A search is underway for missing submarine that takes people to see Titanic..

The idea of being on that submersible is causing me a lot of anxiety. I know they paid "good" money and I know they were all aware of the risks but the thought of being in such a tight space with 4 other people (2 of the passengers are father & son) while grappling with impending disaster fills me with angst.
 
Miles under the sea, and they driving that bitch with a PS4 controller? :smh:

RIP.
Easier to unlock secret levels...... even the secret boss level at the bottom of the sea.....
:itsawrap:

The missing Titanic tourist submersible was piloted with a video-game controller, had a water bottle for a toilet, and previously got lost for 2 ½ hours on a CBS TV segment​


 

The maker of the lost Titan submersible previously complained about strict passenger-vessel regulations, saying the industry was 'obscenely safe'​

AA1cMUcl.img

Stockton Rush, the CEO of OceanGate Expeditions, on April 12, 2017
  • In a 2019 interview, the Titan's maker lamented "obscenely safe" diving security regulations.
  • CEO Stockton Rush said he understood the regulations but regretted their effect on innovation.
  • Rush is understood to be on board the submersible that lost contact with the surface Sunday.
The founder of the company behind the Titan submersible previously described his industry as "obscenely safe" and complained that passenger-vessel regulations held back innovation.

OceanGate Expeditions CEO Stockton Rush is understood to be aboard the Titan, the submersible that lost contact with the surface Sunday, prompting fears for his safety.

The vessel, which set out with four other passengers to view the wreck of the Titanic, was believed as of early Tuesday to have between 70 and 96 hours of oxygen left, the US Coast Guard said.

Rush's efforts to advance the commercial submersible industry — distinct from the world of submarines —have been well documented in the media.

Describing the industry in a 2019 interview, Rush said that there had been no injuries in the field for decades, adding: "It's obscenely safe because they have all these regulations. But it also hasn't innovated or grown — because they have all these regulations."

OceanGate did not immediately respond to a request for comment, sent outside working hours.

Its website describes a commitment to "high-level operational safety" and the Titan's "unparalleled" hull-monitoring safety system.

The profile of Rush, which appeared in Smithsonian Magazine, describes his efforts to expand human exploration of the deep, calling him a "daredevil inventor."

It chronicles Rush's passion for exploring and his efforts to energize the market in private submersibles, which had long been dampened by the number of industrial accidents in offshore submarine work.

A 1993 regulation put strict controls on safety standards and who could pilot a submersible.

Rush called these developments "understandable but illogical," saying he felt the law was well meaning but lamenting the stifling effect it put on commercial innovation.

His remarks on safety came as part of a wider set of regrets about how little the US government prioritized ocean research.

A 2019 blog post on OceanGate's website cites speed of innovation as one of the reasons the Titan isn't classed according to standard regulatory processes. It said that while the company met standards "where they apply," the slow processes of vessel classification were "anathema to innovation."

Rush's company began to advertise in 2019 commercial trips in the Titan to see the famed Titanic wreck, touting an experimental design whose carbon-fiber hull was considerably lighter than other vehicles.

Trips were postponed, according to the magazine, after the company failed to get the proper permits for its contracted research-support vessel.

As of Tuesday, efforts to locate and contact the Titan were still underway.



 
No way to find that small ass capsule amongst a 113 year-old miles wide debris on the ocean floor on sight and sonar alone.
I do this for a living. It's hard to find shit when you know the general area of something. Our sonar is good to about 300 meters. You would need so much time to scan the area at that resolution because the sonar head is moving slowly.

They need a gang of ROV's if they don't have a beacon.
 
I do this for a living. It's hard to find shit when you know the general area of something. Our sonar is good to about 300 meters. You would need so much time to scan the area at that resolution because the sonar head is moving slowly.

They need a gang of ROV's if they don't have a beacon.
A beacon? That cheap mofo that owned it was complaining about safety regulations..... look at the article that I posted above
sidebar: if they didn't die immediately, I hope one of them got a quarter to tap on the side of that coffin

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Money and free time is always a great thing. :lol: You know that shit. Ain't no flex like having money to have all that free time. People just choose different risks.

Yeah, but most those people working those slave jobs barely have a week of truly doing what they want in 75 fucking years of living. :smh:

Prepare for work, commute, work, come home and get a few hours, rinse, fucking repeat, die. Maybe go on a vacation once a year while crammed in coach next to some body positive cow.

Seems strange that people would do this shit of all things, but they doing what the fuck they want when they want. That's living. Well, was in their case.

LOL no fuckin doubt....

sure money and free time is truly heaven on earth....

Im just saying IF TRUE, their oxygen supply is supposed to run out on thursday,

Come wednesday night, if a genie came to them and told them, they had choice, to die,

or flip burgers for the rest of their life

what do you think they would choose??
 
Damn. Imagine being crushed out of existence by the pressure of the whole ass ocean to see vaguely a rusty old ship. Whipipo.

This is what I don't get. 2 miles down is not a short trip at all. They just released images that show the Titanic's front section in detail. They could have just put it on the big screen and call it a day.
 
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LOL no fuckin doubt....

sure money and free time is truly heaven on earth....

Im just saying IF TRUE, their oxygen supply is supposed to run out on thursday,

Come wednesday night, if a genie came to them and told them, they had choice, to die,

or flip burgers for the rest of their life

what do you think they would choose??
They going to choose flip burgers. Then the genie going to check in on them 5 years and see them helping on the grill of one of the 10 burger kings they own.

Those rich cacs will be satisfied with being on land for all the time it takes them to catch their breath.
 
