Ah yes, horrors beyond imagination right before bed
@lienimation2 ай бұрын
I hear you 😂😂
@lremo0022 ай бұрын
Did not think of it this way, but now I do....my dreams should be interesting...good night
@korymanuel86822 ай бұрын
Right I don't know why people go diving in the first place I've never had a feeling or urge to want to learn to go diving and I never will LOL not only that I don't even like getting in water that I can't see through😂😅...@@lremo002
@LocalBatteryThief2 ай бұрын
@@MichaelSmith-on1ig just what the doctor ordered for a sound sleep 😊
@Blahbluh992 ай бұрын
Feel attacked
@betterchapter2 ай бұрын
Imagine it ended up being the greatest pain a human ever felt but was completely unable to let anyone be aware.
@crixuscrucifixus62182 ай бұрын
@@betterchapter Torchwood: Miracle Day
@mnemonichotpocket2 ай бұрын
I wondered if they just said that to comfort the families...
@itzYonko2 ай бұрын
@jimfrazier8611They died instaneously from shock..
@fbidenflagguy2 ай бұрын
They felt nothing.
@BingstonGames2 ай бұрын
@@fbidenflagguyyour honor you wasnt even there
@twistedyogert2 ай бұрын
I know it was quick for the divers themselves, but I can't imagine actually seeing all that unfold. One second, you're talking to the crew on the radio while you are trying to avoid laughing at their Donald Duck voice, half a second later the people you were talking and joking with are spread all over the deck.
@mnemonichotpocket2 ай бұрын
Supposedly it's on camera
@MichaelKean2 ай бұрын
@@mnemonichotpocket and on the door, and the window, and the walls...
@EShaverАй бұрын
@@MichaelKean…till sweat drops down my..?
@ajdaking507Ай бұрын
@@EShaver no dude... just no
@yeetyboigottemАй бұрын
@@twistedyogert Sounds like a skill issue
@cabbageashthe1st5942 ай бұрын
Dead in under 0.2 seconds? I feel like this is more brutal for the people who witness the event and aftermath
@Eric-qo8vv2 ай бұрын
Almost 30 years without any compensation. Ridiculous
@michaelbraum772 ай бұрын
Sounds like something us Americans would do!
@brandonmunsen60352 ай бұрын
Ridiculous? What planet have you been living on
@fredjung2 ай бұрын
THat is criminal. They put their lives on the line for the company and they treat their deaths like they fired them.
@Drakhulis2 ай бұрын
@@fredjung corporate loyalty does that tho
@astrid73042 ай бұрын
@@brandonmunsen6035 Earth, unlike you it would seem.
@magnussivertsen89722 ай бұрын
I Once worked with a guy that was at that rig when this incident occured. He told me he heard a loud sound almost like an explotion, and like they describe here, the remains of what was a man was scattered around the deck. Worst thing he ever saw. The offshore community in norway is not so big, so i’ve talked with a lot of guys experience things that sounds straight out of a horror movie.
@geometricart78512 ай бұрын
being a roughneck is no joke my dude...
@bobby4twАй бұрын
Soo this didn't happen under water?
@grantsutherland6798Ай бұрын
@@bobby4tw no it was a sudden loss of pressure on the deck-resident pressurised can. The actual dive bell latches onto this can, and can be delatched too, when on-duty divers go sub-sea
@lizzie98Ай бұрын
Thanks so much for telling us about that. I've learnt a lot. I'm so sorry you had to see what you describe. I really am and I wish I could take it away x
@Molotov_Milkshake19 күн бұрын
I live next to a railway line and close to a station. Earlier this year I saw the aftermath of someone having jumped in front of a speeding freight train at the station. There were tiny pieces of meat and gore everywhere for about 400 meters up the track from the station. It was surreal watching the police collecting all the pieces. Took them hours. Lots of pieces were left over as well as they just couldn't collect every little bit. Watching the crows picking through the remains afterwards was a bit weird. They were just throwing the pieces of bone away and looking for the meat. You don't need to be on a rig to see someone blasted into thousands of pieces. I can see it by looking out of my bedroom window.
