My bet is that the orcas got em.
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Probably what that banging sound was…
I'm not sure which of all the potential scenarios they could be in are the worst.
Floating on the surface, seeing the hope of survival through the window whilst being able to do nothing about it; trapped on the ocean floor being able to see nothing but each breath; or the sinister creaking that forewarns sudden breach and implosion.
I'm just going to tell myself they've all turned pirate and made for the Carribbean. No tragedy here! No sireeee.
One thing that struck me as really odd though. With all the safety mechanism in place to get the thing back to the surface and they paint it fucking white? That thing should be neon yellow or something.
Also, wouldn't they run out of oxygen relatively soon? I guess they expect the sub to be found quickly after resurfacing. Real nightmare stuff....
Marketing probably thought white looked cooler
You got it all wrong. They crash landed on a deserted isle. This is all according to the prophecy: Five passengers set sail that day For a three hour tour, a three hour tour. […] The ship set ground on the shore of this uncharted desert isle …something something
Or even if they have the electricity to be able to see at all.
It occurred to me that their final moments could truly be: trapped in an airtight tube, 3,800m below the surface, dwindling air supply, and no. light. Pitch darkness. No way to know if anyone is coming, how long you’ve been down there, or if the sub will instead (mercifully) give way to the pressure and crush you instantaneously and without warning.
And you are in a claustrophobic room with 4 strangers.
I seriously can't believe they don't have at least an EPIRB. If they had one, the entire "they might be on the surface" idea could pretty much be ruled out.
Yes, of course! An EPIRB!
... what is an EPIRB?
An emergency position-indicating radiobeacon (EPIRB) is a type of emergency locator beacon for commercial and recreational boats, a portable, battery-powered radio transmitter used in emergencies to locate boaters in distress and in need of immediate rescue.
It gets worse even if the sub made it to the surface it they are unable to find the sub before the oxygen runs out everyone will still die since the sub has no way open the hatch and its sealed to be airtight.
I thought we all learned this lesson with Apollo 1.
There’s a lot about OceanGate that confuses and alarms me but the thing on my mind this afternoon is why there isn’t any way for the people inside to get out without an external crew. That just seems insane—all those ways to theoretically ensure the Titan makes it to the surface in case of emergency but then you just bob there, oxygen running out, too bad? (And the submersible is white?! Not neon orange?? I hate everything about this.)
Could they have designed it in, yes. But when you're trying to be that cheap, a Logitech controller shit from camping world and old construction equipement scream being cheap, it's much cheaper to have it sealed from the outside.
I think that would be a worse way to go. Seeing the air on the surface but not being able to breathe it
Yeah... Unreal. Crazy to think you could have resurfaced... But still suffocate to death.
On why the missing vessel has not yet been located We really have no idea. I mean, the waves are six feet high. It's all whitecaps. The sub itself is white.
The more i read about this the dumber it gets.
At least there are failsafes to bring it back up. If it wasn't too deep if i understand correctly
"There are two pilots, one of which is Stockton Rush, the sub's designer and the CEO, and he drives the sub with a game controller ... It has the right levers and buttons to go up, down, left, right and so on.
This thing is controlled with a game controller. Image the reason for this whole situation is a fucking xbox one plastic controller (just if that is the case).
Edit: Apparently all failsaves should have brought the sub up to the surface, even if the crew is uncouncious.
I found the game controller thing strange at the beginning, too. But then I heard that the Us Navy is using them, too. Although not for steering but for their periscopes.
What I find really dumb is that the crew is bolted in from outside and there is no mechanism to open the vessel from the inside.
Not that it matters much when you're drifting on the open ocean.
And not painting the thing yellow or orange or something that pops, especially when it's not connected to a ship via cables and when the crew can't open the hatch themselves.
What I found kind of amusing is that people pay a quarter million and then have to take turns looking out a small window.
Maybe I'm judgmental... But my level of confidence in their failsafes working properly isnt extremely strong. Specially when the vessel is controlled with a game pad. I read it was just some generic Logitech controller.
Give me a break...
Re: Your edit
None of those fail-safes matter if it's snagged on anything, and judging by all the cables and other stuff on the outside I wouldn't be surprised if it was snagged.
However, I think the buoys 'hearing' banging does sorta mean it's closer to the surface.