Imagine if the billionaires just bought one of these machines instead of going themselves 😅😅
@BeyondtheBox117 сағат бұрын
I’d happily go visit the titanic crash in VR lol
@mitramikeextractz450218 сағат бұрын
Man this hunk of crapola should have never even be able to float on top of a pond! Such a shame that Rush's pride killed those people 😢 frfr all those issues and warnings and such and they still kept rolling thinking it was gonna be aye ok 😮
@steveokingdom588318 сағат бұрын
Is that other part where the people were in?
@torotheplumber378818 сағат бұрын
never used "silla-con" as you put it , because im honest . It was a nice detailed video though.
@r1p1m18 сағат бұрын
Skull head at 5:41 💀
@carlosa.a.100718 сағат бұрын
In a possibly not so far future: Some company: Let's make an attraction to see the remains of the Titan! Ah, yes, and those of the Titanic too.
@Killbear8418 сағат бұрын
Whats a simulition?
@Lottie.Bronte32118 сағат бұрын
This might be a very dumb question but given the titanium portions look relatively unscathed, why on Earth wasn’t the whole thing made from titanium, thereby avoiding bonding and compression issues between different materials? I’m not an engineer but logic just tells me you’re asking for trouble.
@danokerr992918 сағат бұрын
Ocean gate was a joke back in the day and still is. Hope the people in this deathtrap had peace
@Tarantino11118 сағат бұрын
Great m breakdown bro
@robertpresha950418 сағат бұрын
Everything was wrong with that sub.And now he is gone.But he accomplished what he wanted. He is now apart of history. RIP.
@raphaeldoolichand710918 сағат бұрын
Why put a union there?
@BerryMcCaulkiner85918 сағат бұрын
That titanium ring seal is what failed if I had to bet
@robertfindley92118 сағат бұрын
This looks amateurish. So disorganized. Like 5-year-old talking into soup cans connected by a string. I can't believe anyone would accept this. So unprofessional and risky.
@yates660819 сағат бұрын
The glass was nowhere to be seen, maybe the glass was the culprit and that's where the implosion started
@rodneygarces752919 сағат бұрын
Quien conoce de como funciona la presión a grandes profundidades esta bien claro que desde que se supo que el titan implosiono los restos de sus ocupantes no existían ya que debido a la fractura de la nave la implosión a tales profundidades ocurre a tal velocidad que sus ocupantes nunca se enteran que paso, por lo menos no se enteran en este mundo, tal vez en el otro si.
@hermitdan247219 сағат бұрын
Bungee cords holding it togather?
@jloyer238419 сағат бұрын
Ummm... the rachet strap around the debris is suspect to me howd that happen.
@Erenyaegerbernardin19 сағат бұрын
Remember one guy flew off with the front of the vessel so he wasn’t squished along side everyone else but rather alone
@HeaanLasai19 сағат бұрын
Shocking? Ok, you had your fun, now show yourself out. Great video.
@SageGilbert19119 сағат бұрын
why can I hear this man’s every breath
@GordonJohnson-vc8sm19 сағат бұрын
The titan should have been on a leash. They could have been lowered and raised 😢
@BrianFlanigan-nw3ds19 сағат бұрын
Such a shame that poor kid got stuck inside of this.
@julian987r419 сағат бұрын
I am not convinced that it all happened in a nano second. I believe they knew something terrible was on the cards, perhaps only for a few seconds.
@dannyyarbrough91519 сағат бұрын
Stockton Rush shouldn't have rushed with stock parts
@carmenvelazquez958320 сағат бұрын
No pues esa fibra de carbono no sirve, no aguanta
@TCR_Division489120 сағат бұрын
Got a sub from me pardon the pun, your some man sitting there early in the morning till late dinner time. Respect from scotland
@jeffm932820 сағат бұрын
Did the groundskeepers use the blowers in the morning to clear of the course
@beantea559220 сағат бұрын
The rov view of the ocean floor would be pleanty cool enough for me. Plus no danger.
@novastar611220 сағат бұрын
Subnautica ah lookin wreck
@jamesroberts165520 сағат бұрын
I wonder how easy it would have been to just simply strip the old carbon and steel cylinder out and just put new pressure hulls in there every year, none of this would have happened.
@Bigboyjayja7gq20 сағат бұрын
What I don’t understand is why make something so small and poorly designed when you had the money to design it safer comfortable for the passengers liking especially with the big bucks b they paid to get on that thing
@burningMalarkey20 сағат бұрын
Man, these people didn’t deserve to die over this. An experiment with live bodies in it. Crazy man.
@scasey196020 сағат бұрын
Money vs engineering - rip the Oceangate crew.