@mikebruce4332Ай бұрын
Narrator: “This is the story of the Byford Dolphin Incident” Me jumping to conclusions: “I knew the dolphin were to blame for this!”
@UnleashedTraining101Ай бұрын
Crafty little buggers. Dolphins wake up every day and choose violence.
@bluemarvel460120 күн бұрын
🤣
@ShadowCatGold20062 ай бұрын
I realized this was about the Byford Dolphin incident about 60 seconds in. Great video. Their deaths were horrific, but thank God happened so quickly that those four divers wouldn't have had time to experience fear or feel pain.
@RCsFinest2 ай бұрын
It was definitely no accident
@FourEyesFive2 ай бұрын
@@RCsFinestit absolutely was
@RCsFinest2 ай бұрын
@@FourEyesFive Nooo not with something that crucial, that was no accident.
@ossimlz2 ай бұрын
@@RCsFinest Are you insinuating it was on purpose?
@RCsFinest2 ай бұрын
@@ossimlz one of the tenders lived so let that sink in
@HexNottingham2 ай бұрын
Incident begins at 8:10. The whole video is pretty fascinating, though.
@jasonokeyo80772 ай бұрын
@@HexNottingham lifesaver
@Gaming_Channelorsomething2 ай бұрын
Tysm bro
@LifeAsTaayinka2 ай бұрын
Thank you
@SimoraCheeks12 ай бұрын
Thank you so much!
@AlexTommo2 ай бұрын
"Fascinating video" Skips half of it...
@GamingSpirit79Ай бұрын
The fact that it took place above water rather than below makes this story even more tragic, as the death was all the more preventable. 😢
@rudebodega2 ай бұрын
If your last name is Coward I think you almost *have* to do something crazy for a living just to shut down the jokes
@the__lone__thinkerАй бұрын
@@rudebodega Death is no sarcasm. Hope you have some sympathy for the deceased.
@Velocifaptor92Ай бұрын
@@the__lone__thinker Lighten up
@californiarollwithramensea822024 күн бұрын
@@the__lone__thinker death would definitely be sarcastic.
@Zuranthus2 ай бұрын
i hope they really did feel no pain, imagine being squeezed out like toothpaste or being boiled from the inside
@APOLON-bm7ym2 ай бұрын
They all thought "what, oh no Im gonna d..." for not longer than 0,5 seconds... But, you know they say when a person dies, entire life flashes infront of her eyes...so time is also relative, it could last to them much longer than what we think. Death is still oreety uncharted area ..
@Draknfyre22 күн бұрын
@@APOLON-bm7ym Despite the whole life flashing before your eyes thing I think you'd still need a functional body and brain for longer than .2 seconds to experience it. Pretty sure the trigger for that is likely to be you understanding that you're possibly about to die.
@moxiemaxie354316 күн бұрын
Toothpaste comes out smooth
@nicholasharvey12322 ай бұрын
Edwin Coward was no coward if he signed up for a job working a thousand feet underwater, exposed to 9 atmospheres of pressure.
@vikvc2 ай бұрын
@@nicholasharvey1232 unlike Dickson who was a real Dick about following safety procedures
@davetooes61792 ай бұрын
1000ft 320 metres is more than 30 atmospheres
@jeremyyoung44372 ай бұрын
80 metres is 9 atmospheres. Recreational diving with deep specialty goes to about 40 metres. Beyond about 60 metres you can get oxygen toxicity and require gas mixes to reduce the partial pressure of oxygen at that pressure thus the helium in the mix.
@user-xy1eg3tj8hАй бұрын
You know the equipment is not reliable and will fail, it's ByFord.
@leonb26372 ай бұрын
Its bad enough this happened, but worse was the delay in compensation to the families of the dead divers and technician.
@gabrielsfilms20862 ай бұрын
idk man, I think the ppl dying is worse
@millennium6772 ай бұрын
if they were military they would never have gotten compensation
@maninthemask62752 ай бұрын
Money ain’t gonna bring them back.
