Even with the strongest ocean you still would have mangled body parts and the clothes intact. Example the arms would have been intact. The limbs. Most of their bodies. They were wearing boots socks denim and sweaters and jackets so even if the sub imploded those items would be keeping them pancaked to some extent but for the most part Intact. As the strong hull broke to some pieces their bodies fell out and scavengers must of rushed in. I believe their clothes and even bones are still at the bottom of the ocean.
They weren’t vaporized. They would have been crushed but there would still be body parts.
The reason you don’t see bodies here is easy. They could have drifted away from the wreckage and creatures would have eaten them by now.
What’s really haunting is the revelation of the OceanGate logo on the side of the wreck, which confirms what you’re seeing is what you’re thinking.
lol good one
What am I thinking?
fish fed
Olympic...?
why do i keep finding you everywhere
That is way more intact than I expected
The part in the video was aft (behind) the pressurized hull. It was open to the ocean, not pressurized. The fairings are just cosmetic.
The ratchet strap is holding it all together. Kinda strange how a ratchet strap got there but it's definitely there.
@@woolymittens Thanks for clarifying that. I was confused by this video as i was told the best way to imagine the incident was like being inside a diesel engine on the compression stroke - everything inside the pressure vessel was incinerated in a few microseconds. Apparently it was definitely NOT like one of those WW2 submarine movies with water spraying in and creaking sounds!
conspiracy?
Maby
Achievement unlocked: Underwater graveyard [Mythical]
$400 can be collected from this discovery in your inventory
Badge Name: Atlantis's Courtyard
😂
This is another tourist destination at the bottom of the ocean, next to the Titanic.
In 100 years they'll have a mcdonalds down there for hungry tourists
Oh my god 😂 I wonder how far from the Titanic it is? I wouldn't doubt if someday people sell an underwater Titanic/ ocean gate submarine ride package
@@jevindayI think it was a few miles away if I’m not mistaken
Few hundred feet I think, not far at all!
dark tourism as they call it
The tailpiece was not part of the chamber and that is why it survived the implosion.
Thank you, a person that knows
Are the passengers OK?
@@randomsimpsonsquotes6033they said it’s to die for
@@randomsimpsonsquotes6033yep, they swam up to the surface and are now doing world tours about the experience.
@@randomsimpsonsquotes6033 they turned into soup and the bottom feaders had a blast.
Love the irony of using properly made submersibles to record the pieces of and improperly made submersible
I'm impressed they managed to find it.
i wonder if they found any belongings like clothes or gadgets near by wrecksite
@@aguy908I have a limited understanding of such things, but apparently the implosion event caused everything within the sub to be incinerated.
It's not that surprising really. It's pretty much exactly where they expected it to be, as it was descending straight down, to a spot on the ocean floor where they would've then travelled horizontally towards the time Titanic's wreck. It's just it took them a few days to get a remotely operated submersible to the area, that was capable of going that deep, so it could go down and confirm what everyone already feared was true. Once they got that submersible down there, it quickly found the wreckage, which is what we're seeing in this video.
@@georgearthur205- not really, smaller debris like this will drift off instead of just completely sinking in a straight line. Large ships like the titanic though won’t drift with the current as bad. It is haunting though we’re looking at modern wreckage.
..
this is so freaking haunting
very agreed. not for those with Thallasophobia
It sure is. I think what I find most scary is that if you take away the bright lights from the ROV then it is literally pitch black out there on the ocean floor. Can you imagine one minute existing then in a few milliseconds becoming fish food in the deepest darkest depths of the sea? It's a frightening thought. May all the victims of this terrible tragedy RIP. We can talk all we want about Stockton's mistakes and he made many, but we must also feel sorry for all the lives lost including Stockton Rush. Remember he left behind 2 kids.
@@Romulan2469whats scarier is theres not just fish down there but advanced beings that have existed before humans. The crushing pressure of the depths and the heat of the earths crust is nothing to them.
@@playsfromanotherdimension I would be curious to know what makes them "advanced" in your opinion aside from surviving the depths of the seas? I call that a natural evolution for survival and not an advance based on changes they have made for themselves.
