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@Pseudoscorpion14 Жыл бұрын
People comparing this to the Seagate Titan submarine don't understand - this is the COMPLETE opposite. This was their organs violently leaving their bodies. The Titan submarine implosion was their bodies violently entering their organs. COMPLETELY different.
@xmlthegreat Жыл бұрын
lt's not Seagate, it's OceanGate. My Seagate Hard Drives aren't made of carbon fiber lol.
@PushMe_eMlluP Жыл бұрын
One Sucks, The Other Blows
@deborahlettich751 Жыл бұрын
The bodies of 3 of the divers killed during the oil rig accident were completely intact. There is a report with photos. They look like they are just passed out. They obviously had internal damage but only 1 diver had his body torn apart.
@alaeriia01 Жыл бұрын
@@xmlthegreatnah, that's the Toshiba ones
@kstxevolution96429 ай бұрын
no that was tha same thing just in a different direction
@viiviketomaki72843 жыл бұрын
My favourite podcast to chill and decompress to!
@danielled86653 жыл бұрын
Same, I was hoping for a new one!
@Meatloaf_TV3 жыл бұрын
Agreed
@Meatloaf_TV3 жыл бұрын
Good pun
@Raw7743 жыл бұрын
I have indeed seen what you did there
@Sexploitsful3 жыл бұрын
Anyone else read this and go "Ohhhhohohoho"?
@politedog49593 жыл бұрын
29:00: "Yes, because Im gonna have to edit it out later." *Narrators voice:* He didnt edit it out later.
@CykoruKun3 жыл бұрын
"Hi it's Justin in post production, I didn't edit that bit"
@Haunted-doublewide Жыл бұрын
34:00 I know this is two years old, but I have to say it’s still validating as hell now as an immunocompromised person to hear Liam talking about how it’s justifiably upsetting/that it matters how people don’t give a shit about us dying. In the time between this was posted and now I’ve had several friends pay with their lives for other people’s apathy, and now more than ever I (and people like me) could die any day because the wrong person decided to go to work sick or something, even though I’m doing everything in my power to not fucking die. It’s not like most people are testing for Covid anymore, and I don’t have words for the loss coming from ongoing isolation both socially and spiritually. There’s such an overwhelming desire by people to “go back to normal” and pretend the pandemic isn’t still a problem, it really does a number on your brain as a disabled/immunocompromised person to be constantly (and often viciously) told to shut the fuck up about it. It’s more dangerous than it ever was and we have virtually zero support. Anyway, it means a lot to just hear someone give a shit, even if it’s old. We’re still here and trying to survive
@chester6343 Жыл бұрын
Covid was all dramatic bs
@1Gigawatt Жыл бұрын
Hell yeah
@jasonallman696 Жыл бұрын
Yep. I still wear my mask most of the time and I have no serious medical problems. Keep those N95s handy.
@somerandom3257 Жыл бұрын
Currently have to work with a guy with it and nobody else gives a shit, meanwhile I never stopped wearing masks and having minimal contact because I don’t want to spread it especially as my job involves going to multiple places every day Some of us still care and are angry with you at them
@TheFiendishFive Жыл бұрын
Oh yeah? Well i wear a mask even when i sleep. I double the masks when i go for my weekly booster. If you are not vaxxmaxxing then don't Even talk to me
@ianirwin94802 жыл бұрын
Little known fact: all of the 10 year olds screaming at you on Call of Duty are actually all saturation divers breathing helium atmosphere
@Erlec3 жыл бұрын
As a Norwegian, I'm glad you guys talked about this incident. The Norwegian government tends to ignore both human and environmental costs in the search of oil and gas. They are even willing to spend major money on quasi scientific research in order to keep the oil money flowing in. P.s. You did Norwegian pronunciation better then I expected. Good job!
@theoneandonlymichaelmccormick3 жыл бұрын
“bUt It’S sOcIaLiSt, ThOuGh...”
@kazaddum2448 Жыл бұрын
@@theoneandonlymichaelmccormick It's not tho. It's a social democracy.
@Ticklestein Жыл бұрын
I did kinda cringe at dykkerklokken. But somewhat agree
@kstxevolution96429 ай бұрын
Yes. It's wonderful to visit Norway. When Norway decides to visit you its not so good
@RipTheJackR4 ай бұрын
@@kazaddum2448less and less so. Norway fully third way hellbent on decline.
@mythousandfaces3 жыл бұрын
underwater bad, on top of water questionable, air is just right out, roads are sus, but rails are forever
@EmissaryofWind3 жыл бұрын
Underground good or bad?
@maglorian3 жыл бұрын
@@EmissaryofWind Underground only good when you are constructing cathedrals out of salt... oh, and when you call 811 before you dig. of course.
@mythousandfaces3 жыл бұрын
@@EmissaryofWind Underground is the sacred land of municipal transport
@willmiles79783 жыл бұрын
Unless you abuse them (sees new episode of similar-but-shorter-form-more-serious 'Fascinating Horror - The Crash At Crush'...)
@johannageisel53903 жыл бұрын
@@mythousandfaces It may cost you a city archive, though. See the collapse of the Historical Archive of the City of Cologne in 2009.
@EsplodingBomb3 жыл бұрын
Ah yes, the classic "we were supposed to install a device that would have prevented this exact accident from occurring, but nah that'd be expensive, I'm sure it'll be fine!"
@Nick_J_3 жыл бұрын
It only happens all the time, what are the chances it happens THIS time tho, right?
@dracorex4263 жыл бұрын
Is this comment about the main episode or the Safety Third?
@dimentio10303 жыл бұрын
@@dracorex426 yes
@AnonyDave3 жыл бұрын
But don't worry, we can blame it all on the dead guy!
@CykoruKun3 жыл бұрын
Just don't have an accident, duh
@kv43023 жыл бұрын
I kinda wanna put Alice in charge of building a bridge, I'm sure the solid dam she builds out of tungsten carbide will work perfectly. Can't even have holes in it for the water or water traffic, as that'll reduce rigidity.
@weatheranddarkness3 жыл бұрын
And “high strength steel”
@zyavoosvawleilte13083 жыл бұрын
Just make the water load-bearing
@ewanhogg30683 жыл бұрын
@@zyavoosvawleilte1308 Isn't that just a pontoon bridge?