@Archer1702 ай бұрын
@@maninthemask6275 They were paying the bills so moneys needed
@rhysswimmingandgymnastics2 ай бұрын
@@Archer170 Bills? I get they’ve gotta get pay back for the loss; money and punishment. You don’t get money to pay the bills tho. Work like other people
@AndreMcHenry2 ай бұрын
Even at the time, the equipment they were using was antiquated and unsafe. Properly engineered systems are designed to be 'fail-safe' - the failure of any individual component will not proceed to catastrophic failure of the entire mechanism. The design of the trunk connection should not even allow removal of the clamps without detection of a positive lock on the inner door.
@lizzie98Ай бұрын
Thank you so much. You have educated us
@Chad_Thundercock2 ай бұрын
∆P (delta-p, or change in pressure) is like the Wu Tang Clan. It ain't nothing to f*ck with.
@xcel0072 ай бұрын
💯
@allenbates34702 ай бұрын
Indeed, sir. Indeed.
@Dystopikachu2 ай бұрын
Theres a spongebob fan animation on youtube that explains it best
@bsgfan12 ай бұрын
When it’s got you, _it’s got you_
@mnemonichotpocket2 ай бұрын
Dig your style
@thomashenden712 ай бұрын
Norway, is unfortunately infamous for its bad treatment of the North sea divers and oil platform workers, and many divers who were sustaining long term health issues because of their work under extreme conditions, never got compensated or the proper help from the health services.
@blightborn872 ай бұрын
That is BS bud.
@a647382 ай бұрын
Now pretty much all the information about the long term health issues have been removed from internet and new deep-sea divers is blissfully unaware, that is judging by the comments the deep-sea divers make when people tell them what they do is dangerous to their health. It is strange to see that all this have been forgotten already, only the older generation still remembers it... A friend of a friend is a deep-sea diver and he did not know anything abut the bad health effects of deep-sea diving when I asked him about it and if he was not afraid of ruining his health.
@Schlibe2 ай бұрын
@@blightborn87 It's not BS tbh. Workers safety was extremely bad for offshore workers at the time (1970s-80s). Well actually it was close to non-existent, present time is very different, today Norway probably have one of the best workers safety conditions in the world. I am unsure about the compensations though, unfortunately money compensating haven't really been a normal cultural thing in Norway, the payouts are usually very low at least (like 2/3 to a full normal yearly salary for life-ruining negligence). The payouts are getting better nowadays though.
@thesilversurfer71362 ай бұрын
People before profits!
@arrechera-lover2 ай бұрын
Nothing like listening to the horrors of underwater pressure while eating lunch
@PaleBlueDott2 ай бұрын
If he died in 0.16sec then the thumbnail is inaccurate, because he wouldn't have enough time to even figure out what was happening, so he wouldn't look distressed.
@HistoryMasta6102 ай бұрын
@@PaleBlueDott pretty sure it's like that to gain viewers
@double_joseph3272 ай бұрын
@@HistoryMasta610they are saying the body was under distress… not the persons mind…
@laysstandard2 ай бұрын
Yeah this is the Internet we need to nitpick things
@ZY1982Ай бұрын
@@PaleBlueDott Maybe he had seen something distressing but unrelated to the incident in the few seconds before dying.
@spidernatedog5145Ай бұрын
@PaleBlueDott why do you get so mad at tiny little things
@CAP1984622 ай бұрын
In case you weren’t already an “expert” on explosive decompression after the Titan submersible incident. The only mercy is it was so fast they had no idea.
@zoyadulzura74902 ай бұрын
The Titan submersible incident was kind of the opposite of explosive decompression--they experienced an instantaneous increase in pressure.
@jdjk7Ай бұрын
I've read so much about this incident that I knew what the video was about before I even clicked on it. Pressure is terrifying.
@Xurreal-wc9he2 ай бұрын
You might say that this was Depressing.
@MrHav1k2 ай бұрын
Wasn't expecting a crash course on Saturation diving tonight! Fascinating.....