@@Romulan2469 Depending on which perspective youd like to view this from, a basic view from almost any standpoint would argue that since the ability to withstand pressure and heat not even billion dollar submarines/vessels face is already much more advanced than humans already since it opens up the possibility that there has to be a significant technological or biological overlapping when compared to humans. In addition, it would give them some kind of protection against natural disasters that, if given chance to unfold, would wipe out most of modern civilization while these creatures would basically just see those events as another tuesday night. Not trying to be funny or stretch beyond imagination, there was and still is a specie(s) that exists that biologically was/is far superior to humans and thus would give them a level of access to technology that would mirror their capabilities that they naturally already possess.
It’s so…haunting. It’s permanent stain on oceangate as a whole
im pretty sure oceangate no longer exists.
Yeah good ?
Looks like something you can scan for titanium in subnautica 💀
Jajajajaja you just made my day
lmao
There'd be more carbon fibre for you 😂
I actually thought it was a Subnautica thumbnail at first glance until I remembered some goofballs decided to pay tons of money to go down there in a glorified soda can. What could go wrong?
*titanik sunk
*Made a sub called titan
*Sent it to titanikwrekage of titanic
*Drown
*Now titan wreckage that was sent for titanic wreckage can be scan to titanium
The way the camera just barely reveals the very clear logo is a haunting sight let alone being able to read that logo makes this discovery more sad and disturbing
It isn't that sad. This is what happens when you don't want to hire "50 year old white guys," as their ceo said in an interview.
Emotional manipulation at its finest
@@generals.patton546I still think any kind of sadness is pretty justified considering how we’re still staring at the remains of what was decidedly the shared tomb, and final chamber of multiple people.
Of course one of them was really negligent when it came to ocean gates safety, which absolutely lead to the deaths of the other causalities, but regardless we are undeniably staring at a recently made tomb, and the logo being so absolutely clear I think just adds to how eerie, and grim that certainty is.
@@generals.patton546yes blame minorities instead of the ceo avoiding safety regulations
@bigdongkong1854 Dude, the CEO literally said in an interview he didn't want to hire old white guys. I'm blaming him for having obvious bias towards minorities, like a lot of people do. Victimhood is strong with you.
Seeing a submarine wreck underwater with basically no light surrounding it is eerie, but knowing that the most famous ship in the world is only 1600 feet away makes it even more eerie.
It's a little ironic this camera was able to decend as far down as the submarine and capture in high depth everything they risk their lives trying to look at through a small blurry dome.
They wouldn't have even gotten a special experience from going down physically; the pod had no windows so it might as well have just been a drone with a camera feed for all it mattered.
@TheTdw2000 it had a front portal of glass, but yeah, nothing more than a brag as it's a subpar experience.
Da hätte kik gefehlt.
кто проживает на дне океана? СПАНТЧБОБ!!!
Real shit
I'm honestly impressed that much survived the force of the implosion. They really were in a little tube of death. This is a good example of why we use spheres for high pressure instead of cylinders
Only the center part of the hull was carbon fiber which couldn't take the pressure.
This portion visible in the footage wasn't structural and was merely an external cladding or shell around the pressurised inner hull.
@@MB-nn3jw I would be interested to know what kind of material the external cladding was for the tail cone. Must have pretty strong compressive strength along with the titanium end caps.
This was outside of the implosion
@@Romulan2469you just have to watch any video about the birth of ocean gate and you'll find the breakdown of everything in those videos.
All that was missing was a certain CEO to call it "unimplodable."
To everybody saying they are surprised this much remains, keep in mind the equipment we see was already outside the pressure vessel, it was built to withstand the pressure on its own.
And yet you have to keep repeating this factual answer because people are still to stupid to understand 🙄
shame the pressure vessel wasn't built to withstand the pressure
Exactly! Obviously it wasn’t a completely sealed vessel and the components on the aft had to function at high pressure environments. It’s just that the part that was to, you know, *house living people* was compromised very quickly.
@@rexman971oh yeah because everyone just casually knows how that shit works
Also it had that ratchet strap for extra support. I'm surprised I don't see a single piece of duct tape. 🤦♂️
250k a person is honestly not bad to get to become part of the Titanic wreckage
plus tax
Big guy gets his 10%
At those prices, they might as well have bought property down there 😂
Right, especially 100 years later, with inflation and such
@@elliothill3953they can get ahead of the game by buying beachfront property in Florida. it'll be Atlantis before ya know it
Ngl, the poor son that tagged along to impress his father... my heart aches for him the most. A young man taken too soon. I dont even want to know the pain his mother is going through 💔
they were all pretty rich
@@DK-me8iySo that makes it okay for the son who tagged along to suffer this fate?