@azbestosenjoyer3 жыл бұрын
I gotta fever, and the prescription is: M O R E R I G I D
@joshuahadams2 жыл бұрын
@@ewanhogg3068 great for piers in tidal areas. The marina in my local harbour has one. The ramp down is on a hinge and rollers, so it can be at pretty much any angle depending on the tide. It gets pretty extreme during full moon tides.
@ParabolicBox3 жыл бұрын
Reducing an entire human to a soup-like homogenate.
@zimmerwald19153 жыл бұрын
This gelatinized, undifferentiated mass of human labor, is what we mean when we say "abstract human labor." Abstract human labor, the commodity, is crushed and rendered blood and sinew and bone. Defective diving bells are machines for abstracting human labor from living human beings.
@sweetprimrose3 жыл бұрын
Pump some oxygen into it to make Man Mousse
@marinary13263 жыл бұрын
Lubricate the atmospheric railway
@slaughterround6433 жыл бұрын
A great summary of capitalism.
@eyezuel53073 жыл бұрын
@@zimmerwald1915 fucking incredible
@Jaqhnun Жыл бұрын
“[Diving is] one of those hobbies that I really don’t respect. It’s right up there with mountaineering in terms of, like, the idiotic bullshit people do where, like… and I get, you know, taking risks and, like, that’s the only way you can feel alive-that and choking yourself while you jerk it-but like… again, it’s just not a thing I understand. It-God-like, if God wanted you to fucking go underwater, he would have given you gills." for some reason, today, June 24th 2023, I'm thinking of this quote from this episode.
@phathumdeep3 жыл бұрын
I do appreciate the firm anti-ocean stance this podcast takes. Nothing good happens in the deep. Thats literally where monsters live. We left for a reason.
@SlimbTheSlime Жыл бұрын
I take it you also don’t respect fish?
@onii-k3e Жыл бұрын
this comment aged well
@okayokayfineilldoit Жыл бұрын
@@onii-k3e i cant wait for the inevitable pending episode on the crushed billionaire soda can
@marcellucassen8033 Жыл бұрын
Imagine the fish telling each other 'the monsters came back' 🤔
@jamiekamihachi31353 жыл бұрын
Liam: leftist, pro-gun/castle doctrine, Taylor Swift fan.
@jayde_d3 жыл бұрын
he really does support the gays
@IzzyHackworth3 жыл бұрын
this is what peak performance looks like
@DaL33T53 жыл бұрын
Cop bad, gun good
@DaL33T53 жыл бұрын
@Mathew Padgett Who the hell died and made you Marx?
@derrickfoster6443 жыл бұрын
@Mathew Padgett why not?
@joearnold68813 жыл бұрын
I got covid. I was very lucky in that the symptoms weren’t bad, and I didn’t pass it on to my relatives.... Turns out, even after your tests start coming back negative, you can have this crushing fatigue for months or maybe years. I have no money and can’t get out of bed to work, and there’s no help on the horizon What I’m saying is, thank you for your rant, Liam. :)
@jonne77253 жыл бұрын
Post viral fatigue is getting a lot of attention so things might change in the future
@Sylverlea13 жыл бұрын
It is the worse when Doctors don't believe you or understand what you are dealing with it isn't even the faced that you aren't getting treatment( I mean yes that is very bad)but to have a Doctor invalidate your lived experience is crushing you feel as though you are speaking a different language or that maybe you are hallucinating, why would someone ever do this to another person but no other people have gone through this too Doctors are just people too some are curious most are not they want clean simple answer so that is what they get simple answer find support people who believe you and bring them to all appointments it helps you don't feel so crazy.
@Daneelro3 жыл бұрын
I _think_ I got Covid, but it was back in January, when no one was testing and few people have even heard of it, although later waste water tests showed that the virus was in nearby Italy from December. I think it was Covid because it had all the main symptoms: first the dry cough (something I never had before although I catch something every year), then the fever that just won't go away for several days (I don't think I had fever for more than three days ever before), and coughs with mucus but almost no running nose (again unusual for me), and the loss of smell. I even had a regression into fever and mucus coughing after feeling fine for over a week, so altogether it lasted all of January. When it was finally over, I had this crushing fatigue for at least two weeks, where I felt tired after half a minute of walking and had to sit down after a five-minute walk. Fortunately, I didn't have any other long-lasting symptoms. The same back then mysterious disease went through at least five family members, in three steps of six days. Two of them (mother & child) contacted Covid (again?) in September (via the schoolbank neighbour of the child), but basically the only symptom was loss of smell.
@mcamp94453 жыл бұрын
Believe I had it in early April but no tests avaibale, caused congestive heart failure as some viruses do. Don’t duck around wear a mask and stay home
@ashkebora72623 жыл бұрын
@@jonne7725 Oh you sweet innocent child, thinking serious symptoms and long-lasting fallout coming to light might mean those in power would care... sigh, to be so innocent. If those in power cared _literally at all,_ they wouldn't have accepted cigarette company lobbying for decades nor accepted the testimony of bought and paid for oil industry "scientists" who denied climate change while they internally nailed the predictions. There is ample evidence those in power will _never_ care, yet people keep voting in evil idiots who don't care...
@tjbarke60863 жыл бұрын
I am here for Liam's airing of grievances.
@TickTockTimeTraveler3 жыл бұрын
PLEASE see if you can track down some clips of Sat Divers talking to each other at pressure. Between the thick North accents and the helium, these men are speaking an incomprehensible English chipmunk language
@mmmhorsesteaks Жыл бұрын
Guys hear me out, a tiny submersible to visit the wreck of the byford dolphin?!
@kstxevolution96429 ай бұрын
yes lets make it be a glorified spool of carbon fibre
@TheNwr17 ай бұрын
We could even name it! Like, a strong name, something that evokes the power of a glacier…like, Titanic 3? Tri-tanic, if you will?
@ClaudiaNW3 жыл бұрын
Suggestions for spin-off channels: WTYP Food: Rocz shows us how to make vodka pasta. Alice swears at Jamie Oliver and rudely critiques his attempts at Asian cooking. WTYP Health: Liam's advice is "go down to the Sheetz and buy a six-pack". WTYP Weather: Alice complains about the weather in Glasgow (this format will work irrespective of the time of year).