@CanadianInScotland2 ай бұрын
Love all the people demanding the channel go faster... Instead of sliding the time marker to find what you want
@lilyuki52022 ай бұрын
There’s even a play speed button 🤯
@zoyadulzura74902 ай бұрын
It's hard to seek precisely on a phone. Also, it's fair to criticize pacing.
@xRedivivusАй бұрын
@@zoyadulzura7490Gen Z ahh attention span
@zoyadulzura7490Ай бұрын
@@xRedivivus Nope. Not an attention span thing. Pacing matters. There are some channels that drag out a tiny bit of content. I know it can be fun to dismiss legit concerns as a "young people" thing, though!
@rileyinscoe3558Ай бұрын
Fun fact: Backstory is important, and sometimes people want the whole story instead of just a minute detailing what caused it and then ending it. Stop whining.
@Fearless-Hyena2 ай бұрын
Oceangate enters chat.....
@Reaper.6.72 ай бұрын
Get a life
@gammaymeh35002 ай бұрын
I’m pretty sure it was painless.
@CanadianInScotland2 ай бұрын
@@Reaper.6.7don't like it, don't comment on it. Why you going and giving the man reaction by commenting. You gen z?
@Sans-rt8os2 ай бұрын
@@CanadianInScotland buddy, its called a "comment section" you are supposed to COMMENT on it if you want to
@davefoley28252 ай бұрын
@@CanadianInScotland I'm gen x and I can assure you every generation still living has plenty of members who can't handle reality and need to let everyone know it.
@justincarter24172 ай бұрын
Infographics narrator can pronounce literally any name in any language.
@ruthgiles89262 ай бұрын
@@justincarter2417 but with an American accent.
@PoRRasturvaT2 ай бұрын
The depths are a lot more dangerous than space.
@lizzie98Ай бұрын
It's a different universe beneath the water. So much yet to be discovered
@nyteshayde1197Ай бұрын
I remember this incident. I was 13. Absolutely horrific.
@Ji66a2 ай бұрын
That slow decompression is how the pro golfer Payne Stewart died also. Much like the Greek flight mentioned here the pj he was on decompressed while on auto pilot. And the US military had to scramble jets because of its trajectory. It eventually ran out of gas in South Dakota and crashed. All on board were presumed dead beforehand.
@jrag10002 ай бұрын
Nah, it wasn't as horrific as this.
@Ji66a2 ай бұрын
@@jrag1000 your reading comprehension is extremely low…
@jrag10002 ай бұрын
@@Ji66a What are you even talking about? I bet I can read and spell better than you.
@trueilarim2 ай бұрын
@@jrag1000 Well then the problem is more severe and hints in your inability to understand basic text. I am sorry for you.
@taaytertottsАй бұрын
@@jrag1000 you compared the intensity & severity of their deaths when OP was solely talking about how the decompression effect was the same as how Payne Stewart and those with him met their demises. This is precisely why comprehension is key.
@theknifedude1881Ай бұрын
I was a SCUBA Diver (Collector for the Marine Biology Museum @ Pt. Mugu California) in the U.S.N, 1961-1963. I was qualified to 230 ft. I was a little braver, and not as claustrophobic as I am now but don’t think I would have been up for Saturation Diving. I would have liked to explore Mixed Gas Diving but probably not Saturation Diving.
@TheGiggleMasterP2 ай бұрын
Faster than a deepsea submarine implosion?
@Teqnyq2 ай бұрын
💀
@SadForLyf2 ай бұрын
Nuclear explosion center?
@ocuol11122 ай бұрын
I remembered this same event
@freedomutilities92402 ай бұрын
What about mexico 66 million years ago 💀
@tc68182 ай бұрын
Pretty much the same thing, except backwards. They were in a sealed vessel at a modest pressure, then instantly subjected to 6000 psi or roughly 400 atmospheres. The air inside a sub has a fairly high concentration of hydrocarbon vapors. When the hull collapses, the air auto-ignites and an explosion follows the initial rapid implosion. Just like a diesel engine that uses compression to ignite the air-fuel mixture without any external spark. The human bodies incinerated and are turned to ash and dust instantly.
