The Titan Tragedy

Oceangate Expedition lost communication with its deep diving 5-person submarine on June 18th 2023 while transiting submerged to the Titanic wreck site. 5 people onboard were: Stockton Rush, PH Nargeolet, Shahzada Dawood, Suleman Dawood, and Hamish Harding.
In this video I describe the incident in detail. I review the construction, design and system onboard the Titan. I catalog my concerns about the design and operation of this submarine. This video is my personal opinion with the limited information available to me at the time of this recording. A follow up video will be published when more facts from the investigation surface.
Titan is a Cyclops-class manned submersible designed to take five people to depths of 4,000 meters (13,123 feet) for site survey and inspection, research and data collection, film and media production, and deep sea testing of hardware and software. Through the innovative use of modern materials, Titan is lighter in weight and more cost efficient to mobilize than any other deep diving submersible. A combination of ground-breaking engineering and off-the-shelf technology gives Titan a unique advantage over other deep diving subs; the proprietary Real Time Hull Health Monitoring (RTM) systems provides an unparalleled safety feature that assesses the integrity of the hull throughout every dive. The use off-the-shelf components helped to streamline the construction, and makes it simple to operate and replace parts in the field.
Paired with a patented, integrated launch and recovery platform, Titan is easy to operate in varying sea states using a local appropriately sized ship for the project. In coastal waters this means we do not need a large support ship with a crane or A-frame.
Sourced from Oceangate.com and Teledyne interviews with the CEO Stockton Rush. This video is intended to provide my opinion on this event with the information available to me at the time of recording.
#oceangate #controler #titan
📫 Contact Gene Dayhaw gene@solaromgmt.com for paid promotion.
🤩 / subbrief
😎 Patreon ► / subbrief
🏴‍☠️► www.SubBrief.com
😃 Hire ► Aaron / aaron-amick-9538a4171
💌 Contact Aaron ► Aaron@subbrief.com
Aaron's PC Spec
------------------------
CPU: Intel i9-9900k @4.7 GHz
RAM: 32GB
GPU: NVIDIA TITAN RTX 24GB GDDR6
Accelsior 4M2 16.0TB PCIe M.2 NVMe SSD
sub brief, sme, subject matter expert, naval, policy, technology, tactical use of the ocean, sonar, submarine tactics, weapons employment, aip, air independent power, 21st century, aaron, amick, aaron amick, sonar, sonarman, sme, SME, subject matter expert, naval, games, wargames, testing, tactics, news, history, tactical use of the ocean, hide, find, search, jive turkey, jive, subbrief,

Пікірлер: 22 000

  • @snowstalker36
    @snowstalker36 Жыл бұрын

    Why do I get the feeling that his real reason for not wanting to hire submariners is that he was tired of them telling him he shouldn't do a bunch of the things he was doing?

  • @user-sv7kk6vj8w

    @user-sv7kk6vj8w

    Жыл бұрын

    You're absolutely correct. Someone was fired for being a whistleblower

  • @INTERSTATE-35-WARRIOR

    @INTERSTATE-35-WARRIOR

    Жыл бұрын

    BINGO BINGO BINGO!

  • @themustangone6449

    @themustangone6449

    Жыл бұрын

    I think they would cost quite q bit for their expertise, usually the real reason, 80k for rando engineer kid 'hey kid this would look good on ur resume'...'200-300$k' for expert

  • @kermitwilson

    @kermitwilson

    Жыл бұрын

    BBCis reporting the portal window was only rated to 1500 meters, and their target depth was 3500 meters. That blew my mind, I don’t think this CEO respected the depth.

  • @chriskoch7794

    @chriskoch7794

    Жыл бұрын

    And the costs associated with hiring something so silly as experts. If there was EVER need to want experts on your team, it's this one.

  • @meh2999
    @meh2999 Жыл бұрын

    i am convinced that the whole "not hiring 50 year old white guys" thing is just a ploy to avoid highly experienced people that would take one look at this submersible and start raising safety concerns. he wanted people that didn't have the experience or knowledge to call him out, and this was his way of doing so while also looking like the good guy.

  • @BanjoPixelSnack

    @BanjoPixelSnack

    Жыл бұрын

    Bingo. He didn’t want any challenge to his way of doing things.

  • @rakino4418

    @rakino4418

    Жыл бұрын

    Also - cost. New graduates are cheap. These rich guys don't stay rich by paying people properly.

  • @Jeanhollywoodold

    @Jeanhollywoodold

    Жыл бұрын

    He was grooming them essentially

  • @MrSinister718

    @MrSinister718

    Жыл бұрын

    whoa whoa whoa candy pants. are you implying minorities and females are dumb, and during pride month? I'm calling my wife's boyfriend's rabbi right now. I'm literally shaking!

  • @elijahbey3366

    @elijahbey3366

    Жыл бұрын

    Stockton Rush was from San Francisco. Is that surprising?

  • @jonskowitz
    @jonskowitz Жыл бұрын

    When i listen to Stockton talk, i get the impression that he hired exclusively young engineers specifically because they would be easier to manipulate into doing what he wanted instead of what they should be doing.

  • @KC-rd3gw

    @KC-rd3gw

    10 ай бұрын

    Probably a lot cheaper to boot

  • @ripwednesdayadams

    @ripwednesdayadams

    7 ай бұрын

    The accountant also said that Stockton hired teenagers and paid them minimum wage. So it seems like the whole company was run on the cheap and without safety in mind.

  • @jwilliam2255
    @jwilliam2255 Жыл бұрын

    Operating the sub was the easy part. Building a pressure vessel that can stand up to *repeated* pressure cycles and be *verified* prior to every descent that it is still competent to handle the design depth is the hard part. Along with all the other design flaws discussed herein.

  • @hintgy

    @hintgy

    Жыл бұрын

    Speaking of repeated pressure cycles and aviation history lessons (not) learned, the world's first commercial jet the de Havilland DH.106 Comet had a series of lethal accidents resulting in 426 deaths due to hull failure and these tragic events took place 70 years ago!!!

  • @seanedghill5025

    @seanedghill5025

    Жыл бұрын

    Those people simply did not have enough money, but still insisted to play at the big boys' table.

  • @Rod_Knee
    @Rod_Knee Жыл бұрын

    The CEO's dismissive attitude towards SME's should have been a red flag to anyone looking to get involved with Oceangate.

  • @Strykenine

    @Strykenine

    Жыл бұрын

    Most disturbing thing I've ever heard.

  • @hairychris444

    @hairychris444

    Жыл бұрын

    It sounded like he wanted to be the budget underwater Elon Musk (with Musk being bad enough himself), and unfortunately has taken a bunch of other people with him.

  • @buckstarchaser2376

    @buckstarchaser2376

    Жыл бұрын

    If you live long enough, you will develop a healthy apprehension for any product, place, or service that includes the word "Gate".

  • @cantrell0817

    @cantrell0817

    Жыл бұрын

    He's a woke fool apparently.

  • @SeeLasSee

    @SeeLasSee

    Жыл бұрын

    @@hairychris444 teslas at very least have physical controls for every essential control.

  • @dpg0jod
    @dpg0jod Жыл бұрын

    I believe the reason he didn’t want ex-Navy submariners is because they would never dive in an uncertified submersible.

  • @JagdgeschwaderX

    @JagdgeschwaderX

    Жыл бұрын

    I have no doubt at all about that

  • @twocyclediesel1280

    @twocyclediesel1280

    Жыл бұрын

    No doubt. I spent many years working with Navy Divers and they wouldn’t get anywhere near this thing, I’m sure submariners are the same way.

  • @JagdgeschwaderX

    @JagdgeschwaderX

    Жыл бұрын

    @@twocyclediesel1280 The one guy who raised safety concerns got fired, that's all we need to know really. This Sub Brief video summed it up perfectly and yes it's sad but it was a fools errands from the get go. I'm not a navy person but I've worked in the oil industry for 25 years and I've seen stuff that made the hairs on my neck stand up and when the industry fires up next year we're going to see a lot of accidents happen again because they will elevate inexperienced people into jobs they have no business being in especially since loads of older people in the industry are retiring and there's not many people of my age (50) in it anymore.

  • @JudeTheYoutubePoopersubscribe

    @JudeTheYoutubePoopersubscribe

    Жыл бұрын

    I know absolutely nothing about submarines and just looking at this thing you know it's dangerous as f!

  • @cherryxplorer2

    @cherryxplorer2

    Жыл бұрын

    Interesting comment from James Cameron about this... apparently oceangate had a few letters from subject matter experts saying that the submarine was too experimental and should have been certified prior to use. I will never understand why anyone would read a waiver like that and then decide to go on it anyway.

  • @tyronesullivan8165
    @tyronesullivan8165 Жыл бұрын

    That interview with the CEO screams recklessness. Ignoring safety protocols is not inspiring, it's potentially suicidal. The need for experience (even using consultants as SMEs) is essential. Thank you for a very comprehensive overview of this tragedy. Very educational. Contrary to the late CEO of Ocean Gate's opinion, old 50 year olds have great value when they have operational knowledge and experience.

  • @sanjeev.rao3791

    @sanjeev.rao3791

    Жыл бұрын

    That's the point, he avoided the experienced people because he didn't want to pay extra to be given a dose of reality. But he fucked around and found out like libertarians eventually do.

  • @tyronesullivan8165

    @tyronesullivan8165

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sanjeev.rao3791 No argument from me. He (and the 4 others) has escaped reality for good.

  • @leecowell8165

    @leecowell8165

    Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely.. there is NO SUBSTITUTE FOR EXPERIENCE!

  • @taraswertelecki3786

    @taraswertelecki3786

    Жыл бұрын

    More like murder-suicide.

  • @grumblycurmudgeon

    @grumblycurmudgeon

    Жыл бұрын

    Huh would you look at that: ✅ Yet _another_ industry where the motto "move fast and break things" is not applicable.

  • @MundMoriginal
    @MundMoriginal Жыл бұрын

    James Cameron, completely over engineering the husk in order to be 200% sure the thing holds on the one time only expedition. OceanGate: Inspiring tuna can go brrrrrr!

  • @DigitalNeb
    @DigitalNeb Жыл бұрын

    Whenever someone starts talking about a cheaper way to go to extreme depths, you know there's going to be a disaster.

  • @MarlaSingersCancer

    @MarlaSingersCancer

    Жыл бұрын

    What's interesting about the CEO is he really just seemed to believe his own delusions. If he recognized he was cutting corners and taking risks he wouldn't have gone down there himself. People get really arrogant from one success and decide it's just gonna be fine forever, winging it will be fine.

  • @Skyfalcon12345

    @Skyfalcon12345

    Жыл бұрын

    It's always a red flag to hear how you can cut corners on life-preserving safety gear or how "restrictive" safety gear/regulations can be. There's a reason why the saying is: regulations are written in blood. I feel immense sorrow for all those involved, all the families. Tragedy all around.

  • @peterstenbuck8806

    @peterstenbuck8806

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MarlaSingersCancer Arrogance is the word. The sea is very unforgiving, you must respect it or it will kill you.

  • @nighttrain1236

    @nighttrain1236

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MarlaSingersCancer I see a lot of the Californian tech start-up patterns with this; the personality cult CEO, the 'fake it till you make it' philosophy, being a 'disrupter', etc.

  • @allewis4008

    @allewis4008

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@MarlaSingersCancerMallory and Scott are frozen corpses that were once "men with visions". A vision is no replacement for proper precautions.

  • @Jergling
    @Jergling Жыл бұрын

    Small correction: They did hire a subject matter expert in marine and submarine safety, then fired him for trying to require basic safety mechanisms. He publicized their failure to test their claims, so they sued him.

  • @TheMechatronicEngineer

    @TheMechatronicEngineer

    Жыл бұрын

    He was guilty of being WHITE...

  • @qwasd0r

    @qwasd0r

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow.

  • @gns942

    @gns942

    Жыл бұрын

    Was it David Lochridge?

  • @FBI-ju5no

    @FBI-ju5no

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh this company can f**k right off.

  • @ignaciosavi7739

    @ignaciosavi7739

    Жыл бұрын

    Source?

  • @katemaloney4296
    @katemaloney4296 Жыл бұрын

    I don't know of any ship or submarine that has been put together with apoxy. The fact that a father on FATHER'S DAY would drag his teenage son to board a vessel that was three steps above a model airplane kit is mind-blowing. The three passengers could've been anywhere else in the world having dinner and fun with friends and family, or just chilling on their day; what they got instead was a $750K underwater funeral. I hope St. Peter asks Stockton Rush "Was it worth it? Was it?!"

