Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:one of the members of the 5 is a retired French navy diver. apparently tapping every 30 minutes is a navy call signal and not something random. I think they are or at least were still alive.
Thank you! I didn't know that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why doesn't a military sub assist?
How? A “normal” sub cannot dive that deep. And if there are military subs that can and do, I don’t think their governments would want that publicly known.
Military subs can descend to 3000ft. These guys are 12000fy below.
If you think its as simple as sending down a sub to scoop up the capsule or tether a sonar beacon to a submarine and drag it around hoping to detect a ping, then I have a bridge to sell to you.
It would be like flying a kite to catch a space shuttle.
How can a military sub only go to 3000 feet, but these capsules can go to 12,000? Just wondering why the technology is so different.
Probably a cost/benefit decision. Probably not necessary for 99% of dives.
Anonymous wrote:“Safety is pure waste,” said submersible CEO now trapped in unrescuable submersible:
https://bestlifeonline.com/missing-titanic-submarine-ceo-safety-is-waste-news/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The issue is we don’t even know for sure that Titan is intact at this point. We could be spinning our wheels for nothing here.
But the banging suggested it was intact.
Also, can't they locate due to banging noise?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The issue is we don’t even know for sure that Titan is intact at this point. We could be spinning our wheels for nothing here.
But the banging suggested it was intact.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The issue is we don’t even know for sure that Titan is intact at this point. We could be spinning our wheels for nothing here.
But the banging suggested it was intact.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why doesn't a military sub assist?
We’ve got tons of subs in our navy; why doesn’t one of ours just go there, have the crew swim over one by one, and bring those people home already?
So our US Navy submariners can swim at 12000 feet below sea level? We've come a long way in naval warfare preparations.
We lost one of the worlds best divers Dave Shaw when he tried to retrieve the body of a fellow diver. The risk is too high to send a diver down this deep into the ocean.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why doesn't a military sub assist?
because it takes days to get one there. i think they are trying
I don't believe that - there are subs off the coast all the time. There are subs from other countries as well - why aren't they assisting? It's been days since this started and at least one could have made it there by now.
all i've read is they are trying to get an unmanned vessel to the site but it won't be there until later today.
To what purpose it will be there? Best hope if that they are not too deep in the ocean but floating somewhere where sub can go?
If they see it, then they can stop looking everywhere else.
Personally I don't think they're currently alive. But if they are, they are only save-able if they're on the surface or somehow at a shallow depth. That's why rescuers are looking everywhere, across a huge area: just in case. If we see them on the bottom, we can't save them but at least we know.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why doesn't a military sub assist?
We’ve got tons of subs in our navy; why doesn’t one of ours just go there, have the crew swim over one by one, and bring those people home already?
So our US Navy submariners can swim at 12000 feet below sea level? We've come a long way in naval warfare preparations.
Anonymous wrote:The issue is we don’t even know for sure that Titan is intact at this point. We could be spinning our wheels for nothing here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The submersible is sealed with 17 21" bolts that can only be unscrewed from the outside.
Really?? What an awful design flaw.
Why? It's not like they could open it, exit, and swim to the surface.
Seems like a necessary design. If they were the other way, perhaps the pressure from the ocean could press inwards and “unscrew” them. Then everyone definitely dies. Bolting from the outside in means the pressure strengthens the bond.