@BlackhawkenjoyerАй бұрын
3:40 GYAAAAAAAAAAAAAATTTTTTT 😮
@charliejoson91452 ай бұрын
Thank goodness there's now a visual representation of the Byford Dolphin Incident. I have read the Wikipedia article and.....*gasp* have seen the gruesome aftermath after "bravely" unblurring the photos on Google Images
@auddyzhii2 ай бұрын
😢
@eriksand92622 ай бұрын
I didn’t have to bravely unblur anything. I have safe search off for Google. So those pictures popped up just fine for me. Does that make me more brave than you??
@SP8CEVR187Ай бұрын
why is this being reccomended before bed??? 😭😭... and why did i click it...
@gjaeigjiajeg2 ай бұрын
You know your death is epic if infographics does a segment on it.
@jpart35262 ай бұрын
$30k to $45k per month is still nothing compared to what people making playing a pointless ball game.
@DerEinzigSohn2 ай бұрын
@@jpart3526 pointless, yes, but as its proven since the dawn of civilization, whatever has a high demand has a high compensation. We live in a time when the danger for us is so relatively low, we can afford to pay high price for mindless fun. That has very rarely happened - in a way, it's a sign of the good lives we lead. Relatively speaking, of course.
@jaredmerrell75962 ай бұрын
I’ve never heard of a pointless ball game. How else would they keep score?
@qaz-fi1id2 ай бұрын
@@DerEinzigSohn dang Der, well said
@lvloneownage2 ай бұрын
@@jpart3526 people risking their lives for 40k while girls making millions on onlyfans. What a time to be alive.
@thomasparkin2592 ай бұрын
Pay has nothing to do with skill or virtue, it's just a measure what is deemed valuable by society. That's it, nothing to do with being important.
@castorpimp2 ай бұрын
delta P gets you every time
@Guts_BrandoАй бұрын
@@castorpimp when its gotcha, its gotcha!
@yasubtwАй бұрын
“ Just one more vid before bed” The vid: “yeah i’m not sleeping tonight 😅”
@TChighburyАй бұрын
The unsettling feeling when you realise the chances are high that your own death will involve more suffering than this
@rozchristopherson6482 ай бұрын
Never take life for granted.
@MikeHarris19842 ай бұрын
This story always send chills down my spine...
@myname396010 күн бұрын
Oh another Byford Dolphin vid only this time with a catchy title to make it seem different from the 500 other Byford Dolphin vids!!! Nice!
@arthursmith53182 ай бұрын
I can’t believe it took them this long to get to Byford Dolphin
@ManderB812 ай бұрын
I searched KZbin a couple days ago for an Infographics Byford episode, now I have one.
@heckensteiner4713Ай бұрын
The horrifying description combined with the adorable animation style is destroying my brain. 🤯
@CaddRomeАй бұрын
Dont look it up😭
@wintermute73782 ай бұрын
4 went from biology to chemistry in a fraction of a second.
@TristynJanssen28 күн бұрын
I feel like I've heard that somewhere before.
@wintermute73785 күн бұрын
@@TristynJanssen yeah...I think it's adam savage. It's not mine now that I think of it. It wasn't about this but more like "he went from biology to chemistry... real quick"
@TristynJanssen4 күн бұрын
@@wintermute7378 I saw the pictures a few years ago when I was a bit younger after visiting Camp Ripley. It really messed me up.
@themindoflori2 ай бұрын
Was this really a painful death though? I imagine these men died before their brains could even process what was going on.
@captainclueless24 күн бұрын
@@themindoflori Yeah they said it was brutal but painLESS in the title
@svendb719 күн бұрын
@@themindoflori the three probably felt it but it was over for helevik the quickest
@lucid_02825 күн бұрын
Finally someone made a detailed video 😢
@johno95072 ай бұрын
The divers body was so completely torn apart yet somehow his watch stayed on, albeit with its mechanism blown out.
@karapalin2 ай бұрын
@@johno9507 his left arm, from the elbow down, was pretty much intact.