  • @alfalfa2155
    @alfalfa2155 Жыл бұрын

    The more I read about this, the more I feel that this is basically deep sea Theranos. Look at the parallels: -both have a charismatic CEO who considers themselves an innovator but doesn’t have expertise in the field that they are trying to revolutionize (medical science and deep sea diving) -both are a start-up company with a ramshackle, “move fast and break things” atmosphere, even while working in a field that is complicated, dangerous, and where mistakes can actually jeopardize people’s lives -both ignored warnings from veterans in their field, claiming they were just threatened by newcomers and stifling innovation -both hired mostly younger engineers who were recent college grads, while firing employees who had concerns or wanted to take a more conservative approach -both threatened whistleblowers with legal action, claiming that they were sharing proprietary information about their new technology (when in reality they did not HAVE any new technology) -both claimed that they weren’t certified by regulators because their technology was too new and innovative so the usual testing methods were irrelevant for their machines -both used partnerships with legit companies to give validity to their technology, when in reality these claims were either entirely made up or very misleading (Pfiezer and St. John’s Hospital for Theranos, Boeing, NASA and University of Washington for Oceangate) -both overpromised on their tech and underestimated the time and expense it would take to actually make it workable, leading to delays, funding running out, and cutting corners (my opinion based on the fact that the original price for this trip was $80,000, and the couple who tried to sue for a refund after their 2018 trip was delayed 3 years in a row because the sub wasn’t ready, and how hard Stockton tried to get that Las Vegas financier and his son to go on the trip, right down to the last minute and even offered them a $100,000 discount) -both had a CEO who genuinely believed in their product and was capable of convincing others of their idealistic vision, but both were also so confident, over-ambitious and ego-driven that they wouldn’t hear opinions that conflicted with that vision Even their website reminded me of Theranos’s: flashy, full of marketing jargon and grand claims, but vague on details and no citations or scientific references to back up their supposedly groundbreaking technological advances. Elizabeth Holmes might not think so, but she was extremely lucky that she got busted before their shoddy blood tests actually killed someone. Unfortunately, Stockton Rush wasn’t, and instead he paid the ultimate price and took four others with him.

  • @evonekky3672

    @evonekky3672

    27 күн бұрын

    Well said

  • @MindHunger
    @MindHunger Жыл бұрын

    As an Engineer (EE), the fact that the controller is wireless and not wired tells me the people who designed this had absolutely no concept of risk assessment and mitigation. _edit: added EE_

  • @jamesbroomfield7799

    @jamesbroomfield7799

    Жыл бұрын

    I was saying the same exact thing, something as simple as forgetting the USB power cord , like we do when we jump in our car sometime and leave the cord in the house, can be catastrophic failure. But when we are in our car, and forget our power cord at the house, we can always pull over to the local gas station and buy a new cord. But being underwater thousands of feet you don't have a gas station you can go to and grab supplies.

  • @brijekavervix7340

    @brijekavervix7340

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah that stood out like a sore thumb to me as soon as I saw it. The entire sub looked like it had gone through about one conceptual/functional design review at most before they built and sailed (sunk) the damn thing.

  • @torquetheprisoner

    @torquetheprisoner

    Жыл бұрын

    manual backup systems should of been installed aswell for piece of mind

  • @TheTeaParty320

    @TheTeaParty320

    Жыл бұрын

    As another engineer, I agree.

  • @JG-nx3jg

    @JG-nx3jg

    Жыл бұрын

    As an engineer, I have overestimated my intelligence.

  • @12345fowler
    @12345fowler Жыл бұрын

    He wanted younger "inspirational" people probably because they would be much more clueless and less prone to question the overall safety of this whole operation. More easily expendable for his business in case anything bad happen, just blame them on their lack of experience and knowledge, probably much cheaper as well. This CEO guy really rises red flags every time is opening his mouth. Incredible people would trust him.

  • @arnaudquotermans6462

    @arnaudquotermans6462

    Жыл бұрын

    And likely cheaper, oh sorry cost efficient

  • @imoutofideasfornames

    @imoutofideasfornames

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, he must have believed the nonsense he was saying because he died for it. I mean, he did get in the sub after all…

  • @kieranjtierney

    @kieranjtierney

    Жыл бұрын

    @u9vata I believe he was just virtue signaling diversity & inclusion. That's why he said no White guys, even though those are the guys that generally are the experts in the field

  • @BleedForTheWorld

    @BleedForTheWorld

    Жыл бұрын

    For the same reason people trust Elon Musk. People will fall for anything because our society has convinced the masses that wealthier = better.

  • @seekittycat

    @seekittycat

    Жыл бұрын

    Won't have experts who disagree with you when you taught and trained those "experts" yourself!

  • @SteamCrane
    @SteamCrane Жыл бұрын

    My go-to list of subject matter experts: 1. Aviation - Blancolirio 2. Naval - Sub Brief 3. Naval history - Drachinifel 4. Commercial shipping - What's Going On With Shipping 5. Tanks - The Chieftain 6. Structure collapse - Building Integrity 7. Railroads - still looking Several others for specific subjects, like USS New Jersey.

  • @victorc8855

    @victorc8855

    10 ай бұрын

    jago hazzard for railroads, would also recommend redeffect for tanks

  • @user-wm2hv2mh9b

    @user-wm2hv2mh9b

    7 ай бұрын

    Goes to show what you know

  • @FMunixxx

    @FMunixxx

    5 ай бұрын

    Civil Engineering - Practical Enginering Electrical Engineering - EEVblog Machinery - AvE

  • @inerlogic
    @inerlogic Жыл бұрын

    They had a subject matter expert, and when he raised safety concerns, they fired, sued, and counter-sued him. The 96 hours was a calculation for 5 adults, normal activity. They never actually tested it. Apparently they had re-breather masks for CO2 scrubbing. At least the CEO had the decency to die with them.

  • @raymondrobbins698
    @raymondrobbins698 Жыл бұрын

    I was a submariner, got out in 1986 as a chief of the boat. You are spot on regarding everything you said, I was thinking all of the same things you did plus a little bit more. Was there any pre dive procedure or checklist? What about post dive inspection procedure? How about scheduled maintenance? What about an emergency blow system or at least an ability to drop ballast? Did they ever conduct casualty drills or at least write procedures? It is clear that from the CEO on down they did not understand the complexity and dangers associated with diving in a marine environment. There is no rescue vehicle (DSRV), that could be on station before the air runs out, there is no DSRV that can mate with this thing due to the location of the 17 bolt door, and you would probably need some type of mechanical arm to remove the bolts. No such thing exists. As you mentioned, how did they know their air supply was adequate for 96 hours; was hyperventilation due to panic considered in that number? They will not be saved and most likely the submersible will never be recovered. It is ridiculous to believe the Coast Guard will find this thing with their sonar, it is too small a feature to be distinguished from the bottom profile with active sonar and there is not enough machinery noise (if any) to be heard passively above the surface background noise. (I am a sonar systems expert and was an instructor in the tactical training department at the Sub base in Groton, CT) One final thing, the media and just about everyone else are calling this vessel a submarine, it is not a submarine. Submarines are autonomous, this vessel is a submersible and requires a support ship to function. The ocean does not forgive.

  • @chrismaverick9828

    @chrismaverick9828

    Жыл бұрын

    not to mention it's made of carbon fiber. Assuming it stayed intact rather than shattering, is there enough reflection off CF to get a decent sonar return?

  • @Nostradamus_Order33

    @Nostradamus_Order33

    Жыл бұрын

    @@chrismaverick9828 The carbon fiber shattered under pressure. Carbon fiber resists expansion, not compression. It was used for the Boeing Dreamliner just for that reason. It will hold pressure inside, not the other way around. Darwin’s theories of natural selection play-out again.

  • @RealRyanG0sling

    @RealRyanG0sling

    Жыл бұрын

    I wish I was smart about something as you are. Great comment.

  • @user-sv7kk6vj8w

    @user-sv7kk6vj8w

    Жыл бұрын

    Of course they didn't do that. The owner had a game controller in his hand to drive the death machine.

  • @tedthurgate

    @tedthurgate

    Жыл бұрын

    Were I stuck on this and alive, I would be banging on the titanium dome with a hammer every 15 minutes hoping someone had hydrophones in the water.

  • @hedgeearthridge6807
    @hedgeearthridge6807 Жыл бұрын

    Rush was really working AGAINST innovation, all the safety standards and the knowledge of experienced submariners IS innovation that you're supposed to add to. It's like designing a car without ABS, seatbelts, air bags, crumple zones, collision prevention systems, etc and claiming your car is more "innovative". No you made a death trap from a century ago, it's a regression in every way!

  • @willb1157

    @willb1157

    Жыл бұрын

    I have stayed away from this because of the ego's, people who enjoy seeing others die, financial jealousy that KZread brings out. BUT You're damn right. He built a very early Bathysphere. Bloody hell. Absolutely right. Just a tube with air. Bolted in. with some air?

  • @KatieRN51

    @KatieRN51

    Жыл бұрын

    This is an excellent point…he wasn’t innovating, he was cost-cutting. He was obviously intelligent but arrogance clouded his judgment.

  • @wolfbones666

    @wolfbones666

    Жыл бұрын

    From this story, everything about the guy seems like he was the type of person who didn't like the rules simply because it wasn't his idea.

  • @JK-dv3qe

    @JK-dv3qe

    Жыл бұрын

    @@wolfbones666 a narcissist (like most of western political class)

  • @manymantids

    @manymantids

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@KatieRN51i don't think you can really be that intelligent, and rich, and still insist on so much cost cutting. like seriously. $250k per person and he just HAD to use a $30 logitech controller?? nah. he wasn't intelligent, just rich.

  • @BakkuIa
    @BakkuIa Жыл бұрын

    The story of Stockton Rush is tragic, and poetically ironic. For some, it's completely outrageous and for others it's entirely comedic, but at least it ends with timeless lessons to reflect on. He forewent safety and the wisdom of expertise, knowledge, and caution, all for the sake of a childish dream, to cut corners, and mitigate costs. When one of his own people brought up the idea of valuing life, Mr. Rush allowed OceanGate to fire him. Then they sued the man and forced a settlement. They had previously advertised the Titan as meeting or exceeding the safety standard of DNV certification, despite never receiving, or even intending to receive, such a license. Over three dozen field experts expressed their safety concerns, and they were ignored. In a supposed attempt to foster the next generation of expert submariners and engineers, he blocked off the likes of people who may have learned something from the Kursk disaster. People who may have been taught by those who investigated the Thresher. He ignored an entire generation of people who could realize his own dream because he didn't like hearing how downright negligent and dangerous his approach was. He didn't learn a thing from space and aerospace. These fields are written and forged in the blood of dead men and women, and Mr. Rush chose to ignore the dead and let them go on in vain. I just cannot understand the arrogance and idiocy needed to throw out voice communication just because you don't like checking-in while performing one of the most dangerous activities ever conceived. To have no method of escape if you managed to surface. Thank you, Stockton Rush, for reminding and teaching people that safety and lives have no cost. That the new generation must be guided by the people that have been there and done that. I have no doubt Mr. Rush has succinctly implanted the concept of safety into his team now. You got to live your dream, pilot your little sub, and go down with your ship. As much as the man infuriates me, I respect that he put himself through the same reckless adventure as his passengers. The man had no fear of the deep in his little pillsub. I have no doubt he wholly believed The Titan was the next step in deepsea exploration and was revolutionary. Somehow that's scarier than if he knew how ridiculous The Titan was. Rest In Peace to the 4 people he brought down with him. I unapologetically wish OceanGate never recovers.

  • @markcollins7470

    @markcollins7470

    Жыл бұрын

    Beautifully written and every word echoed my sentiments on this tragedy. My heart goes out to those left behind....allegedly the young man was terrified and didnt want to go.....the whole thing was so avoidable

  • @dozeofaudio

    @dozeofaudio

    Жыл бұрын

    why did you write a review on a news story? in amazon products, it helps other buyers make a decision. In books and movies, it gives us a better understanding of the characters and decisions they make. What does doing it here accomplish?

  • @chrisbyars4422

    @chrisbyars4422

    Жыл бұрын

    I will not lie about it: this whole Ocean Gate disaster, while tragic, is a little comedic, too. Mr. Rush cast experience and true knowledge aside. Based on that, if cannot predict the outcome, your ignorant

  • @jaredthehawk3870

    @jaredthehawk3870

    Жыл бұрын

    I believe it's fair to say Mr. Rush earned himself a Darwin Award.

  • @BakkuIa

    @BakkuIa

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dozeofaudio drunk

  • @admin1815
    @admin1815 Жыл бұрын

    l didn't know until yesterday that Stockton actually flew to meet the people he was hoping would be his experimental father son team and marketed the experience and blew off any concerns they had. They decided against it because his attitude. So he took a second father son team. So sad😢

  • @fonlai8721

    @fonlai8721

    Жыл бұрын

    So sad! He was looking for “suckers” He was able to find the 2nd father/ son duo!