@ebnertra00042 жыл бұрын
So WTYP Food is just Rocz being drunk and Alice slowly turning into Uncle Roger? I'd watch, especially if they keep Liam around to just rant about stuff
@RaccKing21 Жыл бұрын
Honestly, we need a cooking episode where all three of them make something. Alice would spend all day reading which knife technique leads to most injuries. Liam would be drunk while ranting about sports. Rocz would be losing his mind over how shoddily made the foldable table is. In the end, all three of them would be standing in front of a halal truck.
@owenberringer10463 жыл бұрын
Me: go to bed after a long night shift Also me: no listen to Alice's Communist propaganda and snarky shade. Me: Yes.
@11214943 жыл бұрын
I usually like the episodes on low volume to fall asleep to. Next evening start with the last I remember from the same episode etc. ususally good for a few days.
@jakx2ob3 жыл бұрын
@@1121494 isn't that literal nightmare fuel?
@MrJimheeren3 жыл бұрын
You made the right choice. Now we can just imagine what the remains of a guy who is sucked trough a small tube looks like
@weatheranddarkness3 жыл бұрын
I don’t go in for gore. But for some weird reason this particular case is making me want to see the pictures.
@GenuineMartin3 жыл бұрын
This could really just become a petrochemicals podcast. For some completely unexplainable reason bad things keep happening on, around, and as a result of oil rigs.
@Gantradies3 жыл бұрын
like they keep saying, just leave it in the ground!
@deeznoots62413 жыл бұрын
Well whatdo you expect when you build on ancient dinosaur burial grounds
@artistwithouttalent Жыл бұрын
Yep. God's acts of love do be mysterious. Couldn't have anything to do with the fact that it involves people who don't care about safety fostering a culture that doesn't care about safety while searching for highly flammable chemicals usually found under pressure from even more flammable chemicals.
@devinfaux69873 жыл бұрын
Remember, kids, explosive decompression both sucks *and* blows!
@jorgeluz95602 жыл бұрын
The "en" at the end "dykkerklokken" is actually the definite article for "dykkerklokke" (diving bell), so every time you guys said "the dykkerklokken" you were actually saying "the the diving bell" and that really amused me lol
@rorybyrne86 Жыл бұрын
Coming back to this episode on the 23rd of June, 2023 for no reason at all.
@JsD2001863 жыл бұрын
Fun fact! Hyperbaric evacuation chambers were introduced for a really, really good reason - "Another tragedy, even more terrible because the men involved had much longer to contemplate their fate, killed a friend of mine. He was in the Far East doing saturation work in an oilfield construction barge. He was in the decompression chamber with the rest of his dive team when a hurricane developed and the barge began to founder. There are lifeboat chambers on barges and dive ships today, which can be launched over the side in such an emergency. The divers remain afloat in their chamber, controlling their own environment until a rescue comes. But there was no such system on that construction barge. The decompression chamber was fixed to the deck. There was no way of removing it and if the divers trapped inside had tried to leave it, they would have suffered an agonising death from the bends. Instead they were given time to write a last letter home, which they passed out through the hatch before the barge was abandoned. As the lifeboats moved away, the barge broke up and sank. The divers inside the decompression chamber went down with it to the bottom of the ocean." (Goldfinder, Keith Jessop & Neil Hanson)
@zombieraddish3 жыл бұрын
I really appreciate Liams covid rant here. Even though the state of the pandemic in the US is more or less entirely due to the federal governments abdication of responsibility (and ensuing piecemeal nonsensical and inconsistent rules at individual state levels), I get a little irritated by the notion you hear sometimes that the masks are just a "culture war" issue, and that it's somehow cooler to not care about it at all because it's "moralizing." This notion that masks and other protocol are not "material" just because it appears interpersonal (due again to the lack of an organized response) is so incredibly disconnected from the stakes involved. It's good to hear lefty content creators bite the bullet instead of being vain about it and just unequivocally tell folks to wear the damn mask. I have old parents and immunocompromised friends, and it matters to me that basically everyone else knows vulnerable people too (whether they acknowledge it or not.)
@OrinLinwe3 жыл бұрын
Even if you don't live in the US, it's still this fairly despiriting recipt how the collective "we" would behave in a really bad situation. I live in Sweden, and it's essentially the same neo-lib thing of "emphasize personal responsibility, let's get back to normal as quickly as possible, no financial aid, etc". it's not quite the cruelty of the US, which seems to wax between condescending scolding from the likes of Cuomo to whatever gleeful, Bolsonaro-esque "don't be an F-word about it" that's on the republican side, but it also isn't "good" in any sense here in Scandinavia. As bas as Covid is, it's basically just a trial-run for whatever is coming next, and it's pretty bleak to get actual data on how "we", collectively, decide to act in a moment of crisis. I saw a blurb on the news during my train-commute about how Sweden's carbon-emissions were down 10% during the height of Covid, and are now close to be on-track for what's considered normal. It was a text-and-image-only broadcast, so it was difficult to decipher what kind of tone I was supposed to get from the broadcast ( if I was supposed to be alarmed or glad about the number), but it did make me think about our general "readiness" as it pertains to climate-change. We have this "probably once in a life-time epidemic" that has forced significant, temporary cut-backs in emissions by extraordinary restraints that aren't, by themselves, sustainable in the way we have structured society. No amount of canvassing, or ads, or activism from people have put as much of a break on emissions that Covid has done, and the actual result we have is around 10% less emissions (in Sweden). So, given that the main political drive (at least in the western world) is to go back to "business as usual" from the temporary stop that is Covid, what is the chances that we have even anything close to a proper response to climate change? It really made me think about all the people who spent most of their life canvassing, sitting in tedious meetings, endlessly arguing online, protesting in the streets, putting themselves in danger, etc, in hopes of turning the tide on climate change. All that human effort - all this "annoying nagging" and "weepy caring" - led to less results than this fluke pandemic, that we're now desperate to "undue" (in terms of emissions). And the numbers, after the fact, aren't even particularly impressive! This global pandemic that has forced most people to drastically change their behavior has only (again, in Sweden) resulted in a 10% decrease of projected emissions, and whatever gains from the pandemic will be quickly wiped out as society returns to normal. It's a very stark and - quite frankly depressing - thing to get actual receipts, and I think a lot of people feel very down right now not only because of the dangers of the pandemic, but because it was a litmus-test for our general "readiness" to respond to crisis, and the willingness of leaders to have some political vision. Ideally though, it will lead to an actual leap forward beyond neo-lib alienation. Or it might not. Either way, we still have to live this reality. Cheers; love.