@ameltjr980220 сағат бұрын
When will we see the GoPro footage?
@scasey196020 сағат бұрын
True SV disaster - engineering trumps ego
@nonickelordime659421 сағат бұрын
i wounder if the little mermaid is riding around with this
@CjArt7821 сағат бұрын
The deaths may have been extremely quick but I'm quite sure that there was a lot of terror before that moment. Doing reckless things like this never ends well.
@charlee852621 сағат бұрын
The titanium fared well.. 😂
@michaelcarmean490621 сағат бұрын
Yes… 3rd Gunman On Top Of Gym 1200’ Away The Real Sniper 🤔 I Believe He Got Away… The Truth Was Crooks Never Fired And Was Shot In Back Of The Head Not In Front… The Other Gunman On The Water Tower Was Mark Violets (Antifa)They Got Him But Didn’t Talk Much About It Always Focusing On One Gunman Crooks
@fridaycaliforniaa23621 сағат бұрын
Omg, thanks *a lot* to this guy who sent you this video !
@Sean1224821 сағат бұрын
I really hope these people didn't suffer. I'm sad that the passengers and pilot are dead. I could care less about Rush. He's the example forever more of what NOT to do. It's very unsettling that this is near the Titanic.
@Neo_Rain14621 сағат бұрын
People were paying $250 000 to go down in that death trap. Pardon the pun but let that sink in
@tbob821221 сағат бұрын
I would like to know what company made that ratchet strap? If it survived a submersible failure at 12,500 feet underwater and still working like it should?! Well that's good enough for me to shell out some $$$ from my wallet for use when a ratchet strap is required at home or for hauling something or whatever else 😂 Good marketing for the company "12,500 feet underwater and still holding" 😂
@melodymyers662221 сағат бұрын
Didn’t learn anything from the Challenger Space Station Rocket and their “O RINGS”….???
@anthonyng301421 сағат бұрын
Blows my mind someone was able to stay married to such an obviously insane person as Stockton. If he acted this way to his clients, his employees, I can just imagine how he was to his family.
@sonniewesley551822 сағат бұрын
I truly don't believe he cured that carbon fiber after every inch put on, i think some inches was skipped, i mean if it was cured right i feel it would've been a little stiffer just thinking about all those crackling sounds heard all the times. I mean that picture of the first hull looked liked it was shredding apart not just a crack.
@anthonywarren420722 сағат бұрын
The entire concept of this vessel was idiotic as a result of the materials used and the construction methodology. To be brief: 1) Carbon Fiber is a stiff material with high flex modulus and is very useful in tension. It is not great in compression, even fiberglass is better in compression. Fiberglass is about as strong as steel, and almost as well proven. Need more strength, use more glass. The main failure mode will be found to be interfacial failure between the epoxy matrix and the carbon under compression; 2) From the construction of the vessel video's I have observed, they used a wet-lay up process with little regard to the thickness, viscosity, and tension of the carbon fibers as the wrap was undertaken. I will add that it was a very dirty environment with careless application of the epoxy matrix. Why they didn't at least use prepreg fiber is a mystery. They could have talked to some serious carbon fiber experts at Boeing to find out the right way to do this sort of build. Clearly they should have at least used a tougher, more rubbery epoxy; 3) Titanium? Titanium has great properties but for this type of construction they may have been better off with steel. Mass and weight were not an overwhelming consideration in the pressure hemispheres, add bulk and one gets all the compressive strength needed for the application, and steel is well proven from the standpoint of adhesion science; 4) Bond of titanium to carbon fiber. This is a critical step and the design of the bond is absurd. As pointed out in the video, there was zero abrasive preparation and the applicator had as pointed out zero understanding of adhesive preparation. The bond seemed to be a few inches deep, I would have designed it to be at least 6 to 8 inches or even more, it is a mission critical bond. It should have been abrasive blasted with Silicon Carbide that was clean and achieved ISO SA 3 standards for white metal cleaning. Then if anyone came near it without gloves on, they would be shot!; and 5) The would have probably been better off to use and acrylic or epoxy hatch design. There are epoxies that are clear and meet or exceed the physical properties of acrylics and bonding like to like is always the best way to go. Although, I have little doubt that a company like Reynolds Acrylics could have designed a far higher strength hatch assembly with great bonding to the carbon fiber. My two bits worth, with input from a few colleagues, with fancy PhD's in aerospace engineering from places like MIT, Cal Tech, and Cambridge.
@gregory349922 сағат бұрын
Sorry but nobody thought they were going down to rescue anyone. Anybody with a brain knew they were dead the instant they were reporrted missing