  • @Fuzzle1985

    @Fuzzle1985

    Жыл бұрын

    They decided against it because the father realized he flew his experimental plane into Vegas. If his own plane was an experiment the father decided he didn't want to be part of his test runs. Clearly Rush had a very high tolerance for risk.

  • @izzyis-real

    @izzyis-real

    Жыл бұрын

    Wtf

  • @HeatherRose2023

    @HeatherRose2023

    Жыл бұрын

    He was a high pressure salesman, that’s for sure.

  • @uropygid

    @uropygid

    11 ай бұрын

    Not sad at all. Just two more well deserved Darwin Awards. Good riddance to them, one and all.

  • @matt.w6854
    @matt.w6854 Жыл бұрын

    The fact they've gone deeper than they've ever tested seems absolutely insane to me...

  • @tonyscott1066

    @tonyscott1066

    Жыл бұрын

    💯

  • @robertschultz6922

    @robertschultz6922

    Жыл бұрын

    This was the submersible third trip to the titanic so they have gone down to the depth before. Again though something happened to keep it from rising. The company should be at fault for not having a better emergency action plan. Even having a rov on board to do an immediate check would have been something

  • @LegionOfEclaires

    @LegionOfEclaires

    Жыл бұрын

    With actual customers nevertheless... Idk, waivers are just a fancy way of saying "we're not absolutely confident in our ability/equipment, don't sue us".

  • @delfinenteddyson9865

    @delfinenteddyson9865

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LegionOfEclaires what surprises me is that the CEO was confident enough to be on board

  • @dereksherwood3794

    @dereksherwood3794

    Жыл бұрын

    @@delfinenteddyson9865 Confident? Dunno. Arrogant, delusional? Certainly.

  • @JunkMan13013
    @JunkMan13013 Жыл бұрын

    Let’s be honest, it’s very unlikely this ends well.

  • @armedbrit493

    @armedbrit493

    Жыл бұрын

    Unfortunately.

  • @robertschultz6922

    @robertschultz6922

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah they probably will find out pretty fast where the submersible is and it probably will be in a thousand pieces. The only bright side is they wouldn't have suffered. Of course another possibility is the battery compartment suffered a fire and the crew died like what happened to the Kursk.

  • @killman369547

    @killman369547

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah.... If that ends up being the case i at least hope it was over quickly.

  • @claymorexl

    @claymorexl

    Жыл бұрын

    Theres a faint chance they were abducted by aliens, but otherwise that carbon fiber tp roll probably shattered like a clay pot at 1k ft

  • @johnbauby6612

    @johnbauby6612

    Жыл бұрын

    If finding them all dead is well then yes, I would say it ends exceptionally well.

  • @charliekelly735
    @charliekelly735 Жыл бұрын

    Great video! One mistake: The Titan DID previously make it to the Titanic several times (albeit with a replaced hull at one point) so it wasn't just a blind test using customers. Stockton's luck ran out. Still, he maintains full blame and is a fool for not listening to the experts.

  • @suew4609

    @suew4609

    Жыл бұрын

    The people that got on it were the fools! I really think he thought it was safe or he wouldn't have gone down again.

  • @sciteceng2hedz358

    @sciteceng2hedz358

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh I didn't hear they needed to replace the hull? That's a totally new sub then. Can you provide a reference?

  • @mdblack98

    @mdblack98

    Жыл бұрын

    I was under the impression this sub had never been this deep. Just one test run done at 3000M. Where's the reference that this sub had been down there before?

  • @seandelaney1700

    @seandelaney1700

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mdblack98 I know he had a failed prototype, I believe this one had done multiple dives and that was how it failed, "cyclic failure".

  • @sigkil

    @sigkil

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mdblack98 You see it for yourself from the point of view of a passenger. Titanic and all. Watch "Bajé a los restos del Titanic 4K | Parte 4/4"

  • @alexlowe2054
    @alexlowe2054 Жыл бұрын

    Check out the lawsuit from David Lochridge, former director of maritime operations for OceanGate who was fired for reporting safety issues. This sub wasn't just a deathtrap. It was practically intentionally designed to violently implode at those depths. The lawsuit (alleged) that the viewport was rated for a depth of 1,300 meters, while the sub planned to go down to 4,000 meters. That would definitely cause an implosion. He cites several other safety concerns in the lawsuit, like the inability to inspect carbon fiber for fatigue stress, which could have been the other likely cause of the implosion. The sub was a death trap.

  • @lpr5269

    @lpr5269

    11 ай бұрын

    The thing was that Stockton's company was not insured and could never be insured. Every person who went on his sub assumed a risk that if something happens, your family will have no recourse. They knew this and went anyway. They had to sign a waiver of liability. So the fact that David Lochridge had concerns really didn't matter because Stockton classified his passengers as mission specialists. Lochridge actually voiced his concerns to OSHA in 2019 and they did nothing. So long story short. There was really nothing anyone could do.

  • @messupfreq550

    @messupfreq550

    9 ай бұрын

    Additionally, carbon fiber is great for aircraft pressurization hulls because the fiber is in tension (higher inside pressure than outside). The biggest problem with the Titan design is the fiber is in compression which is its worst strength direction thus the epoxy is providing most of the resistance, and from what I understand it was not autoclaved to eliminate voids between CF layers and was wound over top of itself. The choice of using a tube also means the greatest deformation occurs in the center of the longitudinal axis which adds a pulling strain vector from the titanium ends where it is glued toward the center of the tube. Probably Stockton thought the pressure on the titanium ends would compress enough to counteract the pulling, however the area of the tube is much greater than the end 'caps' area so the force is not balanced out, resulting in a 'tearing' vector at the titanium 'socket' / glue interface over time.

  • @CephalopodsRock
    @CephalopodsRock Жыл бұрын

    This CEO did a fantastic job of providing video and audio clips that will absolutely destroy his company's chances of winning any of the coming litigation against them

  • @thunderchild4816

    @thunderchild4816

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm not sure anything will really be gained by litigation. Sure there's the company, but how much is it really worth especially now? There's also the issue that the tourists all signed waivers saying they could die and the company isn't liable. The whole operation seems like it's all Rush's show and with him going down with the sub I'm thinking the company will likely go bust, maybe pay out what's left after liquidation to victims families but that won't be much compared to the victims 'worth'. What I do see coming from this will be increased regulations on submersibles though. Although, I suppose you can always just leave port in a country without the regulations and dive in international waters.

  • @Damigod67

    @Damigod67

    Жыл бұрын

    Didnt the passengers sign a contract with the clauses we see at the start of the video? If so, then theres probably no angle for legal action

  • @irtaza_malik

    @irtaza_malik

    Жыл бұрын

    Nope everyone already signed their death certificate

  • @Galworld761

    @Galworld761

    Жыл бұрын

    The Titan was not insured no one would touch it without certification.

  • @ironXlungsX714

    @ironXlungsX714

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Damigod67 In most cases a waiver is null and void if negligence is involved. which in this case it was, I believe they will be open to lawsuits. But with pretty much everyone on board being a billionaire I don't think any litigation will happen.

  • @cultcirca
    @cultcirca Жыл бұрын

    As a former naval architect working on submersible design, just the fact that the pressure vessel was rated for 4,000m which was within or close to the actual operating envelop is crazy to me. We would design the pressure vessels with a significant factor of safety for it's intended operating envelop. That alone was a huge red flag. Thanks for the comprehensive report. Awful situation all around that could have been avoided.

  • @ItsssJustice

    @ItsssJustice

    Жыл бұрын

    You think that's scary, you should look at the new "David Lochridge" news coming out in the last few hours. A prior employee of Oceangate in 2018 was a pilot responsible for the safety of the vessel and passengers. He found flaws with the carbon fibre hull might not be detected and wanted more testing and the sub to be certified by an external agency. Critically he also found out that the forward viewport was only rated for a depth of 1.3km by the manufacturer, not the full 4km the submersible was intended to dive to... and that's not even considering a safety margin at all... He got fired and then there was a load of legal proceedings of unfair dismissal vs confidential disclosure, where it was finally settled between themselves...

  • @cultcirca

    @cultcirca

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ItsssJustice Oh my God WTF. We designed for approximately 1.5-1.6 as a factor depending on application. They exceeded the rated depth by over 2x??? This is literally the opposite of a factor of safety. Factor of negligence?

  • @randallkelley3600

    @randallkelley3600

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ItsssJustice Hopefully a post incident investigation will highlight all of the errors.

  • @gabriel7664

    @gabriel7664

    Жыл бұрын

    Is carbon fiber a common material on this genre/class of subs?

  • @strikereureka5081

    @strikereureka5081

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gabriel7664 It's not, typically titanium is used exclusively for the crew compartment. I have no idea why they would use carbon fibre.

  • @FireflyBrowncoatRo
    @FireflyBrowncoatRo Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely insane that he deliberately excluded experts in the construction and design . If anyone has ever watched “Boiler Room” they deliberately don’t hire anyone with a certification so they can continue illegal activity but those un-certified people don’t necessarily know what they are doing is illegal. He absolutely didn’t hire subject matter experts because none of them would EVER have put their name and reputation on this cobbled together casualty capsule. So upsetting that if you have enough money you can ignore all the rules and people died.

  • @sciteceng2hedz358

    @sciteceng2hedz358

    Жыл бұрын

    Great movie. "Know your ABC's!"

  • @trollking202

    @trollking202

    Жыл бұрын

    The Titan Titanium Titanic submarine was made from China 😮

  • @cheapcraftygirlsweepstakes2338
    @cheapcraftygirlsweepstakes2338 Жыл бұрын

    James Cameron says Titan had dropped ballast and was in ascent when it imploded so they knew they were in trouble. He also says when water starts to force the fibers apart they would’ve *heard it and he thinks that they did for the last few moments. “A horrifying prospect”

  • @leecowell8165

    @leecowell8165

    Жыл бұрын

    We really don't know. They're not releasing any comm and the ballast could have been dropped when it imploded. The other thing was that there wasn't any voice comm I mean how stupid was that?

  • @cheapcraftygirlsweepstakes2338

    @cheapcraftygirlsweepstakes2338

    Жыл бұрын

    @@leecowell8165 I read they’ll be able to tell by the position of the ballast on the sea floor if it was dropped or blown off.

  • @KubanKevin

    @KubanKevin

    Жыл бұрын

    If this is the case, it is very likely they heard creaking or light cracking and attempted to surface. That’s horrifying. I heard that the sound “consistent with implosion” occurred a few seconds after comms were lost

  • @Bryan-Hensley

    @Bryan-Hensley

    Жыл бұрын

    That seems more like the dome cracked.. that might have given them a little warning. However the implosion might have knocked them loose

  • @pathemeleski

    @pathemeleski

    11 ай бұрын

    According to the transcripts that someone released ( unofficial), the Titan went down about 50% faster than it should have. When they got close, they heard noises in the tail. 19 minutes, they tried to diagnose, dropped the weights and tried to surface -- but they weren't going up much at all. (Maybe Water in the tail weighing them down?) Then, ... it was suddenly over.

  • @Milner62
    @Milner62 Жыл бұрын

    To be blunt, they are dead. Odds are the cheaply built submersible imploded on its third trip to Titanic.

  • @PSC4.1

    @PSC4.1

    Жыл бұрын

    I think I believe this theory, the reason is because like you said it's cheaply made, it was an experimental and uncertified sub, all it takes is one decompression and the entire thing just crushes like a soda can. I hate to admit it, but this theory is very likely.

  • @Chiberia

    @Chiberia

    Жыл бұрын

    Third? I've seen more than 3 videos of it diving?

  • @michaeltrivette1728

    @michaeltrivette1728

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Chiberia Ive seen 100 vids of JFK being shot but im sure it only happened once.

  • @TheDrewjustforyou

    @TheDrewjustforyou

    Жыл бұрын

    I wonder how many unmanned test voyages they did with it, and to what depths. What the hell kind of justification is there for not wanting voice comms. "It was annoying" should be negligence.

  • @UncleKennysPlace

    @UncleKennysPlace

    Жыл бұрын

    @@PSC4.1 Well, if there's a decompression, then it won't implode.

  • @DukeJimmyJones
    @DukeJimmyJones Жыл бұрын

    As a retired gutter cleaner I knew this was not going to go well when I heard "off the shelf" and "wireless".