@deanc94533 жыл бұрын
@@OrinLinwe +
@kenjisakaie60283 жыл бұрын
WTF people are saying its culture war? It's the least culture war thing I've ever heard!
@georgekerscher53553 жыл бұрын
@@kenjisakaie6028 Where have you been in the past year?
@kenjisakaie60283 жыл бұрын
@@georgekerscher5355 Yeah, but even if it's a disagreement, it shouldn't be demeaned as just culture war.
@keithpedersen36533 жыл бұрын
Decompression while drunk is not recommended - booze definitely increases your chances of getting DCS. At least that's what PADI says in their training.
@ukaszgolon56173 жыл бұрын
It looks like there are some hypotheses why that would be the case, but it seems there is no experimental confirmation. Not that there has been that many studies though.
@davidwright71933 жыл бұрын
Alcohol doesn’t appear to change decompression risk. However dehydration does as you have the same amount of gas dissolved in less fluid. The PADI recommendation not to get pissed after diving is based on the dehydration that is part of a hangover. Coffee is also on the don’t drink list for the same reason.
@jamieswedler27933 жыл бұрын
The main thing is that everything about diving is conservative estimates based on large-scale studies of diver physiology. So your dive computer is telling you that as long as you ascend before your No-Deco time reaches zero, you probably won't get the bends, but the further you are from the "average" diver, the more risk that estimate doesn't apply to you. And since they aren't studying drunk divers, they can't say authoritatively how alcohol affects your nitrogen absorption, so they just say Don't.
@expectproblems3 жыл бұрын
Given people were dying, how did they pick which people to send down when building those bridges? On a caisson-by-caisson basis.
@jamesdykes29682 жыл бұрын
lol, thanks for this.
@himoffthequakeroatbox43202 жыл бұрын
How long are you here, and can you recommend anything from the menu?
@SlimbTheSlime Жыл бұрын
Nah, they just throw the irish down there
@zuthalsoraniz67643 жыл бұрын
43:30 "But because it's at high pressure you get more oxygen" That's exactly how it works - your breathing mainly cares about the pressure of oxygen, not the volume percentage. So a gas mix with 5% oxygen at 4 atmospheres (equal to 30 m underwater) will deliver as much oxygen into your blood as normal air does, because in both cases you have 0.2 atmospheres of oxygen pressure.
@nikolai877 Жыл бұрын
Weirdly the tanks seem to list a 21% O and 79% He Mix anyway? Maybe that's by weight and the other (5%/95% one) by volume or moles or something?
@zuthalsoraniz6764 Жыл бұрын
@@nikolai877 For shallower diving, where the problem is only nitrogen narcosis but not oxygen toxicity, you only need to replace the nitrogen with helium. You only need to use a hypoxic mix when you go really deep.
@q3st1on19 Жыл бұрын
Nice explanation, you dive?
@uilsoum8753 жыл бұрын
“Nooo i like the clicky-clacks!” “ *I don’t* “
@Daneelro3 жыл бұрын
After 47 episodes of derailing him in every possible way, Liam finally managed to find something Justin can't tolerate...
@Braindouchedotnet3 жыл бұрын
@@Daneelro clicky-clacks are life! #thiscommenttypedonamechanicalkeyboard
@oscarsantana99833 жыл бұрын
Justin is canceled. Long live the clicky-clacks.
@Yora213 жыл бұрын
I do like the clicky-clacks. And I believe all people who do admit that they are clicky-clacks.
@dancingtiger5773 жыл бұрын
Cherry MX browns would be the move for clickly clacks but not really loud clickly clack
@fourcatsandagarden Жыл бұрын
I suspect this video suddenly got a new wave of attention given recent news.
@haphazardlark15023 жыл бұрын
Liam’s extended rant was honestly just what I needed this morning.
@RedwingBB3 жыл бұрын
I don't agree with him about fish, but about most other things, he's right
@punchfisttop3 жыл бұрын
my second fav Liam rant next to his distain of fish rant.
@kv43023 жыл бұрын
It's the best part of the episode and I'm just at the end of the rant
@tylerk62063 жыл бұрын
Yeah love Liam, they have a perfect team for this podcast imo
@mcamp94453 жыл бұрын
@@punchfisttop which episode is the fish one?
@collinbarker3 жыл бұрын
Have not watched it all, but a comment on why Norwegian uses clock for bell. Quite common for many european languages (except english) as cloche meant bell. Churches were the ones that had the bells, and they were used to to tell the time based on how many times the low one rang for the hour, and then a little ditty that would play for each 15 min increment (at least for the fancier ones as more people were needed to ring them.). When time became mechanical (not people jumping on ropes), the bells were still used. Eventually the standard clock face was added, but the bells were still the main feature, so naming the entire time thing "bell" was not weird. Add in the fact that english mugs words rather than borrows, we end up with clock. Also, this is the origin of o'clock, as in 8 o'clock in the morning. 8 au cloche in french, meaning 8 of the bells, or 8 "bongs" of the big bell. Another weird fact is that these bells are where the term dumbbell came from. To train the new ringers, bells needed to be used, but you would not want to be ringing bells while you make the new guy jump on a rope for an hour, so the clapper (dangly bit in bell) was removed from a few, making them unable to ring, or "talk", which was called being "dumb" back then. Dumb lost its meaning over time, but was in the same line as mute and ritard (this is music for slow, youtube might get angry at the other one).
@Joebaseball-qp2nkАй бұрын
“It’s 8 bongs o clock, time to turn in” Need to return to this
@carslayer3 жыл бұрын
Why would you call the school Well There's Your Problem U When you could instead call it Well There's U Problem
@sweetpeabee49833 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I see you, but this way means u can abbreviate to Well There's Your PU, which is delightful in its own way. 🤗
@Kaanfight3 жыл бұрын
Well there’s your Prager U
@uilsoum8753 жыл бұрын
ProblemU Well There's Your U Liam's VanU Load BearingU
@antivanti3 жыл бұрын
"Well there's your problem. You!"
@TalkingSoup3 жыл бұрын
oh my god i've been WAITING for this one ever since i googled what it was. also thanks roz for not putting The Aftermath Photo in the slides
@pattyayyy3 жыл бұрын
My high school welding teacher constantly pushed underwater welding to his students. Literally just this plus playing with electricity underwater. Extra weird considering the school is in the middle of the desert
@SImrobert20013 жыл бұрын
It seems like it, but it pays something like 25 an hour when you are just starting out. It pays really, really really well.
