28 points
*

This is haunting.

There’s no gore or anything, it’s just twisted metal and cables. Still, seeing it and thinking “humans were alive in there mere days ago” made my gut drop. It’s not like looking at wreckage of an old ship or plane or something, it’s different. Because it’s so small, it feels more intimate. Like looking at a coffin vs looking at a graveyard

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2 points

The death of one man is a tragedy, the death of millions is a statistic

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7 points

Omg so tru. *Comits genocide

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4 points
*

Wow so deep /s

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-3 points

So Holocaust is not a tragedy? That’s what you’re saying?

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9 points

No, it’s just a common saying that shows how people react to this sort of news. It’s a bit cynical but not untrue.

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5 points

Hoho!

u/seesaw is looking for a reason to fight.

It’s a common saying you buffoon.

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-6 points

The death of a billionaire however, is hilarious 🤣

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9 points

The death of 4 is aquatic praxis

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0 points

How is the death of anyone hilarious? Does it matter how much you have in your pocket book which will determine the level of hilarity to you? That’s cold. I surely hope you have more empathy in person.

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-3 points

I truly hope you people are not being serious…

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1 point

Weren’t the occupants cremated instantly?

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15 points

I would go with creamed.

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3 points

Diluted

since they were in the water

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1 point

Superheated then liquidised and dispersed like chum

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27 points

Wow I didn’t know they were going to recover it at all. Pretty cool. Can’t wait to read about how shitty the design was.

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2 points

I mean, it’s well known by this point. But a “seconds from disaster” version of it would be interesting to watch as disaster porn.

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23 points
*

Both titanium support rings were recovered intact. These are what bonded the carbon fiber hull to the titanium ends. There isn’t any evidence of carbon fiber still attached in the photos/ videos of the debris.

Edit: more photos

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4 points

So the front AND the back fell off? Is that normal?

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5 points

Doesn’t matter, it happened outside of the environment.

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3 points

From your link it seems that even the front titanium hemisphere is still relatively intact.

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22 points

I did not expect this thing to actually be hauled to shore. Kind of thought they were just going to leave it. How much did it cost to pull that thing up?

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20 points

Hopefully, examination of the wreckage will yield valuable information about the cause of the failure and help future designs of deep-sea submersibles.

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25 points

We already know how to build submersibles. Engineers told the CEO that this submersible was not built to spec and not safe. He fired them.

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11 points
*

Sure we do but there’s always something to be learned from a failure. This sub was unique in it’s design and while that design ultimately failed, the knowledge gained from the failure could potentially lead to an improved design that maintains some of the benefits such as low cost and high occupancy.

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17 points

Normally I’d agree with you, but we already know that carbon fiber is weaker in compression than in tension and that you really shouldn’t attach it to titanium either, due to their differences in malleability.

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1 point

You mean future designs of shallow-water submersibles, because that thing wasn’t ever meant for depths.

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1 point

I mean we have money for that. Not just for social services, cause that will set the wrong incentive /s

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17 points

These are the non-pressurised systems that would have gotten the least damage most likely.

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6 points

Ya the only damage would be from the implosion and shrapnel. Everything else was sitting at the same pressure, so there’s nothing really going on to cause damage.

It’s weird seeing huge pieces that look relatively undamaged. Looks like you can just throw that frame with all the electronics in the spare parts bin and call it a day lol

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