@@MrLSB-w6g who cares
@@thealmightywalter1753 you obviously cared enough to respond so i guess you do.
@@DK-me8iyso?
I'm a diver and when certifying, divers are treated to demonstrations of what happens when pressurization fails…and that at 60 feet. I'm shocked that there was anything left. I rather expected nothing more than something resembling a crashed beer can. It's utterly shocking that these experimental submersible are not properly regulated. It's like trying to climb Everest in a T-shirt, no oxygen and faulty climbing gear. When did they have the first inkling that the consequences might prove fatal?
Yeah. At that depth, anything that _could_ be compressed, already was.
Illuminati is involved in this phenomenon
That big piece is the part that wasn't pressurized because it isn't part of the cabin where the people were. It contained the parts used for navigation. You can't see the carbon fibre hull that made the cabin there because that was pressurized and it imploded.
At least Stockton won’t have his body frozen in place as a memorial on Everest, instead he’s nothing more than literal ocean matter.
Did they teach you to dive to that depth and reassemble a submarine with rachet straps?
The submarine: 'I'm built to explore the Titanic.'
The camera: 'Hold my lens.' 😂
"At some point, safety is just a pure waste." - Stockton Rush
Wow that hits totally different now that I see the wreakage
To be successful you need some delusional faith but Stocktons delusional faith was putting lives at risk
At some point, he became just pure waste.
Puree @@ald1144
His mangled body fed the sea life, circle of life in Stockton’s eyes.
It‘s scary to think that the Titanic lays just a few hundred meters from this
A few seconds later , " multiple leviathan class lifeforms detected are you sure what you are doing is worth it?"
Forever the example of 'more money than brains'.
ie the $/IQ ratio
Example of
2 titanium for seamoth fragment
Remind me that the Titanic ship are just needed for the viewsand travels, than the safety on the way..
Remember kids, don't use carbon fiber on a submerible :)
Or spellcheck on your comments lol
@nah51176 too funny!
Don't look like a fibber.
I think you can use it to certain depths and only once or twice. They're essentially disposable. Carbon fiber hulls tend to develop stress fractures. Which over time results in well.... This..
Just remember to spell properly
Especially if it wasn't good enough for aircraft and was purchased at a discount........ oh and if you don't want to consult engineers because they're are too many white ones. Well I hope it was worth taking the risk...
RIP OceanGate Titan
(2018 - 2023)
I feel bad for the kid who went down there with his dad
Feel bad for his poor mother 😢
That kid looked so much like my son who died in his sleep October 2017 it was as though he died again.
The kid was the only smart one in the group because he was the only one that tried to get out and said no he didn't want to do this and it seems like a bad idea
I don’t; they knew what ‘’they were getting into”’. He didn’t have to go. Yeah, it’s sad what happened but they knew the risks of it. That submersible was janky and controlled by a Xbox controller. I wouldn’t have paid what they did to go!
@@CBlizard if you knew the story he didn’t want to go his dad pressured him into it his dad was a billionaire I just don’t feel like he had a choice
12,300 feet down! holy smokes. I will never understand why people think they need to physically see that wreckage...send these cameras down and stay safe.
Same reason you'd go to the grand canyon rather than seeing pictures of it. Or a live performance
@@archimetropolis totally diff't ballgame going to the extremely safe and above water grand canyon...so much risk to witness a wreckage that deep. nuts
The best part is they still were looking at the titanic with a camera at the depth
But how would you take a selfie to post on instagram?
If you think that is deep remember that Hamish Harding previously descended successfully to the Challenger Deep (35876 feet) of the Mariana Trench. Remember that deep sea diving submersibles are perfectly safe if the right approach is taken to the design and safety of the submersible. The Triton 36000/2 submersible, also known as the DSV Limiting Factor, has reached a depth of 10,928 meters (35,853 feet) in the Challenger Deep, which is the deepest point in the Mariana Trench.
Truly froze me out of my body when I looked at those videos especially the incident ones.
My condolences to the families it’s hard to see the wreck where your loved one spent their last moments.
My brother was lost when El Faro sank in 2015 near the Bahamas seeing footage of the wreck broke my father’s heart.
I’m sorry for your loss
I'm so sorry - who was your brother, if you don't mind me asking? Or what position was he working?
Sorry for your loss. El Faro’s captain is responsible for that tragedy.
Famous last words "all good here."
To be continued
Or was it "can anybody hear that creaking sound?"