@marinary13263 жыл бұрын
@@SImrobert2001 25 bucks an hour to weld underwater in some rich dude's pool presumably, the largest body of water available in the desert
@christophervanerp11333 жыл бұрын
My Principles of Engineering teacher told us about his time underwater welding in the arctic circle for $200/hr. He told us all to never ever do it.
@weatheranddarkness3 жыл бұрын
For the average non psycho, non masochist the number of hours a year you end up getting paid for works out to it being not remotely as lucrative as it sounds
@pattyayyy3 жыл бұрын
@@marinary1326 nah nah like you live in a capsule underwater with some other chump for 3 weeks. Or you’re just under a dock or some shit welding. Thing is salt water makes sure if your current goes anywhere but where you want you’re toast
@willowrabbit3 жыл бұрын
I have also read that it would have been physically impossible to undo the latch by hand with the 9 tons of pressure on it, and it wasn't that dead guys fault, the latch just broke off, which makes the cover up even more disgusting.
@LB19732 жыл бұрын
The hand me down story which has done the rounds is that the communications were lousy so dive control had established a hand signal system to the deck divers to know when to knock off the clamp. The clamp was also stiff so had to be hit with a hammer to free it even at atmospheric pressure. The deck guy had just come on shift so dive control gave him a wave to say hi mate and the hand wave was interpreted at hit the clamp off so he did. The diver inside was in the process of shutting the door between the entry lock and the trunk. Even hitting it with a hammer shouldn't have freed the clamp under pressure but thats what happened. The timing of it was so unfortunate had the door to the entry lock been shut all four would probably have survived.
@princeoftonga3 жыл бұрын
Interesting story regarding pressurised construction. In the late 1800s when a company was digging one of the underground tunnels under the Thames they pressurised the tunnel workings so they wouldn’t flood. One day to celebrate some sort of distance record they held a ceremony in the incomplete pressurised tunnel. The ceremony involved 19th century gentlemen in top hats, ladies in big dresses, speeches and champagne. Everyone was apparently a little disappointed that the champagne was flat but no matter. As all the gentlemen and ladies (I think there was a lord of somewhere or other as well) came back to the surface they decompressed and the co2 in the champagne they’d all consumed came out of solution. Giving everyone hideously bad gas!
@cmarano3 жыл бұрын
Liam: also - NEVER APOLOGIZE FOR THE RANT! We love it and we'd miss it.
@cowfangirl420 Жыл бұрын
thanks for the phrases chunky marinara and soup like homogenate. came in handy this week
@SadisticSenpai613 жыл бұрын
Wait, didn't Justin say at the beginning that this was an old outdated system and there were modern systems with mechanical safeguards available? So yeah, it would be the company's fault for skimping out and refusing to pay for an upgraded, safer version of the system. Not that any investigations would *ever* return that result.
@niagarawarrior96233 жыл бұрын
Investigations have a funny way of turning up disappointing results. yes, its possible the Deck hand accidently killed everyone by improperly completing the sequence. Human error does happen. However its more likely the old diving equipment failed, being that it was KNOWN to be outdated, KNOWN to lack essential safety features, and as mentioned in the podcast, the operators were KNOWN to have sought out special permits to operate old, unsafe equipment.
@josephmctighe4695 Жыл бұрын
rewatching for no particular reason
@savanahtiger Жыл бұрын
Here in 2023, while we wait for the Oceangate episode
@ClaudiaNW3 жыл бұрын
I love to sell weapons to the Merfolk Christian Democratic Party for their underwater guerrilla war against the mercommunists. They placed an order for 50 armoured battle sharks.
@scarylion1roar3 жыл бұрын
with laser beams?
@ClaudiaNW3 жыл бұрын
@@scarylion1roar Laser eyes
@scullystie43893 жыл бұрын
That sound cannon from the god damn news looks and sounds like something Orks from 40k would make.
@km54053 жыл бұрын
this epsode is going to be a deep dive
@rm25693 жыл бұрын
Justin would be the type of person to start humming semi obscure They migh be giants songs about dead painters.
@fntthesmth4232 жыл бұрын
For that Safety Third segment, a clear takeaway is to get any stupid or dangerous requirement your boss makes in writing
@gregmoore16903 жыл бұрын
Liam's tangent, around the 32 min mark. Holy shit that's a perfect explanation of how I feel. It's exhausting, thanks to you guys for being here and caring, and at least giving us some time away from this shit.
@kattkatt7443 жыл бұрын
Lots of the guy who did the deep sea diving in the North Sea got long term debilitating effects that weren't immediately noticeable... and funny thing about that... they didn't get any kind of compensation or extra pension when it was discovered, because, you know, they should have known that long term debilitating effects where part of the work.... Also simping for Alice, her norwegian pronunciation is decent!
@Jujudocine3 жыл бұрын
Timestamps: 0:01:38 - Well there's your problem 0:04:50 - the goddamn news (starting with the big boom) 0:08:55 - news: big boom created west virginia plant 0:12:43 - IS EVERYBODY READY FOR DIVING???? (What is diving) 0:19:40 - saturation diving 0:55:35 - byford dolphin 1:19:05 - safety third
@Anonarchist3 жыл бұрын
my family's covid count is now 6 infections, 2 deaths, anyone who refuses to treat you with civility does not deserve to be treated with any civility.
@coreygolphenee96332 жыл бұрын
Its like the Cancer of Sars having had both in my life wouldn't recommend it to anyone
@11214943 жыл бұрын
Tacoma Narrows Bridge Episode next? Sooo much looking forward to that one!
@flameraven4210 ай бұрын
For anyone (like me) who's tempted to look up the photos - if you really want to see what rapid decompression looks like, Mythbusters did an episode testing it-- they made a "meat man" human analogue with pig organs, put it in an old-timey diving suit, and then decompressed it to see if the body would be compressed into the helmet (as the myth said). Short answer: yes.
@KomodoDad3 жыл бұрын
"You mean I can just hang out in Milwaukee and get drunk for nothing?" RedLetterMedia's business model.