  • @grigorioschristodoulou5229

    @grigorioschristodoulou5229

    Жыл бұрын

    As a gamer I cant count how many times controllers have lost connection, ran out of batteries or one of the joysticks decides to die…

  • @Bankable2790

    @Bankable2790

    Жыл бұрын

    @@grigorioschristodoulou5229It’s so insane. I just can’t even begin to comprehend…

  • @michaelalexify

    @michaelalexify

    Жыл бұрын

    As i retired plumber i agree

  • @steverogers7601

    @steverogers7601

    Жыл бұрын

    After watching all of the videos, reading the articles, and reading the comments, I feel at peace knowing that this tragic event is at least funnier than a Brendan schaub comedy special.

  • @RevMikeBlack
    @RevMikeBlack Жыл бұрын

    When I was a teen, my godfather was a white 50 year old electrical engineer. He was one of the most inspirational people I've ever met. The age/race thing was a bluff. The last thing these clowns wanted was smart, experienced submariners who would call the sub's design into question.

  • @ElaraNightsky

    @ElaraNightsky

    Жыл бұрын

    diversity isnt the problem. the best engineers are usually asian and indian😂😂he would survive if he went full "woke" lol

  • @zchen27

    @zchen27

    Жыл бұрын

    The kind of inspiration he's looking for is the kind of inspiration snake oil salesmen and multi-level marketers try to sell to their marks.

  • @imsofly114

    @imsofly114

    Жыл бұрын

    What the heck does your white godfather have to do with anything....

  • @imageisn0thing

    @imageisn0thing

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm sure cutting cost was a factor too. He clearly was trying to save money.

  • @darkprose

    @darkprose

    9 ай бұрын

    He didn’t mention race, did he?

  • @cvineyard7890
    @cvineyard7890 Жыл бұрын

    Current Navy Submariner here. This is a thorough and comprehensive explanation. I also agree with most of the top comments here, if he would have hired actual professional submariners he wouldn’t have made it this far. What a great idea with terrible execution. RIP

  • @robertperry6048
    @robertperry6048 Жыл бұрын

    Hiring experienced “old guys” is smart. These veterans have years of experience and have survived decades of dealing with deep diving submarines and casualties of systems in submarines. They have experience in spotting trouble spots before things fail. It is sad that this accident has ended with the lose of life.

  • @DuckieMcduck

    @DuckieMcduck

    Жыл бұрын

    The reason why he didn't hire old guys is because if he did, none of them would have built this death trap.

  • @asddw4998

    @asddw4998

    Жыл бұрын

    You don't get it, had he not hired Pedro and Shaniqua to do the job he wouldn't be able to brag about it on the internet

  • @jonb7470

    @jonb7470

    Жыл бұрын

    Specifically white guys too.. he doesn’t want them white and old apparently.. now he’s reaping the cost.

  • @JagdgeschwaderX

    @JagdgeschwaderX

    Жыл бұрын

    The real problem is his hiring wasn't diverse enough, we've been invaded oops sorry enriched with millions of highly skilled engineers over the last few years...just sayin'

  • @LazerLockon

    @LazerLockon

    Жыл бұрын

    This CEO's social warrior score may have just cost him 5 lives

  • @usmcjlsharp
    @usmcjlsharp Жыл бұрын

    Stockton - "I don't hire old sub pilots." Me (old guy who's seen some things go real sideways) - "You mean you have to hire young people who are ignorant to the danger, are inexperienced, and don't know any better because older or more experienced pilots would call you out on your poor practices and safety standards." Never EVER trust someone who doesn't want to hire someone with a lot of experience. They are either cheap or dangerous or both...

  • @ballsoutbob559

    @ballsoutbob559

    Жыл бұрын

    Not only old sub pilots, old WHITE sub pilots. Color is important nowadays...

  • @jimlthor

    @jimlthor

    Жыл бұрын

    I've learned that if you're the smartest person working for the company, it's generally time to look for a new company. I've been very fortunate to work with people that have 30-40 years if experience in my field. It makes my job much easier and safer knowing the right way to do things, and to get a heads-up on things that can go wrong that aren't obvious to someone with just a few years of experience

  • @charlesstoeng9166

    @charlesstoeng9166

    Жыл бұрын

    Amen to that! From an old soldier

  • @matthorn6118

    @matthorn6118

    Жыл бұрын

    Benefit of "young people who are ignorant" is that they don't know what's not possible. Only good for IT or business: the worst is bankruptcy.

  • @chrisb7528

    @chrisb7528

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ballsoutbob559 I heard they majored in Diversity, Equity and Inclusion.

  • @johnnyblaze8439
    @johnnyblaze8439 Жыл бұрын

    Feel so bad for the kid, he didn't even wanna go and I don't blame him. Also, somethings you just don't go cheap on.

  • @ricladouceur6202
    @ricladouceur6202 Жыл бұрын

    Does anyone think a game controller was rated for this usage. This is why a toilet cost the military 2000 dollars instead of 300 that we buy at home depot. They are built to a critical standard, rated for heavy use over long periods of time. The use of a game controller alone should have been a red flag.

  • @jimmillward3505
    @jimmillward3505 Жыл бұрын

    I had an operation to fix a broken leg 2 years back, when they wheeled me into the operating theatre i was relieved to see that the surgeons working on me were over 50. Nothing and i mean NOTHING compares to someone with experience. They did a damned good job too.

  • @sp00f34

    @sp00f34

    Жыл бұрын

    i appreciate your comment. true bro

  • @OShackHennessy

    @OShackHennessy

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s a bit old for a surgeon peak performance is actually quite a bit younger. Older surgeons tend not to keep up with the latest tech and sometimes get complacent. If your surgeon looks like he just graduated high school then you can worry but mid thirties to fifty and you’re fine. That’s not a hard rule but it’s what I’ve seen.

  • @OShackHennessy

    @OShackHennessy

    Жыл бұрын

    And depending on how bad your leg was mangled fixing legs are easy. Hard to screw up a resident could have done it.

  • @unish25

    @unish25

    Жыл бұрын

    They used young folks, because it's cheaper to pay inexperienced young folks.

  • @ajc5479

    @ajc5479

    Жыл бұрын

    What age did those surgeons qualify? Your comment only qualifies you as a moron.

  • @ym5891
    @ym5891 Жыл бұрын

    Apparently, they just found a debris field. So it definitely looks like an implosion at this point. Which, arguably, is a better result than finding them suffocated. They would have died instantly.

  • @Birdylockso

    @Birdylockso

    Жыл бұрын

    Low oxygen will cause one to pass out and die unconsciously, which is way better than a violent death of a collapsing capsule that crushes you to death. I think I will choose passing out and gradually die.

  • @aenguswright7336

    @aenguswright7336

    Жыл бұрын

    Can't help but feel you a spot on here

  • @WhiteWolf-lm7gj

    @WhiteWolf-lm7gj

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't think they have confirmed if the debris is from the Titan yet (or at least told us)

  • @spacequack5470

    @spacequack5470

    Жыл бұрын

    @@WhiteWolf-lm7gj Obviously is the Titan

  • @WhiteWolf-lm7gj

    @WhiteWolf-lm7gj

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh, actually it looks like it has now been confirmed to be the Titan.

  • @rickyrubio7934
    @rickyrubio7934 Жыл бұрын

    I’m almost convinced that the CEO should be facing criminal charges if he had not been on the vessel.

  • @badger313

    @badger313

    Жыл бұрын

    Came here to say exactly that! And so many of the things said in the video. He was criminally negligent.

  • @diclo383

    @diclo383

    Жыл бұрын

    @@badger313 he got judged and executed... Sadly along with some gullible company

  • @mattgee4867

    @mattgee4867

    Жыл бұрын

    Almost? This guy disregarded safety standards and ignored decades of experience in submarine development

  • @leecowell8165

    @leecowell8165

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah sue his molecules they're probably floating around out there somewhere...

  • @ReptilianLepton

    @ReptilianLepton

    Жыл бұрын

    @@leecowell8165 His estate can absolutely be sued.

  • @georgejones8784
    @georgejones8784 Жыл бұрын

    As I understand it, the Apollo 1 hatch was openable from the inside. The problem was that the hatch had to move inward before opening outward. The fire caused a massive overpressure which the astronauts could never hope to overcome. I believe the mission always included a spacewalk by the pilot to retrieve equipment from the service module, so the crew was never intended to be locked into the ship.

  • @leecowell8165

    @leecowell8165

    Жыл бұрын

    I did not know that...

  • @jmayer29

    @jmayer29

    Жыл бұрын

    The capsule was pressurized to 14.7 psi on the ground to simulate the pressures in space. That alone would have made it impossible to open the hatch inward without first depressurizing the capsule.

  • @zchen27

    @zchen27

    Жыл бұрын

    So it's kinda the rough equivalent of not making exit doors swing outwards.

  • @jmayer29

    @jmayer29

    Жыл бұрын

    @@zchen27 In a pressure envelope like a space capsule or aircraft, you want the door to act like a plug when it's closed, using the structure of the aircraft and door, not the latching hardware, bear all the hardware. This was the problem with early iterations of the DC-10 and the outward opening rear cargo door. On a sub, you want the hatches to open outward so the water pressure presses the hatch into the frame and seal, effectively locking it in place.

  • @taraswertelecki3786

    @taraswertelecki3786

    Жыл бұрын

    Just a couple of pounds per sq. inch pressure differential will ensure no man could open that door. And yes, you are correct that the Apollo astronauts carried out a spacewalk to bring equipment from the service module into the command module before re-entry.

  • @clearsailing7993
    @clearsailing7993 Жыл бұрын

    I was a mechanical engineer in the auto industry. It took about 10 to 15 years to get good on the component I worked on. The engineering degree was only the start. I am thankful to the mechanics and technicians who taught me so much. They were my instructors even though technically I was their supervisor. I was humbled up right away by these guys with the immense amount of product know how and experience they had accumulated in 30 to 40 years. I learned to always ask them for their input on new designs or issues we were working on.

  • @darcymoon2109

    @darcymoon2109

    Жыл бұрын

    Bosses who don’t want to listen to their employees don’t do well.

  • @manjsher3094

    @manjsher3094

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm sure tool makers helped with the journey. Cheers to the tool makers, cheers!

  • @shadow7037932

    @shadow7037932

    Жыл бұрын

    There's a lot to be said about institutional knowledge that's only known to the old timers with experience. Too bad the CEO of this company was so callous about this fact.

  • @Falkirion

    @Falkirion

    Жыл бұрын

    Still a lot of that in railways the world over. You learn so much from the old guys who've been in it for 40+ years. I can't count the number of times I've had an issue and gotten it explained and fixed within minutes talking to these guys. The old guard is always happy to mentor the younger generation if you show an interest in learning

  • @tbobtbob330

    @tbobtbob330

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep! My experience as an EE is similar. Students graduating college are almost useless. The engineers and technicians start getting better at 6-8 years, but it's the 15+ year veterans who are gold in a design review. They catch things nobody else thinks of.

  • @Anchor-Supreme
    @Anchor-Supreme Жыл бұрын

    Choosing not to hire experts in the field for both design and monitoring on dives because they weren’t “inspirational” tells me everything I need know about that CEO. Dude is entirely responsible for those people he killed.

  • @tm13tube

    @tm13tube

    Жыл бұрын

    Maybe he had a second to realize they were right.

  • @alpheusmadsen8485

    @alpheusmadsen8485

    Жыл бұрын

    Indeed! It's one thing to prefer to hire "inspirational" youth -- it's another thing to ignore the "cynical" elderly, because "cynicism" is often just the results of seeing a tragedy or two over their lifetime, and learning how to avoid them.

  • @Setixir

    @Setixir

    Жыл бұрын

    It wasn't about inspiration. It was about not having people around that would call him out on his bad ideas. It's an ego trip.

  • @sandersrk

    @sandersrk

    Жыл бұрын

    I can’t think of the last time I was inspired by someone younger. It’s always the old guy who knows things and is willing to share.

  • @precisedime1377

    @precisedime1377

    Жыл бұрын

    "Crush depth is systemically racist" -or something idk.

  • @margaretclark4091
    @margaretclark4091 Жыл бұрын

    You know the saying "Fools rush in where Angels fear to tread"Definitely applies here. One catastrophic mistake on top of another 😮

  • @davidwelch2791
    @davidwelch2791 Жыл бұрын

    My dad and I are USN retired submarine service veterans and we followed this tragedy immensely. One thing that I would like to point out was why didn't they have a SIB (submarine id beacon)? Because this could possibly have saved their lives. There are so many reasons of why that this incident happened, but the failure was all due to CEO for not getting system experts involved. I feel sorry for not only the loved ones but also everyone involved. They will deal with trauma for years. Be safe and be 😎

  • @daveluttinen2547

    @daveluttinen2547

    Жыл бұрын

    You'd have thought that at least they could have had a launchable emergency buoy.