Reminds me of that scene in The Naked Gun where Detective Drebin says "nothing to see here" when all those explosions are going off in the background.
@@Richnineteenseventyonehey guys, mind if I crack the window?
@@OwariDragon23Insert disk 2.
“Gentlemen, it has been a privilege playing with you tonight.”
Reality: "Gentl..."
Dats wat she said
Sadly, all the band members died. That's unusual. Workers often live in a disaster.
@windsofmarchjourneyperrytr2823 and what exactly is unusual about those musicians not surviving?
@@penclaw😂
As fresh as this looks, imagine how the titanic looked when it first sank to the bottom. What would've been creepier than it is now.
Imagine all the theories that life wouldnt be sustained at the point of the titanic wreckage. Imagine how terrifying it would be to just go down underwater then you see the Titanic, still in fresh paint.
Customer:
"Yes yes make us a submarine so we can see a part of history with our own eyes"
Sub devs:
"1 submarine to be a part of history coming right up"
Eerie the ocean gate logo is still legible
Much like Titanic's nameplate. As if she's saying "I am who I am."
i mean its only been like a year
If you look at the bottom left, this was taken last year right after the incident.
almost too convenient
@JAXXNCREATED only been a year? This vid is from like 3-4 days after the implosion lol
It amazes me that as humans we’ve figured out space travel in a relatively safe way, but not the depths of the ocean
I think the cold war just accelerated that advancement, had it not been for the arms race it'd probably would've been a lot slower like how we handle ocean science (or more time and money would've been spent for ocean exploration actually. i wonder what that world looks like.)
Make no mistake though, both space and ocean travel are major risks and not walks in the park fit for tourism projects. What happened with this wreck was a lack of safety regulations and one massive massive ego of a greedy rich man. a tragedy made from hubris, not from a lack of technological advancements.
The rocket explosion from the 60s was a similar situation, lack of proper regulations
Dealing with sea waves and depth pressure level is harder than you think. Space has less risk factors
Once Musk makes it to the moon you wait, there’ll be our first lunar disaster. It’s got nothing to do with risk, has more to do with billionaire idiots not all having rocket tech to die trying in space.
Absence vs excess (of pressure)
Bruh. What do you mean "Safely"?
There are plenty incident on space too
*"Detecting multiple leviathan class lifeforms in the region"*
This was emotional to watch knowing that 4 unsuspecting and trusting people lost their lives. The owner knew the risks in his head but was motivated by his ego. This is truly sad and my heart goes out to the families who having to relive the horror as they search for answers.
Five people died.
I hardly think the expert with 75 dives on seperate crafts didn’t know what he was getting into… he got to go for free .. he risked it and lost
Yeah, ‘cause it didn’t say “death” eight times in the first two pages of the waiver. Please. They all knew what could happen.
LMAO, “emotional?” Bye.
@@phantumbelly1319 ~ I do agree with you that Paul-Henri should have known better. He had decades of experience on and under the water. How Stockton was able to convince him to dive to those depths is going to remain a mystery. I can’t find the original video, but the person made comments about him wanted to die with the Titanic. He was all things Titanic and does make for a romantic story… provided it’s true. We’ll never know.
All the way at the bottom of the atlantic with the titanic, vanished all the way down in pure darkness. Extremely terrifying
The souls of this lost ship now walk in heaven with the crew and passengers of the Titanic.
The souls of this lost ship now walk in heaven with the crew and passengers of the Titanic.
@@TimothySweeney-k1u somehow I don't think a bunch of billionaires made it in
this starting to feel like Illuminati stuff like the sacrifice them because who in there right mind would go down there knowing eat just happen to people in the titanic
Well atleast they got to experience the titanic experience
Go deeper find those Aliens!😂
Ego kills
This looks straight out of subnautica, this is fucking terrifying
i mean the aurora was basically just oceangate
@@adbrown10Actually it was shot
I _knew_ it reminded me of something! It’s giving the lifepod that was torn open by a boneshark(?).
We have technology that can find objects 12,000 feet below but still can’t cure cancer 😳😳😳
Fun fact: Cyclops' design is based off of OceanGate's Titan
It's written near the end of credits
Did they find the controller?
0:48 is that more oceangate wreckage in the back ground?
Yes, much like the Titanic's stern, it imploded, and has a small debris field where the current pushed it slightly away.