@paulpeternaanouh31933 жыл бұрын
I just realised that the safety third drop says "shake hands with danger" instead of "Safety is the danger" and I'm very disappointed
@ConductiveFoam3 жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/rGOZl4d9d6qcb6c There you go
@RyanTennant3 жыл бұрын
For the longest time I did too assuming it was some Mike Rowe nonsense, but it's even better once you've watched the outstanding video it's featured in.
@willmiles79783 жыл бұрын
Yeah, took me like 7 episodes and only when Alice mentioned something about 'literally shaking hands with danger' to put it together.
@TheKnowledgeWizard3 жыл бұрын
It's been almost a year and I keep coming back for Liam's rant. It's a reminder when I start to get comfortable with where I am. While yeah, a lot has changed since December 2020, there's a lot that hasn't changed either.
@nickyarbrough83923 жыл бұрын
Oh, sure, put it out literally RIGHT as I'm going to bed :(
@PhilfreezeCH3 жыл бұрын
In Europe it is the middle of the day. Once again proving we are superior in every way. XD
@jakx2ob3 жыл бұрын
@@PhilfreezeCH exactly, right when I'm waking up.
@Raw7743 жыл бұрын
F
@nickyarbrough83923 жыл бұрын
@@PhilfreezeCH It was actually like 8 AM my time, I just keep weird hours :(
@fitandhappy423 жыл бұрын
“We couldn’t think of anything” I’m going to take that as a cue for suggestions, and ask you to look at the Dreamscape accident. Two fatalities might be low for a WTYPP subject but it’s very high for a piece of public art.
@MySerpentine3 жыл бұрын
I'd suggest the Great Boston Molasses Flood myself, because it sounds ridiculous but actually was a pretty big disaster, but that also sounds cool.
@Gantradies3 жыл бұрын
@@MySerpentine didnt boston stink of molasses on hot days for something like 2 decades afterwards?
@MySerpentine3 жыл бұрын
@@Gantradies There are people who swear it still does.
@vandama0mossadegh3 жыл бұрын
They've done ones in that range before, the Lake Peigneur one, for instance, had zero fatalities!
@CykoruKun3 жыл бұрын
@@vandama0mossadegh and Lake Peigneur was one of the best episodes!
@truirf3 жыл бұрын
The guy looking up from his asbestos snack reminded me of my mineralogy class here in Saint Petersburg, Russia. The teacher was passing around asbestos ore samples, and most of the students were just casually playing with it. I agree it's kinda cool, fluffy rock, but everyone laughed at me when I said it probably wasn't a great idea. I was told it's fine, it's only a problem if you work in manufacturing the stuff, apparently. There's a town in the Urals called Asbest where they still mine it. Ah yeah, and I'm just coming out of nearly a month of COVID, because the university administration decided that the virus clearly didn't apply to us, nor the orders from the Ministry of Education in Moscow. They only went to distance learning at the start of last week... My chest hurts, asbestos or COVID?
@musicmanfelipe3 ай бұрын
Liam’s Covid rant brought back bad memories. I worked as a paramedic during all that time, and I saw the worst in everybody come out. Part of the reason why I will never set foot on an ambulance again unless I’m the patient.
@PedroBentoIT Жыл бұрын
just rewatching this and the kursk episodes for no reason in particular...
@qtipmotha3 жыл бұрын
Kanawha is pronounced "Can-ah". I was texting my brother about it when it happened and he was like "eh its 12 miles away and the evacuation is only for 2 miles". I replied "Sure. I listen to an engineering disaster podcast though and sometimes shit like this inexplicably goes from uh oh to FUCKING RUN. Probably nothing to worry about though. Just to be aware of". If you guys cover this in an episode at some point it could maybe be rolled into one covering all of the sacrificial economic zones in the country. Other ideas: Any of our mining disasters like Sago in 2006, the 2014 MCHM chemical spill in Charleston WV as well. Also the Buffalo creek dam disaster.
@RappinPicard3 жыл бұрын
I feel like Alice would get a kick out this quote attributed to William Mulholland: “What I would do if I were custodian of your park, is I’d hire a dozen of the best photographers in the world. I would build them cabins in the Yosemite Valley and pay them something and give them all of the film they wanted. I’d say, ‘This park is yours. It’s yours for one year. I want you to take photographs of it in every season. I want you to capture all of the colors, all of the waterfalls, all the snow, and all the majesty. I especially want you to photograph the rivers. In the early summer, when the Merced River roars, I want to see that.’ And then I’d leave them be. And in a year I’d come back, and take their film, and send it out and have it developed and treated. And then I’d print the pictures in thousands of books and send them to every library. I’d urge every magazine in the country to print them and every gallery and museum to hang them. I would make certain that every American saw them. And then do you know what I would do? I would go in there and build a dam from one side of the valley to the other and stop the goddamn waste”
@ladyiden3 жыл бұрын
I love the Weekly Group Therapy with Liam segment. That was a good addition, guys - it's genuinely one of the few things that's been keeping me sane these past few weeks. It's hard as a front line healthcare worker going into the winter right now and hearing him validate every angry and hopeless feeling I have makes it easier to keep going as I have to keep closing out more and more profiles. Also something something hipster toast with blasting jelly and human-flavored Smuckers.
@surrow61923 жыл бұрын
i just want a woman to byford dolphin me is that too much to ask
@xovvo39503 жыл бұрын
yes
@Yootzkore3 жыл бұрын
Terribly sorry in advance for that one: EXTRUDE ME MOMMY
@joinedupjon3 жыл бұрын
Hoaganaes dust explosions please. 5 people killed by bad housekeeping over the course of 3 easily preventable incidents at the same plant. You've got to start throwing negligent suits in jail for corporate manslaughter when what's basically the same accident keeps happening over and over in the same plant and they don't do anything.
@liocla23313 жыл бұрын
Quick bit of trivia that’s quite interesting: freedivers, even competitive ones who swim down to 100+m don’t suffer from decompression sickness, apart from Herbert Nitsch... but he's more dolphin than human. But they do suffer from nitrogen narcosis and it is an issue in competition for those who forget to get the tag at the bottom because of it: Freediving is cool
@biggiejohn33603 жыл бұрын
uhhhhhm, yeah, DO NOT google "Byford Dolphin incident images" . . . .ohh my
@RyanTennant3 жыл бұрын
I read the clinical descriptions of the casualties and decided that was all the further I needed to go.