  • @diclo383

    @diclo383

    Жыл бұрын

    @@daveluttinen2547 i agree with both, but then again, there is a small detail.... They probably got squashed really suddenly.... My money would be on the carbon fiber, that I really don't like much... Very hard to check for weak points or irregularities in the work.... And it fails really bad when it does, and suddenly, like glass.

  • @seandelaney1700

    @seandelaney1700

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm not familiar with an SIB but James Cameron said they had a "transponder" which was integral to itself (own battery) which went offline at the same time as comms were lost. A pretty sure signal of a rupture.

  • @davidwelch2791

    @davidwelch2791

    Жыл бұрын

    @@seandelaney1700 I describe the SIB in ( ). Basically, it is a device that lets the Navy know that there is an emergency with a submarine. It is like a "black box" for aircraft.

  • @calamitysangfroid2407
    @calamitysangfroid2407 Жыл бұрын

    His choice of hiring young fresh grads makes me think of what the videogame industry does. CEOs from a marketing background disrespect the old guard, make unreasonable demands, push stupid ideas. The old guys leave. CEOs hire young and desperate people, tell them its about 'passion', and rely on either the inexperience or desperation to do stuff that's flashy and 'market friendly' but breaks easy.

  • @Ublunublu

    @Ublunublu

    Жыл бұрын

    Bro… that’s a seriously good analogy

  • @normangoldstuck8107

    @normangoldstuck8107

    Жыл бұрын

    Diversity hires. You know the rest.

  • @bar10ml44

    @bar10ml44

    Жыл бұрын

    Let the smart ass kids find out the hard way. I have a friend whose ex husband is extremely wealthy. Their 2 children are superb and not spoiled by it but their friends are totally driven by you tube influencers and making as much money as possible. We have created mini monsters

  • @tonybutler5139

    @tonybutler5139

    Жыл бұрын

    thats the way the company I work for runs, " don't take advice from us old guys , because it clashes with the "in" croud..... to hell with safty, Do it the new way....

  • @dowork5617

    @dowork5617

    Жыл бұрын

    Spot on. He knew experienced engineers would be skeptical of how he was running things so wanted to bring in young guys that are moldable and can be “taught” to do things their way instead of the right way

  • @JerichoTheBeagle
    @JerichoTheBeagle Жыл бұрын

    The thing that gets me is that the CEO touted aerospace industry inspiration, and was himself a flight test engineer on F-15s. F-15s have triple redundancy on critical systems. When asked about the apparent "MacGuyver-ish" look, he said everything can break as long as the pressure hull is intact and you're safe. As a former F-15 maintainer, that sounds like an idiot saying "the plane is fine as long as the wings are still attached"

  • @Nutmeg142

    @Nutmeg142

    Жыл бұрын

    He probably over-gd the targeting pod and airframe too.

  • @esperantojoe426

    @esperantojoe426

    Жыл бұрын

    I think it's more comparable to an A-10 engineer saying "It doesn't matter what fails as long as the titanium tub surrounding the cockpit remains intact". Then he has some smart people with no practical experience replace the titanium with aluminum for cost savings.

  • @CrashTestPilot

    @CrashTestPilot

    Жыл бұрын

    Any landing you can walk away from is a good landing. If the aircraft can be used again, then it is an outstanding landing.

  • @ExileTheKnightsOfMaltaNow

    @ExileTheKnightsOfMaltaNow

    Жыл бұрын

    Pain while since I've had a television but I seem to remember something about macgruber

  • @ExileTheKnightsOfMaltaNow

    @ExileTheKnightsOfMaltaNow

    Жыл бұрын

    There's the right way the wrong way the Army way and then the PlayStation way?

  • @F.C.77
    @F.C.77 Жыл бұрын

    Great in-depth. Can you do a video on how the titan imploded?

  • @voltsoftruthBSbuster
    @voltsoftruthBSbuster Жыл бұрын

    When they announced that they found the pressure hull of the sub in pieces that was the first clue that something was very different about this sub and there were probably flaws in the design. Then I saw them fabricate the hull I was shocked. Let me be frank and admit I'm not a structural, or naval engineer, however I do know a lot about how materials behave and fail under loads, excessive pressures, stresses and sudden forces. And even though you could create a much worse shape for the subs pressure hull, the shape they chose and material was not ideal and was perhaps flawed. Cylindrical shapes are strong but not strong enough for the pressures you are going to be exposed to 2 and a half miles under water. Every deep diving submersible like Alvin, Trieste, that was not military in nature have always utilized a spherical shaped pressure hull constructed out of Titanium or hardened steel sandwiched between two layers of Titanium and were typically 5-7 inch thick. Now a spherical shape is much stronger than cylindrical shape since it distributes the pressure equally around the circular shape, and yet even those pressure chambres were created from solid machined Titanium 5-7inch thick. This should immediately tell you a cylindrical shape made from the same thickness wouldn't be strong enough. Despite being the second best choice for preasure hulls, they are not ideal for extreme depth where there is no margin for error. One could argue it was made from carbon fiber which is stronger than Titanium and steel, however carbon fiber has its own flaws. First off if the fiber was not woven properly with upmost tight tolerance it will be defective and much weaker than even steel. Secondly Titanium and some medium carbon steels, are very ductile, extremely flexible, and can flex and deform quite a bit before rupturing. Titanium doesn't snap but almost tears like rubber and extremely tough, ductile metal. It will start to flex, bend and deform long before it completely fails, giving ample warning that the structural integrity of the vessel is jeopardized. Carbon fiber has non of those attributes. It will remain stiff and solid right up to the mili Second it fails and is crushed, never giving you any indication that your vessel is in trouble. Im sure the vessel had preasure guages and sensors monitoring the pressure exerted on the vessel, but those could, fail, give you false readings, or malfunction. There should always be a visual gadgets that are fail proof. The best technique is used by submariners maybe if he had a 50 year old male who served on a sub he could have implemented a simple device that perhaps could have saved their lives. Its a simple yet ingenious method of determining how much force is being exerted on your craft. A simple string (fishing line) or tight rope is secured to one side of the vessels wall and run to the other side of the wall. The string is tighten as tight as you can. Once the sub starts to dive, and the pressure of the water starts to crush or squeeze the vessel the hull will literally start to get smaller, this could be easily verified by seing how much play you have in the string that was tight when the vessel was at surface preasure. Its not uncommon for the string to gain as much as an inch or two in the slag as the hull gets pushed tighter and tighter. If the string starts to exceed normal compression and become even looser, you would have a early warning that something is not right and the vessel is being pushed beyond its structural capabilities. One final suggestion would have been to split up the cylindrical preasure hull into 3 sections by inserting separation walls 5inch thick circular in shape at equal distances from each other. This in effect would have turned one long cylinder into 3 smaller ones greatly increasing the amount of compressive force the cylinder shape could withstand. When you are dealing with those types of pressures and forces you should never design the vessel to be good enough. It has to be made to withstand double the pressure you expect. The Trieste was created to wistand several times the force of the pressure it was going to encounter, and still the glass window cracked on the way down. If it was made just to the specs, it would have been crushed like a soda can. I believe this is where the flaw in the design doomed that Vessel. I haven't even addressed the horrible flawed design of bonding titanium rings to the outside of the carbon fiber body. Did no one see the disastrous flaw in that design. By doing that you now allowing the pressure to attack the carbon fiber vessel separately from the rings that are bonded on the outside. What happens if the pressure chamber compresses at a different rate than the Titanium ring. You have now created a gap which will tear the bonding agent, force the water in, and you can imagine the rest. The ring should have been designed in such a way where it fit or part of it fit inside the cylindrical body. Why did no one catch these potentially deadly flaws. Again I'm not an expert, and I'm not suggesting or implying that's what failed, but if I saw that design for my sub, I would have never dived even 10 feet in it, its still a flawed design. In the end this is a tragic situation, and I'm not blaming anyone, its not my place, the people ended up paying the ultimate price. I'm sure everyone had good intentions and no one purposely designs a faulty and dangerous vessel that they would have to entrust with their life. All im saying this should be a learning experience no matter how tragic. If I was going to design a sub, I would reach out to every design bureau that has ever constructed a deep diving submersible and seek their advice, ask for their opinions, and would pay them to assess and evaluate my vessel and let me know what concerns or flaws that need to be addressed, not to mention test it multiple times diving to the maximum depth the sub was designed for and evaluate its performance, before I let anyone board and dive that vessel. RIP to all that perished.

  • @randolphstevens6664

    @randolphstevens6664

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @thereisnosanctuary6184

    @thereisnosanctuary6184

    Жыл бұрын

    Stockton was an Aries.

  • @leecowell8165

    @leecowell8165

    Жыл бұрын

    those rings could have been attached with Lepages paper glue they were in compression. The largest issue here is that carbon fiber is not a very good material to be used to withstand compression. great for tension but not for compression. They should have used a titanium based sphere similar to the Trieste design right down to using gasoline for ascent. And the way to prevent a view port failure is to use cameras instead. That's what Cameron did when he visited Challenger Deep.

  • @rickbrenner6079

    @rickbrenner6079

    11 ай бұрын

    Great post:) All of your safety suggestions make perfect sense to even a layperson like myself. Like many people with personality disorders, Stockton was blind to see how the choices he made correlated with his successes and failures in life. And he never wanted to listen to or take anyone’s advice on how to improve. So folks with personality disorders (such as Narcissistic Personality Disorder) are stuck in a holding pattern their whole adult life where they experience zero emotional growth and, unfortunately, end up hurting (or in some cases killing) folks who they manage to suck into their holding pattern (to use an aviation metaphor, since Stockton originally wanted to be a fighter pilot). It’s a shame that the Titan wasn’t as water tight as Stockton’s ego.

  • @TheTarrMan
    @TheTarrMan Жыл бұрын

    I'm a CNC machine operator so here my perspective. They have something calculated for 4000m. The Titanic is 3,800m deep. I think ISO (or NCEES or one of those) requires a 150% minimum buffer for engineered loads (meaning for diving 3,800m the sub would have to be engineered for 5,700m to be "save"). They're literally running at 95% at the Titanic. . . At that depth even temperature changes could have changed the water density enough to surpass the haul strength and crush the sub. Update : I'm right, this is exactly what happened. If it's any consolation they died almost instantly. The hull imploded, followed by their skulls, torsos, even their femurs because the center is filled with marrow. . . They basically turned into like a fine mist. Maybe their hands and feet were left but that probably quickly became fish food. The lesson here is to keep accountants out of the engineering room. . . . And also to hire professionals and not inexperienced people out of some sort of misplaced self-entitled wokeism. (That was very stupid.) I'm just an entry-level machine operator and knew this, what's their excuse? A professional would've slammed on the brakes on this during its inception. HIRE "OLD WHITE PEOPLE".

  • @AcesnEights698

    @AcesnEights698

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly. Operating on a pittance of theoretical margin with a host of unknowns is suicide. Absolute hubris.

  • @mattb9003

    @mattb9003

    Жыл бұрын

    Total agreement. They used human beings as test dummies.

  • @B44SB66

    @B44SB66

    Жыл бұрын

    You are absolutely right the fiberglass hull Shattered and they were all gone instantly

  • @Arclite02

    @Arclite02

    Жыл бұрын

    For what it's worth, the Wikipedia entry says it was designed for a 2.25x margin, and they took the 4.5" thickness to 5". Whether that's actually accurate beyond a spreadsheet... Who knows??

  • @just9911

    @just9911

    Жыл бұрын

    Isn’t the thing only certified for 1500 meters?

  • @edc3690
    @edc3690 Жыл бұрын

    This entire story is an example of deadly arrogance. I'm not an engineer, but any intelligent person would see the lack of failsafes needed to make this a safe vessel. May they rest in peace.

  • @phataton7588

    @phataton7588

    Жыл бұрын

    Sort of like the TITANIC

  • @johnjohnson1997

    @johnjohnson1997

    Жыл бұрын

    It's also a story of fairy tale woke garbage.

  • @fudgen.a1249

    @fudgen.a1249

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnjohnson1997 Five people die in a submarine due to gross neglect and safety oversight, and your first thought is politics. How disgusting of you.

  • @EZLN

    @EZLN

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnjohnson1997 how is it woke? a ship full of rich white people seems like the opposite of whatever woke means in your head

  • @fangal12

    @fangal12

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnjohnson1997 yeah, nothing about this was woke not even in the bastardized way people like you use the word 😅

  • @NumbersCanBeFun
    @NumbersCanBeFun Жыл бұрын

    Marine Veteran, I appreciate your take on this video. I found it to be very straightforward, informative and educational about the entire situation. I miss talking with gentlemen like yourself about these kinds of things. I hope you do a very detailed followup to this video now that we know the tragic conclusion. I am very interested to hear your thoughts and your explanations on how this played out, in your opinion.

  • @thehunter9430
    @thehunter9430 Жыл бұрын

    Great video. This really broke it down and brought up many concerns and situations that realistically needed attention.