The idea of being on that submersible is causing me a lot of anxiety. I know they paid "good" money and I know they were all aware of the risks but the thought of being in such a tight space with 4 other people (2 of the passengers are father & son) while grappling with impending disaster fills me with angst.
..add to that they all got they swamp feet out no shoes on + a fucking porta-potty trainer chillin in the corner :itsawrap:
 
Lolz James Cameron is about to say "fuck the Avatar sequels" and is already penning "Titanic 2: Submersible"....Shit will hit theaters in 2 years on a $300 million dollar budget, recreating with digital precision, the claustrophobic environment of said submersible along with screen accurate recreations of the joystick used to control it. It will win Best Picture.
 
Those fucks didn't even get to see the Titanic..... they were only one hour forty-five minutes into the dive... if it imploded, they became part of the site like a crushed soda can

A Titanic dive takes about 10 hours from start to finish, including the two and a half hours it takes to reach the bottom, the website says.

.
 
Those fucks didn't even get to see the Titanic..... they were only one hour forty-five minutes into the dive... if it imploded, they became part of the site like a crushed soda can

A Titanic dive takes about 10 hours from start to finish, including the two and a half hours it takes to reach the bottom, the website says.

.
Maaan FUCK that! Every part of it!!
 
Those fucks didn't even get to see the Titanic..... they were only one hour forty-five minutes into the dive... if it imploded, they became part of the site like a crushed soda can

A Titanic dive takes about 10 hours from start to finish, including the two and a half hours it takes to reach the bottom, the website says.

.
Major fail :smh:
 
Heard em say they got an estimated 40 hours of oxygen left.

Anybody know how long they were supposed to be gone if this would have went as planned? Had anyone been down in this bitch b4 or was this the 1st run?
 
More questionable shit to be risking your life with.... I know David Pogue is thanking his lucky stars

CBS News' David Pogue on his experience diving on now-missing sub​

A large search and rescue mission is underway in the North Atlantic for a submersible carrying five passengers to the site of the Titanic shipwreck, after it went missing Sunday. CBS' David Pogue profiled the company that owns and operates the sub for "CBS Sunday Mornings" in 2022. He joins "CBS Mornings" to discuss his experience on the sub.


 
Imagine seeing the dude with a game controller while you’re in panic mode
One of those dudes is gonna snap on him. The argument will only decrease the oxygen supply

Owner of the company never told them the rescue hack...... up, up, down, left, right, X, X, A, start, Y, up

:itsawrap:
Nigga I’m trying to be respectful and you in here wildin out :lol: :lol: :lol:
I’m going to hell because of you :smh: :lol:
 
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Heard em say they got an estimated 40 hours of oxygen left.

Anybody know how long they were supposed to be gone if this would have went as planned? Had anyone been down in this bitch b4 or was this the 1st run?
10 hours.... peep what I already posted iron.... they've been running this as a tourist business for a couple of years now after starting as a research business

.
 

The maker of the lost Titan submersible previously complained about strict passenger-vessel regulations, saying the industry was 'obscenely safe'​

AA1cMUcl.img

Stockton Rush, the CEO of OceanGate Expeditions, on April 12, 2017
  • In a 2019 interview, the Titan's maker lamented "obscenely safe" diving security regulations.
  • CEO Stockton Rush said he understood the regulations but regretted their effect on innovation.
  • Rush is understood to be on board the submersible that lost contact with the surface Sunday.
The founder of the company behind the Titan submersible previously described his industry as "obscenely safe" and complained that passenger-vessel regulations held back innovation.

OceanGate Expeditions CEO Stockton Rush is understood to be aboard the Titan, the submersible that lost contact with the surface Sunday, prompting fears for his safety.

The vessel, which set out with four other passengers to view the wreck of the Titanic, was believed as of early Tuesday to have between 70 and 96 hours of oxygen left, the US Coast Guard said.

Rush's efforts to advance the commercial submersible industry — distinct from the world of submarines —have been well documented in the media.

Describing the industry in a 2019 interview, Rush said that there had been no injuries in the field for decades, adding: "It's obscenely safe because they have all these regulations. But it also hasn't innovated or grown — because they have all these regulations."

OceanGate did not immediately respond to a request for comment, sent outside working hours.

Its website describes a commitment to "high-level operational safety" and the Titan's "unparalleled" hull-monitoring safety system.

The profile of Rush, which appeared in Smithsonian Magazine, describes his efforts to expand human exploration of the deep, calling him a "daredevil inventor."

It chronicles Rush's passion for exploring and his efforts to energize the market in private submersibles, which had long been dampened by the number of industrial accidents in offshore submarine work.

A 1993 regulation put strict controls on safety standards and who could pilot a submersible.

Rush called these developments "understandable but illogical," saying he felt the law was well meaning but lamenting the stifling effect it put on commercial innovation.

His remarks on safety came as part of a wider set of regrets about how little the US government prioritized ocean research.

A 2019 blog post on OceanGate's website cites speed of innovation as one of the reasons the Titan isn't classed according to standard regulatory processes. It said that while the company met standards "where they apply," the slow processes of vessel classification were "anathema to innovation."

Rush's company began to advertise in 2019 commercial trips in the Titan to see the famed Titanic wreck, touting an experimental design whose carbon-fiber hull was considerably lighter than other vehicles.

Trips were postponed, according to the magazine, after the company failed to get the proper permits for its contracted research-support vessel.

As of Tuesday, efforts to locate and contact the Titan were still underway.



Well if the vessel suffered decompression his foot is literally in his mouth now...
 
Lolz James Cameron is about to say "fuck the Avatar sequels" and is already penning "Titanic 2: Submersible"....Shit will hit theaters in 2 years on a $300 million dollar budget, recreating with digital precision, the claustrophobic environment of said submersible along with screen accurate recreations of the joystick used to control it. It will win Best Picture.
Celine Dion's song "On Their Brave Journey" will be described by critics as"..a soaring tribute"...
 
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