@Gantradies3 жыл бұрын
as someone who looked up what "krokodile addicts" look like, i legitimately feel your pain :( not joking, thats also a series of images nobody NEEDS in their brain :(
@jbarbeau923 жыл бұрын
I’m not sure what would be worse to look at, the chamber covered in human jelly Liam was imagining, or the actual mangled mess I saw when I looked that up.
@CykoruKun3 жыл бұрын
I found the Thanksgiving turkey analogy very accurate. Very accurate.
@alkihistoriker3 жыл бұрын
I thought "Surely they must be exaggerating." googled the above and instant regret
@Lily-Sinful3 жыл бұрын
see if we got liam a shittier mic, it wouldn't pick up the keyboard!
@synthgal10902 жыл бұрын
The first time listening to Liam's rant: "yeah! YEAH!" Listening to it a year and change later: "yeah...."
@CowMaster90012 жыл бұрын
I hope everyone stays home and your power goes out so you suffer every minute of it.
@michaelstrauss44113 жыл бұрын
Roz- I have to edit out your clicky clacks Liam Roz- *leaves clicky clacks in*
@MrMrUSMC3 жыл бұрын
Explosive decompression is one of the scarier things that can happen to a person, so I look forward to simultaneously laughing and feeling nauseated once you all get to the gory details of the incident itself. edit: 'Jam spread very thin' this gonna be good.
@mor4y3 жыл бұрын
Theres a freaky documentary/feature film about a deep sea diver in the North Sea who's ship drifts away and severs his umbilical, leaving him with no light, heat or oxygen supply apart from a few mins worth in a backup tank.... features real audio from the incident spliced into it, thats nightmare fuel too 👀 The guy survived, called Chris Lemons, the film is called Last Breath, well worth a look if you don't want to sleep tonight 💀
@MrMrUSMC3 жыл бұрын
@@mor4y Thanks for the recommendation.
@Runningfromtheredqueen3 жыл бұрын
"Hei, og velkommen til "Vel, der har du problemet", et podcast om ingeniørkatastrofer som er i seg selv en katastrofe. Med slides."
@cybernaile3 жыл бұрын
Underrated comment
@justinddunlap Жыл бұрын
Anyone visiting this (again or first time) due to the Titan failure?
@Deh9o11en8or3 жыл бұрын
If you're looking for episode ideas you guys should do the Therac-25. TLDR is that some awful programming resulted in a machine with a bug that gave people radiation poisoning.It's used as kind of a case study in the Software Engineering world for what can go wrong.
@Deh9o11en8or3 жыл бұрын
Also has a nice case of the company behind it denying that anything was wrong after the first deaths, leading to even more people dying.
@sleatersan3 жыл бұрын
The Therac-25 incident makes me so fucking angry and sad. People being hurt by something that was explicitly supposed to help them, at a time when they were ill and vulnerable and likely scared...just, ugh. I'd love to see them do an episode on it too, though. Also, I see you fellow Homestuck :P
@PFMediaServices Жыл бұрын
Looking for y'all in the comments on the recent Therac-25 episode.
@PhilfreezeCH3 жыл бұрын
26:30 AS far as I know the solubility of gases in alcohol (ethanol) is far lower than it is in water. So this would mean that alcohol would actually help against decompression sickness in that way. BUT from experience (I am a fish, blub) I can say that alcohol hits different if you have large pressure changes. We tried about everything you shouldn't try, drinking alcohol before diving, while diving (baloons are your friend) and after diving. I can say you that it doesn't really matter when you drink it, the effects are way more potent so that might be an issue.
@PhilfreezeCH3 жыл бұрын
40:00 The drunk feeling from diving is slightly different than the normal drunk feeling. To me diving bellow 30m feels kinda like a mix between weed and a drink.
@sweetpeabee49833 жыл бұрын
29:55 - Liam's covid rant, for future reference. 🙂 There's a specific place in my own life that makes me so angry if I think about it too long, but it can be hard to hold onto that fury because they're really good at making you feel like it's _your_ problem, actually & it's got nothing to do with them. So it's really validating to hear these same feelings reflected for a change -- that no, I'm not making a fuss for no reason, and I should be mad & stay mad. 🤗 that's tough for me, but I'll keep trying!!
@louisvictor34739 ай бұрын
They call it clock because in quite a few european languages (not even strictkly the linguistic family, just geographically) the word for bell and clock are the same, because of the church stuff and bell ringing at specific times a day.
@elainejsta3 жыл бұрын
“A thanksgiving turkey after it’s been gone through” is exactly how I would describe pictures of this accident tbh
@KJamesMellick3 жыл бұрын
In the pacific northwest, in the 1880's, Caisson Disease was ascribed to "TyphoMalaria".
@heralds Жыл бұрын
'im gonna have to edit that out later' - 15 seconds after multiple unedited clacks. This comedy is what keeps me comings back
@kierraa053 жыл бұрын
i’m not a squeamish person but this one was brutal as hell; edit: everyone telling you not to look up photos is gonna make you look them up and then you’ll realize they were right
@condorscondor3 жыл бұрын
Noted.
@authoranonymous8892 Жыл бұрын
Definitely don't do what I did which was "look up the photos before listening to the episode, not realizing that the 'dolphin' wasn't just referring to a dolphin the crew of the Byford somehow accidentally exploded."
@knifefght9 ай бұрын
I showed my mum the photos, she said that the poor guy looked like a plate of dinner
@lazamair3 жыл бұрын
Nooooooo! Rocz....why did you Activate Windows ?!
@ernekid72413 жыл бұрын
he has his Airpods in he cant hear us!
@sunnohh3 жыл бұрын
Its a trick....hopefully
@davidwright71933 жыл бұрын
Did Bill Gates subscribe to the patron?
@alexroselle3 жыл бұрын
sellout!
@justinokraski37963 жыл бұрын
it comes and goes
@connorprice51053 жыл бұрын
not sure if this is the best place to recommend disasters, but here are 2: The Ycuá Bolaños supermarket fire, and the sinking of MV Sewol. Both I feel would lend a lot of material for discussion.
@cryptbeast32223 жыл бұрын
Yeah my experience with factory work in WV is that a lot of places are one bad day away from blowing sky high. So many factories with practically no safety or maintenance standards. I'm talking operational standards from the 70s to the 40s depending on the location. Do not buy property there. Ever.