  • @doug9194
    @doug9194 Жыл бұрын

    An additional point that I may add, Oceangate did in fact have a subject matter expert working for them, David Lochridge. However he was terminated by Rush for failing to approve the sub's safety standards.

  • @LordInquisitor701

    @LordInquisitor701

    Жыл бұрын

    I guess that means a CEO wins a Darwin reward

  • @highplains7777

    @highplains7777

    Жыл бұрын

    Let me guess, he was 50+ and white.

  • @ImposterSloth

    @ImposterSloth

    Жыл бұрын

    I feel I have heard this story... lots of times before.

  • @ronchappel4812

    @ronchappel4812

    Жыл бұрын

    ouch!

  • @harkonen1000000

    @harkonen1000000

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LordInquisitor701 Getting other people killed disqualifies one from Darwin awards.

  • @boofriggityhoo
    @boofriggityhoo Жыл бұрын

    I worked briefly on a research vessel for an internship, and distinctly remember a conversation with various crew about this guy, Stockton Rush and Oceangate. They all said he was going to kill himself and others with his ideas -- this was quite a while ago when he was merely discussing the idea of taking people down to the Titanic, and hadn't actually built anything yet. I'm no expert myself, but seeing this now and the information coming out, it seems as though they were spot on. The fact that he once answered that his submersible was "too high tech" to warrant basic safety evaluations that most manned craft must go through, for example, was a big red flag -- and he said that about a year ago I believe. Having nice cameras or a custom-built cabin doesn't make your vessel particularly innovative, but especially when it comes to basic safety -- most of which was learned through decades of various catastrophes, as you pointed out here. There's a reason why captains and engineers are so stern about safety -- it can become a life or death matter within a split second. There are always risks involved, even just on a ship, but safety is not really something you want to dismiss entirely for the sake of innovation.

  • @TheDrewjustforyou

    @TheDrewjustforyou

    Жыл бұрын

    Sounds like the guy had a death wish and couldn't afford to go to space.

  • @PsRohrbaugh

    @PsRohrbaugh

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheDrewjustforyou arrogance is universal

  • @brunorivademar5356

    @brunorivademar5356

    Жыл бұрын

    That is absolutely bonkers. Guy was a total maniac.

  • @LackofFaithify

    @LackofFaithify

    Жыл бұрын

    There's always a certain amount of dark humor doing something so alien (your first dive, I imagine going to space, etc...) where humans are not meant to be. But It comes knowing all the gear is inspected, all of the people trained, contingencies in place as much as they can be. As horrible as this is, I find it far more troubling that no one stopped him. I guess that's why you would only want kids on your crew: an old fart might have known he needed to be dealt with before he killed a bunch of the kids that didn't know what they had been hoodwinked into doing.

  • @kjadfhgioaudbfvilaeu

    @kjadfhgioaudbfvilaeu

    Жыл бұрын

    Safety first...Unless you're an arrogant mill/billionaire.

  • @csmtcqueen
    @csmtcqueen Жыл бұрын

    Sidenote: Stockton Rush also sounds quite immature and narcissistic. Everything was about how he felt, what he wanted. Nothing about what was best for others.

  • @sylvainvanduyl6143
    @sylvainvanduyl6143 Жыл бұрын

    The first second I heard the sub was lost... i thought, I need to look at Sub Brief to see what he has to say about that. But, after a busy weekend, I finaly had the chance. Love to see the following video.

  • @ectolle54
    @ectolle54 Жыл бұрын

    Hearing that CEO gives me chills. Hiring all young students because you want to be inspired instead of experienced sub engineers is a terrible policy. Then going down so close to the sub’s operating range on a dive is crazy

  • @scotty9462

    @scotty9462

    Жыл бұрын

    Something tells me we haven't seen the last tragedy at the alter of diversity.

  • @kederaji

    @kederaji

    Жыл бұрын

    @@scotty9462 Making assumptions. Diversity had nothing to do with him hiring inexperienced designers.

  • @edmund184

    @edmund184

    Жыл бұрын

    it really is a Sign of the Times

  • @BurnerJones

    @BurnerJones

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kederaji "didn't want old white men" means diversity hires

  • @humanbeing2420

    @humanbeing2420

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dennyb6768He wanted young people as opposed to older people. He said nothing about diversity or hiring people of color. You conservatives love to invent your facts.

  • @underwaterlevelz1947
    @underwaterlevelz1947 Жыл бұрын

    Former Radioman from an LA Class sub. I'm stunned that loss of comms was not grounds for an immediate onboard systems overhaul. A skipper can lose his command for failing to clear the broadcast ONCE, it's a big deal.

  • @slip6699

    @slip6699

    Жыл бұрын

    There's a difference between a CO that reports to an Admiral, that ultimately answers to congress. Commercial venture where the owner is only responsible to him self or investors. There is no regulation, no insurance etc. It's all at risk. There's a reason why military ships have so many people on a bridge and a super tankers only has 2-3.

  • @BattleBladeWarrior

    @BattleBladeWarrior

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree! You'd think after that, if they couldn't establish a secure way to maintain connection, they'd have just used some sort of umbilical cable to keep them plugged into the main ship. but maybe thats not safe at those depths either?

  • @packersfanforlife7903

    @packersfanforlife7903

    Жыл бұрын

    I believe the CEO fired someone simply for saying the sub was unsafe. The CEO seems like a man with loads of money and believes anything is possible and was arrogant enough to believe his own BS. If he truely cared he would have been smart enough to know you cannot know everything. Without a willingness to listen he is now dead in his own creation fue to most likely an ego issue. That been said this is a very sad situation.

  • @tissuepaper9962

    @tissuepaper9962

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@BattleBladeWarriorimagine the price (not to mention the weight!) of a 4000m umbilical.

  • @pnwlady

    @pnwlady

    Жыл бұрын

    And then not reporting it for another 8-9 hrs after losing communication. This company is way out of line.

  • @burnpitcav1519
    @burnpitcav1519 Жыл бұрын

    That is so crazy that they didn’t do it in a vacuum/sterile environment that is also temperature controlled for optimal adhesion. Also, I find it very difficult to believe that glue can hold indefinitely

  • @xndr3
    @xndr3 Жыл бұрын

    This is such a good breakdown. Thank you for your insight on this horrific ordeal.

  • @barbaranorris6169
    @barbaranorris6169 Жыл бұрын

    My husband was a lead NASA mechanical engineer. He wants you to know the Apollo astronauts were not “bolted” in. The hatch was installed from inside the capsule. Pressure build up inside the capsule made it impossible to remove the hatch. Redesign made an externally installed hatch that could be removed by engineers from outside the capsule. My husband was intimately involved on Gemini and Apollo spacecrafts before going to Shuttle Program.

  • @steveperreira5850

    @steveperreira5850

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for clarifying that. It makes sense because the pressure is from the inside. It is the opposite on a submarine

  • @rbgolfer2013

    @rbgolfer2013

    Жыл бұрын

    This should be up near the top. Super interesting!

  • @BoucherYe

    @BoucherYe

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol

  • @steves8236

    @steves8236

    Жыл бұрын

    My understanding is that in addition to an all-oxygen environment, Apollo 1 was also undergoing a high pressure test of the capsule at the time of the accident; thus making a blowtorch of the fire.

  • @barbaranorris6169

    @barbaranorris6169

    Жыл бұрын

    @@steves8236 correct. It was an insane test that had been done many times without a problem, so no one thought about what they were doing.

  • @methanbreather
    @methanbreather Жыл бұрын

    Carbon fibre is great, until the moment it cracks. It also 'ages' a lot with every load cycle. Titanium is known for 'rot'. The window was not rated for the depht at all. The controller is from Logitech. Logitech had a long standing problem with their wireless unified receivers: after 30 connection events, the receiver died. And they did not thoroughly check the submersible after each dive. No x-raying for example. Just some 'knock&listen' tests. Some time ago a huge patch of the carbon fibre hull delaminated. You can't get out, without outside help. This thing is a death trap. but it gets worse: in previous tours they touched down on Titanic's decks and moved around between superstructure elements. In a carbon fibre hull under lots of stress. So... what happens if the deck gives away? What happens if some sharp edge is bumped? They used a death trap AND did idiotic stuff. The loss is no surprise. That it took them several tours to fail is the surprise.

  • @karldolphin7547

    @karldolphin7547

    Жыл бұрын

    So the sub had gone to the Titanic before? Just w the CEO? I thought u In the vid he said it had only been tested to 3000 m.

  • @xsmatt81

    @xsmatt81

    Жыл бұрын

    everything you point out is valid. Except logitech receivers are pretty reliable in my experience over the years. BUT why on earth would anyone USE wireless tech to control a submersible like this. Logitech is good stuff around the house for gaming or wireless mice, etc...but not mission critical sutff. Wiresless anything is dumb in situations like this

  • @goatofdeparture
    @goatofdeparture Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the closure. I’d love a follow up once the time comes

  • @eedlebendhaardt8348
    @eedlebendhaardt8348 Жыл бұрын

    This is the video on this subject that I've been looking for. Thank you for your thoroughness and focus on the technical aspects!

  • @khankrumgaming8926
    @khankrumgaming8926 Жыл бұрын

    As an engineer, here is what I see wrong at 4:50-4:59 : they are not wearing protective suits, it looks like open air factory, no particulate control of any kind, no masks, no hairnets. Once something is stuck to the adhesive it can provide a path for seawater to creep in, combined with vibrations and settling of the materials, steel and titanium being more prone to shrinkage with dropping temperatures at depth, there is a lot of mismatching of materials. I can see cracks forming due to internal stresses in tension, yes titanium is very strong so is carbon in tension but dust and rust on the adhesive can cause sheering and punctures... just too sloppy for experimental assembly of something that has to be perfectly smooth and free of debris.

  • @johnnunn8688

    @johnnunn8688

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep, it should have been assembled in conditions replicating an operating theatre.

  • @damonmelendez856

    @damonmelendez856

    Жыл бұрын

    Math is racist. Just because things don’t fit perfectly doesn’t make them any worse.

  • @kalbic

    @kalbic

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed. I believe when dealing with pressures like this stick with one single material, don't mix materials because like you said each one will react differently to pressure, cold, etc. Another thing to note is I'm not a fan of carbon fiber. Metals will bend, especially titanium, carbon fiber fails completely when it goes, just like shattering glass. This is why I don't like carbon fiber used to support airplane wings, no warning, just instant catastrophic failure.

  • @Jeff.55649

    @Jeff.55649

    Жыл бұрын

    Haha so cringe when people present themselves as engineers. LMAO 🤣🤣

  • @hayleygordon7969

    @hayleygordon7969

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed - I’m not an engineer but the way they’re weaving the carbon fiber and painting on the glue doesn’t seem precise enough for something that needs to be extremely uniform and sound

  • @MR-intel
    @MR-intel Жыл бұрын

    30 hours before the oxygen was due to run out, I finally heard a deep sea explorer state what I had suspected: "There is no equipment for rescue missions at this depth".

  • @Sphyn0x

    @Sphyn0x

    Жыл бұрын

    I think that time for how long they have oxygen should have been taken with a grain of salt. CEO was cutting corners everywhere and I wouldnt be surprised if we found later that time was only 1-2 days or less.

  • @lordfarquaad4174

    @lordfarquaad4174

    Жыл бұрын

    the US has retrieved a helicopter wreck from over 19,000 ft depth, this is only 12,000……

  • @Drakonus_

    @Drakonus_

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lordfarquaad4174 That was a wreck with no life needed to be saved. It's a totally different scenario.

  • @Drakonus_

    @Drakonus_

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lordfarquaad4174 Not to mention, retrieving a wreck is easier since you have a long period of time to find it. We still only have a rough idea where Titan is currently located.

  • @FlareonOW

    @FlareonOW

    Жыл бұрын

    Do you really not see the difference between retrieving a WRECK and retrieving 5 SOULS from that depth? That’s a massive difference.

  • @isaacgeise
    @isaacgeise Жыл бұрын

    Sir, I really appreciate the calm, clean speech, professional way in which you made this video! You and many other older, experienced men in my life have inspired me! Don't ever think that you are to old to inspire young people...I am one! Thank you again! Please do a follow up video!

  • @johnmothershead1690
    @johnmothershead1690 Жыл бұрын

    A few years ago there was a video of a Wealthy Self-Made Businessman™️ who bought himself one of those little Scorpion helicopters. Gentleman had no helicopter rating, training nor experience. The video showed the factory pilot flying in to deliver the aircraft and give the new owner a familiarization ride, but on landing he takes a quick trip to the restroom. In the video you actually hear the new owner say "How hard could it be?" as he climbs into the aircraft. You can probably guess how that went. "How hard could it be?" mentality seems, to me, to have been a large part of this project.