Yea looks like it. I hope the coast gaurd releases the full length footage
I know it’s just wreckage and that this is impossible, but it kinda looks like a body…
@@lightningterry Technically it is the corpse of a ship, body of once was. Like a finger of man's creation, sunken to the first level of hell.
this starting to feel like Illuminati stuff like the sacrifice them because who in there right mind would go down there knowing eat just happen to people in the titanic
No cuz that’s actually terrifying 😳 it’s crazy to think that there were people actually inside that thing 😭
Pov:seamoth after reaper attack:
If you think that's terrifying, ask yourself "where are the bodies"
Fish food or decomposition @@VictorDreygo
@@10_1_25_TSLR they evaporated
Vaporiz by the implosion
"If this test comes back red the hull would break and everyone dies"
"oh look, it is red"
"well anyway, tell the marketing team it is safer than crossing the street"
I see a roll of duct tape....
Where at? I've replayed it a few times, and haven't spotted it - - -
@@SpiderxPunkThe black thread kind of thing that is used to hold both the halfs together
Istg the world could end in WWIII tmrw & the only things left to remember humanity would be Twinkies, Roaches & a roll of duct Tape that randomly defies physics
@@suryateja4987 0:35 it’s a ratchet strap. You can see the eyelet ends, ratcheting mechanism, and slack excess below the “C” and “E”.
@@WhiskeyTango68 ah! That makes sense. And how about that bag that's holding something? Are those the duct tapes?
Guys the only part that imploded was the cockpit where the crew was, that part is pressurized so that part imploded the rest no
What’s with the strap keeping it all together?
„You know at some point safety is just pure waste“ - Stockton Rush
Can we find the controller???
very beautifull wreckage / I liked it very mutch/ thanks
Terrifying to be that far down underwater in pitch black with only a flashlight. I'd rather be up in the clouds. Although space is terrifying too.
Death in space is extremely painful then in ocean
@@Ariana_Swift13i don't think so. The moment you're exposed to the space environment, you're gone. Just like this submarine killed those people. Too quick to feel
I still can't get why everyone thinks space is instant death? @@ImNote69
When you're exposed to space, you aren't immediately dead, you have about 20 seconds of useful consciousness left.@@ImNote69
Imagine how vast the search area must have been...to be able to find that is incredible.
It was about 100 yards from the Titanic.
Crazy to think how much time, effort, and ungodly amounts of money go into people going 2 miles under the ocean….when obviously the technology is there to do it from above. This video is proof. Makes no sense to me, but what do I know…..
they sailed to the precise coordinates...from there it would be DOWN...
Actually no because the submersibles goal was to reach the Titanic and we know the exact location of the Titanic and therefore it was very obvious that the wreckage of the submersible must've been somewhere in the proximity of the Titanic and it was. The search area was very small and the remains if the sub were found very quickly.
why did you think it was "vast"?
Just out of curiosity, what was the ratchet strap holding down?
For those thinking it's really intact, that's just the tail cone. The other 2/3rds is gone
I would’ve died if the PlayStation remote was just laying on the ocean floor.
I was waiting for this!
Logitech, not Playstation
if it was somewhat airtight, consider it gone. but if it has some holes and somehow the water would've slid in then yes it might be alright
@@norgerThe heat of the implosion vaporized everything that was inside.
@@JonathanPARADIS-nb5bw the thermoplastics in the controller would be fine I guess
What brand is that microphone
Thanks for putting creepy music in this
now time for ocean gate wreckage with happy music video
*Under the Sea!*
they should have put the whale sounds too😅
this starting to feel like Illuminati stuff like the sacrifice them because who in there right mind would go down there knowing eat just happen to people in the titanic
*Curb Your Enthusiasm theme song*
Standing there like some monumental Beacon of Failure.
Doesn’t seem like it imploded at all, I see a clean split as if the hull gave way at a certain pressure.
This is so scary yet I'm so fascinated by the oceans and what lies beneath and the people who dive deeper to rescue and recover stuff
"The unsinkable Titanic". Remember this phrase ?😢
This gives me subnautica vibes!!
this is so haunting, creepy, eerie, and sad
Glad to see everyone is okay
Yeah everyone’s okay over here
Stahp😂
Yep no bodies were found so that must be a good sign right 😂
the fact that the ocean gate logo is perfectly show is crazzzzzy
Ok hold up, who put the strap around it to hold the panels together?
Yeah how ?
The submersible drone
Hunter Biden
That's OEM!!