@Mareczekw302 ай бұрын
I need to point out one mistake. 100 feet is 30 meters which is equivalent to 3 atmospheres not 9. Also, since I'm not an expert I will not argue but 1 day of decompression in hiperbaric chamber for 100 feet seems excesive. 100 meters would be more believable. 100 feet is possible for ordinary divers and they are able to surface without need of hiperbaric chamber.
@jakecarruthers6513Ай бұрын
It's 4 atm at 30 meters - not 3. That's because it's 1 atm at sea level, which is 0 meters, then an additional atm for every 10 meters of depth.
@veteranhenrymworiaАй бұрын
Infographics: Most Painless but Brutal Deaths Lathe accidents: I'll have the pain to go with that
@m3talc0re2 ай бұрын
As soon as I got through about 1 minute of this video, I knew it was about the Byford Dolphin incident.
@AbsentMinded619Ай бұрын
I was ready to hear about a really sinister dolphin and was disappointed.
@m3talc0reАй бұрын
@@AbsentMinded619 🤣
@Storified12 ай бұрын
Great video, love the animations!
@venonat802 ай бұрын
The actual autopsy photos aren’t hard to find online and is horrible. You basically see some slab that doesn’t even look like meat. The only hint it was a person and meat was most of his hand was in tack and connected to the mess.
@Naglfar942 ай бұрын
@@venonat80 ah is that so? What's it called? The incident that is.
@Spudchucker922 ай бұрын
@@Naglfar94 Byford Dolphin disaster
@suekuan15402 ай бұрын
Defunct Websites like bestgore and liveleak used to show this stuff
@TT-cu7zeАй бұрын
Intact not in tack
@gandalfgreyhame34252 ай бұрын
This was well demonstrated in the Aliens 4 movie, although it was shown as happening much slower than it would have in reality.
@erikstolzenberger15172 ай бұрын
Well...between outer space and a spaceship there's "only" a difference of 1 athmospheric unit...those poor guys had MUCH more to endure... reminds me of that old song from Queen...
@jarlwhiterun74782 ай бұрын
That scene was sad
@JGrimm522 ай бұрын
That actually wouldn't happen the pressure is not that great in space
@stgeorge282 ай бұрын
You couldnt pay me a million to do that for a living.
@perdykoolАй бұрын
😮that's crazy insane! I cannot imagine the scene for the bystanders or clean up crew
@VParzivallАй бұрын
Painless and instant. Now thats the best way to go.
@crazy4sian23 күн бұрын
When the phrase “Safety regulations are written in blood,” this is just one of those regulations put in place.
@henahayashi17 күн бұрын
Is anyone else weirdly obsessed with the Byford Dolphin accident?
@nightfury75199 күн бұрын
Yes I saw a short and been learning everything about it
@COYOTE_N82 ай бұрын
Might as well do a oceangate episode next.
@DrDeuteron2 ай бұрын
They were in much worse shape much faster.
@katyboebaty91932 ай бұрын
My dad was a Navy saturation diver.
@SunnysRoyalSkipper2 ай бұрын
Knew it was the oil rig divers from the Byford Dolphin within 2 minutes
@ShinnoEli2 ай бұрын
I~~ guessed it from the thumbnail, because that incident dominates a significant portion of my nightmares. Xp
@hisserzone2 ай бұрын
Same
@j.d.v.278222 күн бұрын
Mind you, there is a fraction of a moment, where the subject realizes what is about to happen. That 0.2 seconds of "HÉ!!'" must be a hellish moment. Now imagine being thrown in a timeloop where it happens over and over and over and over.
@dancingnature18 күн бұрын
0.2 seconds . That’s too fast to do or feel anything
@williamdoyle206313 күн бұрын
It is five past one in the morning as I am watching this, and my question to you would be - why would I want to imagine being in a timeloop and have this happen to me over and over again? Just why?
@adriansandoval21616 күн бұрын
1:44 I can’t be the only one who sees the evil faces on the plastic bags
@AJFN2315 күн бұрын
@@adriansandoval216 fr thoe
@patskyle14 күн бұрын
oogie boogie bags
@user-ur1fu9tp7y2 ай бұрын
...Why am I watching this at 2 am in the morning?