  • @yae_ja
    @yae_ja Жыл бұрын

    Asked my former submarine commander dad his opinion before we found out what happened. He had guessed an unsurvivable event like implosion, and said he would have never gotten in the sub.

  • @markcargill9734

    @markcargill9734

    Жыл бұрын

    Madness . However if Money is no problem...... So Sad.

  • @manidubs123

    @manidubs123

    Жыл бұрын

    Anyone who took 10 minutes to look into all the safety issues would never step foot in the titan. Apparently the 19year old was terrified and didn't want to go but only went because it was fathers day and his dad was obsessed with the titanic

  • @CristiNeagu

    @CristiNeagu

    Жыл бұрын

    Maybe that's why the CEO had all those kind things to say about "50 year old white guys"... The 50 year old white guys all told him he's crazy and walked away.

  • @anticom6099

    @anticom6099

    Жыл бұрын

    @@CristiNeagu bingo

  • @jimsteinway695

    @jimsteinway695

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m a naval engineer. There is NO WAY I get into this piece of barely tested “equipment “. Carbon fiber is a great material for race cars and maybe boats that float. But just one flaw in the carbon fiber or bonding material and death ensues

  • @NinjaRunningWild
    @NinjaRunningWild Жыл бұрын

    From the OceanGate wiki : *Rush's experience and research led him to believe that submersibles had an unwarranted reputation as dangerous vehicles due to their use in ferrying commercial divers, and that the Passenger Vessel Safety Act of 1993 "needlessly prioritized passenger safety over commercial innovation"* Anyone not doing their due diligence on the CEO of this inept company learned the price of that in savage fashion.

  • @whiterabbit4606

    @whiterabbit4606

    Жыл бұрын

    Jesus. The guy was a psychopath.

  • @maddannafizz

    @maddannafizz

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@whiterabbit4606 aptly said. The man was soiopathic.. I don't understand how a father would take their child on something so untested and unchecked.

  • @vordt4139

    @vordt4139

    Жыл бұрын

    Was he the CEO? You have to be picked by a Board of Directors to become a CEO. I HIGHLY doubt this dudes "company" had a Board of Directors.

  • @jamestaylor8951

    @jamestaylor8951

    Жыл бұрын

    @maddannafizz I saw that he son gifted it to his dad as a father day gift. I don't know. If I was the father, I would have to be the smart one in the room and say no I'm good.

  • @kaas12

    @kaas12

    Жыл бұрын

    @@maddannafizz I don't understand, if you're so wealthy, why you wouldn't do an independent assessment by someone like Aaron on the vessel that's taking you TO A DEPTH OF 4000m especially if it looks like that.

  • @FredRedFrred
    @FredRedFrred Жыл бұрын

    I cannot see how the speaker is not "inspiring"--he knows his stuff and in his world is a very interesting knowledge source. Rock on Aaron.

  • @TheStarForge
    @TheStarForge Жыл бұрын

    For context, that is not a PlayStation controller. It is a off brand, Logitech Game controller that is 29.99, that I remember using wayyyyyy back in Middle/High School for Robotics. Edit: Looking at other material, they actually had two controllers. One a PS3/PS4 controller, and another the Logitech off-brand controller I was speaking about. Not sure which they used in the sub at the time, however both are not good for what Oceangate wanted.

  • @user-ct8my8rv9c
    @user-ct8my8rv9c Жыл бұрын

    After hearing your explanation of his hiring practices, I now see why the internals were two screens, one button, and a gaming controller. Wow. RIP to all aboard.

  • @AmbuBadger

    @AmbuBadger

    Жыл бұрын

    All it would take is for the lithium battery in that controller to become unstable and vent, nevermind all the other issues with this clown show.

  • @pyropulseIXXI

    @pyropulseIXXI

    Жыл бұрын

    They had a viewport that was only rated for 1.5km depths....

  • @jhershy1381

    @jhershy1381

    Жыл бұрын

    sad situation. But yea using ling time experienced people to build anything highly technical would be a best idea in my opinion.

  • @Choff8492
    @Choff8492 Жыл бұрын

    I was a Chief Officer on merchant navy and proud to be a seaman. As a young cadet at my time, I could not be more amazed and inspired by the old sailors, engineers, ratings and officers (old guard as we called them) that I had the honor to work and after some time, lead. Respect for their stories, experience and seamanship. It really take a different kind of person to go to sea, it is not easy, and when the SHTF you will want that 50+ Bosun to be by your side. It is sad to hear those words from the CEO, and even more that ended like this.

  • @michael511128

    @michael511128

    Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely. “inspirational” and “space technology” were marketing gimmicks used in Hollywood movies.

  • @jugghead-1975

    @jugghead-1975

    Жыл бұрын

    Right on...me as well ! Marine Corp vet and I was in awe of my staff NCOs! Different times I guess

  • @saax3816

    @saax3816

    Жыл бұрын

    This guy suggests these redundant systems but that adds more weight. Its stupid to heavy sub.

  • @hondaxl250k0

    @hondaxl250k0

    Жыл бұрын

    I was a semen once.. a matter of fact it was the last time I moved with purpose.. beat 30,000 other semen. Still tired.. lol. Thank you for your service 👍🏻👍🏻🇺🇸

  • @HailAzathoth

    @HailAzathoth

    Жыл бұрын

    @@saax3816 so you'd want to go down 4000m without redundant life support systems? You okay in the head bud?

  • @ryanthomas2374
    @ryanthomas2374 Жыл бұрын

    I am a mechanical engineer that works for a composite pressure vessel manufacturer.. So i have a dog in this race... their testing and design are VERY flawed. No proof? no MEOP? No destructive testing? No cyclic testing? Absolutely insane! Also their boss interface is bad.. Their boss needed to be inter-woven with the composite structure and not just epoxied on and i guarantee they didnt prep that bond surface right with a clean room etching and a water bead test. also they probably didnt do a lap shear bond test on that interface.. It is absolutely insane that ANYONE was enter and submerge in that death trap!

  • @theartistcherrypi6454

    @theartistcherrypi6454

    Жыл бұрын

    Sounds like they needed your expertise on the project smh.

  • @embb82
    @embb82 Жыл бұрын

    I just wanted to say that I really love your speaking style and the way you structured your video, it was technical enough to be interesting without being inaccessible to someone like me who doesn’t know much about the subject matter, and some of the comparisons really blew my mind! The Apollo comparison really made me think about how he said he learned from NASA about safety…

  • @somchaiwongma3813
    @somchaiwongma3813 Жыл бұрын

    I am not an engineer but the fact alone that this thing was designed to withstand the water pressure for up to 4000 meters and they were planning to dive to a depth of 3800 meters would make me feel unsafe. I would expect a larger safety margin than 5% What I don’t understand is why they would skip on a regular hatch, not really a challenge since the water pressure helps to seal it. Imagine a flight attendant talking about safety procedures and explaining to patiently wait in a case of an emergency until someone from outside opens the door…

  • @user-bi2me1kj7p

    @user-bi2me1kj7p

    Жыл бұрын

    Definitely, Thats like buying car tires with a speeding rating of 150mph and driving them at 145mph😂

  • @_mysilentblue2227

    @_mysilentblue2227

    Жыл бұрын

    yep 5% is ridiculous

  • @zolikoff

    @zolikoff

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't think we can claim it was designed to withstand 4000 meters. If parts of it were explicitly rated to less than that, then it wasn't really.

  • @schrodingersmechanic7622

    @schrodingersmechanic7622

    Жыл бұрын

    The porthole window was rated to 1400m. The guy that brought that fact up in a meeting was immediately fired.

  • @zolikoff

    @zolikoff

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Abstract.Noir414 The problem is that "designed for" and "able to withstand" are two different things. One is a design and manufacturing plan based on calculations, where errors can enter the picture at various stages, and even if executed right, repeated use introduces wear and reduces the performance over time. And the latter is the actual real world performance - as exhibited in this case, it was not able to withstand it on repeated dives. So that's the problem.

  • @hqwefg
    @hqwefg Жыл бұрын

    When I first heard about the incident and the price tag of $250 000 a seat, I thought the sub was going to be something like the Mir-1 or a commercial version of it, but seeing that it was actually hand assembled with bolts in some shed, piloted by a PS2 controller, and had none of the usual safety features makes me wonder how the heck did this not raise red flags.

  • @callsignapollo_

    @callsignapollo_

    Жыл бұрын

    Hey now give them some credit, it was in a workshop, with a PS3 controller! /s Seriously the fact that this was allowed to dive any deeper than a shallow lake is a tragedy in and of itself. Any decent craftsman will tell you that built to spec is underbuilt, and i highly doubt it was actually built to spec to begin with

  • @tomriley5790

    @tomriley5790

    Жыл бұрын

    Me too - I just can't understand how anyone would get in it - the whole thing is just so unbelievably amateurish. Nuts.

  • @solarsombrero227

    @solarsombrero227

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tomriley5790 Yes hearing all this its just utterly insane that anyone would voluntarily step foot in that death trap

  • @user-lv7ph7hs7l

    @user-lv7ph7hs7l

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes exactly me too. Mir (and Alvin) to me are what I would expect to see Titanic. First time I saw the boat I was confused. Didn't quite register for a moment it was the sub. I thought it was maybe a camera to film the main sub....

  • @AnimeSunglasses

    @AnimeSunglasses

    Жыл бұрын

    It's not the hand-assembly that worries me, it's the scarcity of testing. I would never want to go anywhere in a submersible that it hadn't tested at! Or that didn't have a tether and hardwired comms to the surface!

  • @melaniegarden3416
    @melaniegarden3416 Жыл бұрын

    Incredibly well done. Looking forward to your follow up.

  • @stutteringstutterson9888
    @stutteringstutterson9888 Жыл бұрын

    Appreciate the effort and knowledge put into this video. Thank you.

  • @stlpaulie
    @stlpaulie Жыл бұрын

    This isn’t a tragedy, this was entirely preventable and negligent. It’s criminal not a tragedy.

  • @redmage777

    @redmage777

    Жыл бұрын

    Why does being criminal preclude it from being a tragedy? Its all those things.

  • @keenanmoore264

    @keenanmoore264

    Жыл бұрын

    They signed a waiver though. So any criminal charges would be negated, I think.

  • @Getloose360

    @Getloose360

    Жыл бұрын

    @@keenanmoore264 🤷🏿‍♂️...🤦🏿‍♂️

  • @JG27Korny

    @JG27Korny

    Жыл бұрын

    @@keenanmoore264 no waiver can save you from gross negligence. But the responsible is dead too.

  • @coconuts7960

    @coconuts7960

    Жыл бұрын

    @@keenanmoore264 most waviers like those "any injury is my fault" often fall through in court and don't actually make it the person who signed fault. its more of a deterant to sue than anything

  • @gravestone4840
    @gravestone4840 Жыл бұрын

    I used to build military Subs with crazy high tolerance standards. You had to test and re-test every single weld, screw, bolt, wire, pipe, literally everything. They had whole teams testing everything that could possibly go wrong during the manufacturing process. Anything less could mean death for the crew. Even with all that redundant testing, I always thought those guys going down in those things were nuts. There's no way I would have went down in that shoddy looking thing, especially to the untested depth that they went. With a Sub like that there's no excuse not to do some remote unmanned descents. Even some tethered drops could have saved these folks lives. The ocean is no joke, you don't respect her for a single second and she'll take you for everything you're worth.

  • @wazza33racer

    @wazza33racer

    Жыл бұрын

    damn straight, its not called "the cruel sea" for nothing, it dont care in the slightest.

  • @cproteus

    @cproteus

    Жыл бұрын

    The North Atlantic at that. 😢 no joke at all.

  • @trteeerryfse-wy2ww

    @trteeerryfse-wy2ww

    Жыл бұрын

    I'll take you for everything you have. ❤

  • @penelopelgoss2520

    @penelopelgoss2520

    Жыл бұрын

    I worked at GD in SD, CA on the Cruise Missile program. The testing, retesting, DCAS Governmental steps for testing and safety and always questioning did get a little old but then our bozo supervisor kicked the ground wire off the cruise missile in full fuel testing mode. He could have flattened the entire building! He was acting carelessly and not paying attention. KABOOM! I wouldn't be alive. This CEO is paying for his shortcuts and with the lives of others and the families and friends of all those who've been lost.😪😭☹😢😧😲😱

  • @millennialpoes5674

    @millennialpoes5674

    Жыл бұрын

    Sure you did lol

  • @cmartin1226
    @cmartin1226 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you fellow US Navy sub guy. When I heard the design and of comms lost I knew it imploded. Should have been certified.