The same guy who designed the pringle can submarine
They must not have flicked that ratchet strap and said "that aint going no where" before diving....
You know that's exactly what happened too. They were like "this strap is super tight.."
this shit looks like something straight out of subnautica
this is what high definition of humor looks like
Quaint little tombstone.
Wonder if they recovered anything of their bodies.
@@montanasnowman3138 fish turds
They did.
They did indeed find remains. Not sure what the condition of the bodies were, but given that they stated needing a DNA test to identify them, I imagine there wasn't much left of them. Maybe just bits of flesh and bone. They probably weren't found in the location shown in this video either. The Titan imploded a couple of hundred meters above the sea floor, so a lot of its parts were scattered to form a debris field. The object we see here is the tail cone. The rest of the wreck is probably somewhere else.
They sure did but it's literally fragments of bone at best. At that kind of pressure an implosion turns the human body into tomato paste. Fortunately they died without feeling anything.
@@Romulan2469 Unfortunately though, they knew they were going to die. I couldn't imagine the horror...
any remains?
Looking at those cracks. It must have been a violent implode.
@@alexlennert4181 its actually a really really instant death for the people inside
There are 100s of experts in this comment section, just ask.
Is they such as a non violent implosion
Maybe it was a smooth and calm implosion.
@@LowTierHuman-10 Of course. The implosion happened within a few milliseconds, considerably faster than the brain would have time to process before being rendered into atoms.
Should place a plaque thsre "A monument to man's arrogance"
Yess Absolutely...!!!!!!!
"you fuck around, you find out"
Realistically, if mankind were as self-hating as you, the titanic would get the plaque. "unsinkable" is pretty arrogant especially when it claimed 1500 lives and sank on its first voyage.
You could say that about Titanic aswell (Bruce Ismay)
More accurately.
When you don’t follow safety and the advice of seasoned professionals.
Where else would the wreckage be?
The strap kind of sums it all up. What a joke of a craft.
Eh
no it doesnt, all you said is defamation. from someone else who doesnt know what theyre talking about, its probably there to hold together something flimsy that never required bolts
@@nuguns3766 LOL, strapping together something that's flimsy yet supposed to go nearly four kilometres down to the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, way to illustrate the guy's point.
jokes on you, it held together.
@@windshearahead7012 It clearly didn't.
Leave Titanic alone! It is not a site for tourists.
And for scientists? Surely they are allowed to continue research and discovery expeditions.
@@Romulan2469turns out scientists aren't tourists
@@Zenith292 I have seen enough comments from people to indicate that the wreck site should never be visited by anyone as it is considered a grave site, that's why I asked the question. Also OceanGate referred to Titan's passengers as mission specialists not tourists, even though that is exactly what they were.
We all knew they died, but it's eerie seeing the definite proof of their death
That tension strap speaks of the quality materials used in its construction.
The new titanic
Nice 👍🤚...!!!!!!!
Imagine if someone had said "Good himself couldn't implode this sub"!
What is "funny" is that Titanic 's name was to make justice to its side, a very large ship. Titan, on the other hand, is a pathetic submersible. They named that to visit Titanic, but the choice of the name is horrible
What was the ratchet strap for around it?
“Ima take my submersible to go see the submersible “ - Dave Chapelle
I didn't know the fish play music at the floor of the ocean.
Oh yea, Sebastian the crab loves a good sing song.
What, you've never seen the little mermaid....
2012: what happened to the Titan?
2024: JESUS CHRIST WE FINNALY FOUND IT!
So, the tail section was being held together with a ratchet strap?
Where's the Logitech controller 🎮
😂😂😂😂😂😂
mine broke so im borrowing it sorry.
yo man the military uses xbox controllers on aircraft carriers.
It became one with the human smoothie
Can you imagine if the controller was found miraculously undamaged at 6000 psi? Logitech sales would have skyrocketed!
Why is there a Wikipedia page about the Titanic linked to this?
Looks so calm down there. Amazing, it's the total opposite. What's the pressure at that depth again?
6000 PSI
@@90_98 damn
Moral of the story.
Dont use glue in ur submarine.
why is there a band around the wreck?
Why is there a ratchet strap around it
To hold his pants up
It’s part of the cables that are used to drop it in the water and or pull it out
@@RuffianPunch that seems redneck aF. I think you're messing with me
@@RuffianPunch coming from a proud redneck!
I don't know, but it definitely didn't help.
Surprisingly clean at the bottom
That's what she said