@anonymousf454Ай бұрын
Lol...same. I think there was a thing in Mideval Europe where people usually woke in the middle of the night, did stuff, then went back to sleep. Its in us....lol....look it up😂
@henahayashi17 күн бұрын
Lol
@KarenLee-bs5ms2 ай бұрын
What did I just watch why was this recommended and I won't be sleeping tonight😮😮
@nobodynoonenowhere56092 ай бұрын
Mr.Ballen should cover this story.😮No disrespect to Infographics. ❤
@jeffb3212 ай бұрын
Pretty positive he has a byfold Dolphin video
@jonelfilipek78482 ай бұрын
I love Mr. Ballen stories. He was born to tell stories! 😊❤😊❤
@Lextacy062 ай бұрын
@jeffb321 yes, He did a story on this.
@johnscustomsaws3 күн бұрын
This story is the reason I still get nervous flushing the toilet...
@mikebuncak12712 ай бұрын
So you would die quicker in this situation than if you were pushed into space without a suit? And which is worse what happened here or when the sub imploded.
@QuantumS1ngularityКүн бұрын
The first time i read about this incident, the one thing that really put me in awe wasn't the pictures (and yes, there are pictures of the bodies or the parts of them), but the fact that there were no outboard pressure gauges. Absolutely mental the peole outside the "boat" couldn't know that the pressures in each part of the system are.
@DanielKolbin2 ай бұрын
that's a lot of damage
@HappyHealthyKarate-Do2 ай бұрын
Flextape
@mafia_megan30492 ай бұрын
I understood but at the same time i'm hella lost😭
@thomasalegredelasoujeole999820 күн бұрын
Kind of like that submarine near the Titanic, those are situations where you cease to be biology and become… physics.
@ctakitimu2 ай бұрын
An unfortunate story indeed but not a bad way to go. Healthy and alive, then insta-deleted. No pain or terror.
@yerp.22 күн бұрын
As long as I was old sign me up
@ruk2023--2 ай бұрын
Get to the point already. I want to know what happened before listening to 10 minutes of teasing.
@garryhackstedde44172 ай бұрын
Noooo than it will to short and I won’t fall asleep before it’s over
@MilkmanAssassin2 ай бұрын
It's called a story, just skip if you no longer have an attention span
@ruk2023--2 ай бұрын
@@MilkmanAssassin All good stories start with context.
@roygalaasen2 ай бұрын
thanks! saved me 10 minutes there!
@Prometheushighaf2 ай бұрын
Thanks I knew what to skip lol
@michellegallia93612 ай бұрын
I’ve heard about the Byford so many times over the years but I’ve never heard the detailed list/descriptions of the actual injuries to the bodies from the pathologists before. I mean the situation and gist of what happened to them and their bodies is already absolutely horrible, but the descriptions of every single injury to/inside their bodies and organs makes it so much more insane to hear and picture… I’m so glad there wasn’t enough time for them to feel any of that 😳😱
@suekuan15402 ай бұрын
The titan sub mariners died pretty fast too. Also walking into an invisible steam leak at a nuclear plant was a quick death for a worker who walked into to super heated stream of steam
@grumbling2 ай бұрын
the pictures of the bodies are wild, and the fact that a man survived it is even crazier
@extec1012 ай бұрын
he survived by being on the outside far enough away from the danger.
@teonnakatz2 ай бұрын
Interesting video! If you plan to do more like this and I hope you do you should do the Paria diving disaster at some point most videos on the subject dont explain what exactly happened to cause it but focus on what happened after and would definitely hope to see an explanation of how something like this could occur.
@jamiecardinal72112 ай бұрын
@@teonnakatz Paria diving disaster is so sad..... watched the documentary.....brought me to tears.