  • @DarkHowlerz
    @DarkHowlerz Жыл бұрын

    An unfortunate tragedy, that maybe could have been avoided. Condolences to all the families.

  • @lonniesullivan7821
    @lonniesullivan7821 Жыл бұрын

    Just hearing that the CEO had them remove direct comms, because he got frustrated with situation reports interrupting his good time, tells me everything I need to know about this operation and why it was doomed to fail. I guess he didnt want any old salts in the organization, for the same reason.... They'd be a bummer on his good time, with their disagreement on choices made in this sub design and testing. Direct comms should've been left in, failure in deep waters of the passive comms used, shouldve been dealt with before guests were taken down. The sub should've been pushed to 4000 in test dives before guests were taken down to the Titanic's depth. Controls shouldve been hard wired and not off the shelf. Emergency O2 and mask should've been in place for the driver at least, so he could remain effwctive and save all the crew in an emergency. So many failures, and most of them easily avoided with patience, more testing, and use of input from more experienced personnel.

  • @01iverQueen

    @01iverQueen

    Жыл бұрын

    What's weird to me is that they chose to go 3000m when testing instead of 4000m which they obviously knew that they will have to reach. Which makes you question why they did it if they bothered testing at all. It's like they deliberately chose to cover up and lie about testing at 4000m

  • @TojiFushigoroWasTaken

    @TojiFushigoroWasTaken

    Жыл бұрын

    Wow im surprised a lot of news channels aren't discussing this....this makes so much more sense....his stupidity doomed them all....i wonder if the remaining people inflict a physical damage to the ceo as he did this to all of them

  • @Lunk42

    @Lunk42

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep sounds like the guy cared more about his own ego than the lives of people entering the sub.

  • @Thisandthat8908

    @Thisandthat8908

    Жыл бұрын

    That's also sounds a bit like Apollo 1. Of course Gus Grissom famously complained about bad com (during that very test) but they did not cut it.

  • @sly2792004

    @sly2792004

    Жыл бұрын

    should just bought a existing design sub that's proven safe. but its sure all this was to save cost and maximize profits.

  • @isaacfaith9369
    @isaacfaith9369 Жыл бұрын

    An employee at OceanGate was fired back in 2018 for raising concerns about the hull of the submersible being unsuited for the targeted depths. ALL of the warning signs were there. But Stockton actively seemed to disregard every single one of them. It's a tragedy that these souls had to perish this way. It was avoidable.

  • @jconearth6686

    @jconearth6686

    Жыл бұрын

    ...IT HAS N0T SH0WN THAT ANY0NE PERISHED...THERE IS THAT P0SSIBILITY 0F C0URSE, BUT UNTIL THEN @ISAACFAITH, HAVE S0ME 'FAITH' AND A LITTLE H0PE - AND PRAYERS .

  • @horacewonghy

    @horacewonghy

    Жыл бұрын

    You know what, he should hire a narco sub builder instead of you😂

  • @isaacfaith9369

    @isaacfaith9369

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jconearth6686 I would like to have faith in times like these. We can only hope for the best and leave the rest to the experts. But I am also a man of reason, and my current reasoning is that the Titan got folded into the size of a grape fruit by the sea.

  • @joeshmoe7967

    @joeshmoe7967

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jconearth6686 I can agree to a point, I think they are gone, but I hope I am totally wrong.

  • @Lucas-ys7gl

    @Lucas-ys7gl

    Жыл бұрын

    @@isaacfaith9369 I get a sense the CEO fancies himself the Elon Musk of submarines. Am I close in that evaluation? Btw, Elon isn’t the genius, the people that work for him are.

  • @allgunsblazed9106
    @allgunsblazed9106 Жыл бұрын

    Feel bad for the kid , not the billionaire's

  • @j_m_b_1914
    @j_m_b_1914 Жыл бұрын

    So many people on Reddit were making fun of the game controller. I'm so happy you realized there was nothing wrong with using a well researched and manufactured game controller. I was especially happy that you picked up on the real issue -- that he was using a wireless one. The only other issue was that he probably should have used two for redundancy (much like airplanes with duplicate controls for a copilot). Great video!

  • @herbert92x
    @herbert92x Жыл бұрын

    My father in law was a career submariner going back to just after the Nautilus. He used to cringe at the recreational sub business. While the USN makes it look easy, the safety regs were written in 'fish food'.

  • @dasboat64

    @dasboat64

    Жыл бұрын

    That's an understatement. Having earned my "fish" and served thousands of hours underwater, aboard several US Navy submarines... the ocean is very unforgiving under perfect conditions.

  • @kristihall174

    @kristihall174

    Жыл бұрын

    My step-dad was always shaking his head at the recreational sub business model. He was a Navy man and was an subs frequently during his 20 year career. The ocean is extremely dangerous under perfect conditions. Unfortunately, these 5 men aren't coming home. In all likelihood it was a hull breach.

  • @ws8061

    @ws8061

    Жыл бұрын

    I've met a few guys who make mucho grande in the private sector consulting for O&G who were sub guys and it's all to try and immulate subsafe within the constraints of the private sector on their ships and oil platforms (that's at least what they told me, I believed them, we were at a bar and they were indeed 40 y/o white dudes so that part checks out)

  • @johnjackson783
    @johnjackson783 Жыл бұрын

    As an Electrical Engineer., P.E. with more than 40 years of professional experience, I can appreciate hiring young inexperienced engineers and technicians. We were all “young and inexperienced” at one time. But it’s important to couple them with experienced professionals who can mentor them as I was, especially in designing and building a mission-critical submersible with no margins for errors. The USN don’t give young ensigns or Lieutenant JG command of a submarine. Sure, they’re college graduates but lack the training and experience for such a role. Stockton may have paid for his arrogance with his life and the lives of his passengers. OceanGate just closed the “gates” on any furture expeditions. And you're right "they're deceased"

  • @tocalvary9457
    @tocalvary9457 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for an in-depth and very informative analysis! Helps layperson like me to understand what went wrong.

  • @stealtoe9036
    @stealtoe9036 Жыл бұрын

    Great video hopefully you make another on the subject especially when they discover exactly what happened which will take a while.

  • @mrkeiths48
    @mrkeiths48 Жыл бұрын

    As a former US Navy submarine sailor, I appreciate the risk. We used the thumb rule of approximately 46 psi for every 100 feet of depth. At 13,100 feet, that would be greater than 5000 psi acting on that submersible. Fortunately, a breach with that much differential pressure would make for a quick dismissal. I only hope that they are not stuck down there and they run out of oxygen.

  • @tertiuscilliers6412

    @tertiuscilliers6412

    Жыл бұрын

    As a South African Navy sailor with subs in our navy as well, I have to wonder why they did not have an externaly mounted EPIRB in case of emergencies. Al vessels that sail more than 100 miles from the coat must have one, even our subs have them. That was recless, plus I cannot imagine that, that sub could sustain 5 people for 96 hours at that depth, I hope that your assesment was correct and that their end would of came quickly and relatively painlessly. May they RIP

  • @The_Ballo

    @The_Ballo

    Жыл бұрын

    For all we know they surfaced and have yet to be found. What a SNAFU

  • @nickbreen287

    @nickbreen287

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tertiuscilliers6412 You would need a very special EPIRB that can withstand 400 Bar cycling!

  • @louiscypher4186

    @louiscypher4186

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nickbreen287 They make them but i don't know if there any that are made for commercial subs. In any case commercial sub's have had a much simpler system available for decades called an "acoustic beacon". Which is exact what it sounds like, It basically just gives out a constant sonar ping so rescue vessels can hone in on it. Of course at that depth the range would be extremely limited. I'm sure that wasn't "hip" and "inspirational" enough for the CEO though.

  • @FifinatorKlon

    @FifinatorKlon

    Жыл бұрын

    ffs, please do use non-retarded means to measure.

  • @MrDjslater
    @MrDjslater Жыл бұрын

    This seems to be quite an ironic twist of fate that a submarine, touted to be the best of it's kind, went missing while carrying ultra wealthy passengers, to visit the wreckage of a ship that was billed as unsinkable and carried ultra wealthy passengers.

  • @quinncupp5218

    @quinncupp5218

    Жыл бұрын

    Yep

  • @sebastiannelson6355

    @sebastiannelson6355

    Жыл бұрын

    I wonder how long it is till a third one joins them and it becomes a curse

  • @blah007001

    @blah007001

    Жыл бұрын

    @@sebastiannelson6355 If the current pattern holds: 111 years. Perhaps the next sub will be called the "Futility" or the "Olympia" for more irony.

  • @ralphjune9798

    @ralphjune9798

    Жыл бұрын

    those ultra wealthy people are everywhere!

  • @maggyfrog

    @maggyfrog

    Жыл бұрын

    i beleive this is what's meant by "history doesn't repeat but it rhymes"

  • @stephenernsberger9678
    @stephenernsberger9678 Жыл бұрын

    Let me tell you brother, if any of the family members watch this upload & most likely have... you've def! help them get a better understanding of what occurred.... that's why your THE MAN!!! God bless you, again GREAT WORK THANKS!!!

  • @jaywalker690
    @jaywalker690 Жыл бұрын

    I really enjoyed your video & informative discussion on this. Can’t wait to hear your feedback & thoughts on the development with this devastating situation.

  • @mamat1213
    @mamat1213 Жыл бұрын

    I just find it so hard to believe they had NO recovery plan for this 20k lb vessel, knowing it would require massive effort and slow ascent due to the depth. I mean just wow 🤦‍♂️

  • @BigSuzpekt

    @BigSuzpekt

    Жыл бұрын

    If there was ever a recovery plan I’m sure the CEO would have made it which salvaging the vessel to reuse it for more tours rather than to save any passengers lives. He didn’t care what could happen to passengers only about profit.

  • @mustang5132

    @mustang5132

    Жыл бұрын

    The vessel was supposed to automatically drop all ballast and start to resurface after 14 hours. I’m not sure about the specifics of this though. This was so that if the crew was incapacitated, they could still be saved. An emergency beacon would have then been activated so that they could be safely found. However, as I and many others expected, it was lost due to an implosion. There are no extra safety and rescue measures that can be taken for such a catastrophic event. The only thing that could have been done was to reinforce the structural integrity of the vessel, especially its pressure chamber. My guess is that either the vessel was not sealed properly or that after numerous dives and hours at the intense pressure at such low depths, the structural integrity slowly deteriorated. Once it was damaged enough and it went below an acceptable depth, it imploded. Allegedly, Rush fired an employee after he publicly claimed that the sub should only have been rated at 1800 meters and that the window was a structural weak point so take from that what you will

  • @spearson103

    @spearson103

    Жыл бұрын

    He's a rich kid, he knows tax payers will ultimately wind up footing the bill for his misadventures

  • @nineteen8122

    @nineteen8122

    Жыл бұрын

    @@BigSuzpekt Well, that’s a ridiculous statement.

  • @Queenofmykingdom123

    @Queenofmykingdom123

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MBRMrblueroads I could defo believe it 🤣

  • @TheBitterSarcasmOfMs.Anthropy
    @TheBitterSarcasmOfMs.Anthropy Жыл бұрын

    As an ex nuke submariner, I would have never gone 10 ft deep in a swimming pool let alone 9000 feet in this death trap.

  • @marklafferty4031

    @marklafferty4031

    Жыл бұрын

    The people such as yourself who have lived this as a career would truly see this for what it is. Sad to see that people that have paid for this don’t truly see or understand the risks involved.

  • @TheTimeFarm

    @TheTimeFarm

    Жыл бұрын

    Cut them some slack, I'd chill at the bottom of the deep end all day in this thing as long as the pool was empty.

  • @bessanessa301

    @bessanessa301

    Жыл бұрын

    That’s probably the real reason he didn’t want to hire veterans; the SMEs wouldn’t get near it

  • @cheddar2648

    @cheddar2648

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheTimeFarm The sea does not cut anyone some slack, "bruh"

  • @AviationNut

    @AviationNut

    Жыл бұрын

    The titanic is at 13,000 feet, 3962 meters which is just mind blowing.

  • @lalajohnson7194
    @lalajohnson7194 Жыл бұрын

    I've worked with some of the older military personnel. It's understood no two people are the same, but I've found these guys to be awesome to work with! I learned so much from working with them! I understand why military personnel are given priority for hiring. The logical problem solving, team working applications the ability to stay calm, because they've seen it all. This company would've only benefitted even if one was hired just to consult!

  • @leecowell8165

    @leecowell8165

    Жыл бұрын

    Military people are given priority because they do not question authority and do what they're told without a buncha lip. Tell you what though to become a submariner in the states you ain't stupid.

  • @pvtjohntowle4081
    @pvtjohntowle4081 Жыл бұрын

    A very good summary of the potential issues with the loss of this submersible.