@jamiecardinal72112 ай бұрын
The guy blames himself for his friends death... saw it on tv
@thespicytravelgirl229711 күн бұрын
“Their hearts were all in ruins” - same bro, same
@KaoticWhisper2 ай бұрын
Delta P, once it's got you, it's got you
@Headloss2 ай бұрын
Her: 'I bet he's on Onlyfans, or messaging other girls' Him: '10 times Seagulls outsmarted humans, how many hotdogs can this man hold in his mouth underwater or the most brutal painless death in history'???... hmmmm
@nickaoke2 ай бұрын
Yes, there are pictures of this on the internet. Pretty nasty stuff!
@auddyzhii2 ай бұрын
Link😢
@kars60262 ай бұрын
Safe search off and just browse this incident and go to google image, i believe there is one on the wiki.
@wyattdawg18 күн бұрын
This is just a horrible, completely unresearched explanation of saturation diving
@marvelthespacewing55622 ай бұрын
Already knew what this was before playing the video
@jamesalbertserquina34602 ай бұрын
This is probably how instantaneous it happened with people from that imploded submarine.
@VechsDavion2 ай бұрын
Delta P, bad for me. Delta P, wee hee hee.
@johnmorgan4405Ай бұрын
I think the Titan submersible has this beat in terms of quickness of death. I’ve seen the implosion and death of all passengers estimated at ~3.7 milliseconds. That’s fast.
@Tharosthegreat2 ай бұрын
This is what i think of everytime i see one of them popcorncannons.
@melvinhunt6976Ай бұрын
I had a friend who had a massive heart attack and died instantly! He was walking and talking and died in the middle of a Word !
@peter-radiantpipes28002 ай бұрын
Mr Ballen browsing?
@benmaster54542 ай бұрын
I know, right
@CrazilyCrazyDude2 ай бұрын
Totally
@Jemppu7 күн бұрын
"we'll be exploring in depth" I see you.
@Rizz_Messiah2 ай бұрын
Id argue the sub that imploded at the titanic wreck was quicker.
@jeffb3212 ай бұрын
Implosion and Delta-P are totally different, Implosion is under pressure, Delta-P is pressure equalization....
@scottbarber93742 ай бұрын
@@jeffb321 Implosion isn't pressure equalization?
@extec1012 ай бұрын
@@scottbarber9374 he meant thatbyford where a equalization from 9 atmospere to standard presure. titan the other hand is a rise in presure as it went from 1 atmosphere to 400 in an instant.
@scottbarber93742 ай бұрын
@@extec101 Are those not both pressure equalization?
@extec1012 ай бұрын
@@scottbarber9374 now its start to be complicated, going from high presure to atmospere is a presure drop to equal. going from on atmosphere to 400+ is a rase in pressure. but yes it is an equalisation to the enviromental presure so can we agree t both be right?
@grantsutherland6798Ай бұрын
One aspect of saturation diving that has not been adequately explained is that this high pressure environment is both on deck and off. The way this is done is by pressurising a hyperbaric cylindrical habitat on deck (known as the 'Can' or 'Bin' to which the diving bell can attach / detach with via pressurised lockout chambers at the coupling
@MrRoyalGard2 ай бұрын
As a Norwegian, this is true!
@marko.rankovic2 ай бұрын
I'm sort of wondering as someone who grew up in Bergen, why isn't this incident ever spoken about over there? It was quite a big thing to happen in Norway of all countries considering how strict Norway is with safety.
@rogeriopenna9014Ай бұрын
I still haven't started watched the video. I guess it will be about Byford Dolphin?
@ikechukwuagwu30542 ай бұрын
Gone in 0.16 seconds
@Headinbreak53002 ай бұрын
Crammond died while he was in the elicopter that was transporting him and martin to the nearest hospital
@AjalaKingsGreenstream2 ай бұрын
Fortunately no other set of people madw the same mistake after this one. Especially in recent times when people are more educated.
@zoyadulzura74902 ай бұрын
The significant thing that's changed is workers' rights. Employers will make workers face risks to save money if they think they can get away with it.
@Danthrax812 ай бұрын
Listened for 5 seconds. Said "The Byford dolphin accident" out loud. Close video