@FishSandman3 жыл бұрын
I'm really glad you didn't edit out Liam's Covid rant. It was extremely cathartic, I think the kids call it a "mood"
@mina478792 жыл бұрын
"Fun" fact, I don't think most phones would actually function in the diving bell, due to the high helium environment. Phones usually use something called MEMS (Microelectromechanical System) oscillator (essentially a microscopic silicon tuning fork) to provide the clock signal for the phone's processor and electronics. MEMS oscillators are sensitive to helium and often stop functioning in a high helium environment.
@michaelkirschner3 жыл бұрын
29:00 Rocz: I'll have to edit it out Narrator: He didn't
@memomorph53753 жыл бұрын
1:27:45 made me laugh “Conduct unbecoming of a pest control officer”
@GamerBurgerz3 жыл бұрын
I feel bad for the guy at the end, but at least this Safety Third story had some kind of comeuppance for the person in charge? Kind of?
@spacefork72963 жыл бұрын
Said guy at the end here, i wont spoil it but there is more come upance for Bob in the second part.
@GamerBurgerz3 жыл бұрын
@@spacefork7296 Glad to hear it! Wherever you are now, I hope it's got better safety regulations.
@spacefork72963 жыл бұрын
Well... That will be answered if they use part 2
@OutbackCatgirl3 жыл бұрын
@@spacefork7296 i get the feeling it'll be in the next episode, based on how enthused Justin sounded about it.
@FinetalPies3 жыл бұрын
You know what, I didn't look up the photos and I'm proud of me. Thanks for being insistent, I believe you.
@dayathbon3 жыл бұрын
Hot of the presses is because most presses use high temp IR heaters to flash dry enough of the ink so that when the next sheet(s)s go to stack on top of the next they don't smear the fresh ink.
@davidwright71933 жыл бұрын
It’s not just the nitrogen component that is the problem. At a partial pressure of above 1.6 bar oxygen becomes toxic so deeper than 60m (7 bar) air becomes toxic. You can breathe any mix of inert gases with a ppO2 of 0.2 bar and higher. However O2 doesn’t contribute to either narcosis or bends so mixes with a ppO2 of 1 to 1.2 bar are preferred.
@mor4y3 жыл бұрын
BBC Scotland did a TV programme on one of these diving Bell units, answers tons of questions you have about things like entertainment, food and that centre hatch hinge.... I'll see if I can find it, the parts where they're breathing helium are hilarious 😄 I'm sure they had cameras down there for a whole diver rotation, so several weeks, and features details of running 3 teams at once so one can always be at depth
@mor4y3 жыл бұрын
ps: I don't mean 3 teams doing 8 hrs each, I mean 3 living accomms, with one coming up to working pressure, one unit at pressure and working, and another unit who have just finished their rotation and are depressureising. It takes several days to safely pressurise/depressurise when dealing with deep north sea dives, so 3 full living accoms were required, and the bell could connect to any of them thanks to the fancy crane arrangements on board
@kestrel4521 Жыл бұрын
Alice describing decompression sickness as "getting your blood soda streamed" is now how I'll think of that forever...
@JoshSweetvale Жыл бұрын
cola This is your blood /shakes bottle of cola This is your blood on bendz.
@snigwithasword12843 жыл бұрын
I stumbled upon a documentary on raising the USS Monitor where they also used saturation diving. It was made-for-tv shite but it did show divers stripping on deck and rushing to get into the decompression chamber. Pretty shocking honestly, I imagine that's a bit like breathing vacuum for a heartbeat! I had assumed in all these systems the divers would not be exposed to surface atmosphere for even a moment before they were readjusted, maybe that's only necessary in the deepest dives though.. Well I have an excellent excuse to rewatch this episode now! Here's an NOAA log of the recovery with some semblance of technical description: oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/monitor01/logs/jul30/jul30.html And the shite documentary for anyone interested: kzbin.info/www/bejne/qoiUgpqcebFnr7c
@TheRealE.B.3 жыл бұрын
If it's what I think it is, that fall protection system for the roof was probably supposed to have been installed to custom specifications specific to that roof as developed by a specialty engineer. Even if the system had been installed "correctly" with two saddles, the precise saddle positioning and the tension in the ropes might have been important (I think they are supposed to be pretensioned so that the rope between the saddles is always taut). Ropes stretch a lot when they are subjected to the force of a grown-ass man falling off of a roof, and it's a deceptively complex system that has to balance between being flexible enough to reach the whole roof, stiff enough to not let people hit the ground before engaging, strong enough to catch a falling man, and energy-dissipating enough to not cause fatal internal bleeding when it catches him. Much more complicated than your usual "handrail that can withstand 200 pounds" flat roof fall protection system, almost like you're building a little SUSPENSION BRIDGE on the roof, except with the semi trucks bungee-jumping off of the side instead of driving over it. Basically, the system may still have been dangerous in a potentially fatal way even if it had been installed the way the Safety Third submitter had wanted it to be. Honestly, if there were actually any residential single-family home developer occupying the middle ground between "cheap Ryan Homes papier-mache McMansion garbage" and "literal custom-built mansion", they'd probably be pre-building the tie-off points into the roof as a standard feature.
@spacefork72963 жыл бұрын
Yeah you are not gonna get an on site engineer to one of these things. Not in that company or others like it. But suffice to say we could have done MUCH better withgear we had on hand and just didnt use. Technically we were also supposed to have those hand brake things that slide up and down your safety line to lengthen and shorten your rope, hence "tie loops in your rope to take out slack" see also, "none of us were properly trained"
@TheRealE.B.3 жыл бұрын
@@spacefork7296 Oh, I take it from your use of the first-person that you're the guy! Thank you for replying to my humble comment. Yeah, safety regulations are so often a weird tug-of-war between rules that are so complicated that they sometimes get in the way of actual safety and people who don't even care or try. I did not mean to imply that hiring an engineer was actually a viable option, if that's how it came off, just that I think that's probably what would be required for full OSHA compliance.
@richardrawson5 ай бұрын
Y’all killed me with the Pokémon Red/Blue reference! About 10 yrs ago my wife and I got to keep the belongings of a storage unit of a recently deceased lady who was a hoarder. Inside the unit we came across those two games still sealed and in mint condition and we sold them to a collector on eBay for about $1500 each. Absolutely unrelated to the diving bell accident but I couldn’t resist telling that story!
@yum99183 жыл бұрын
I miss my CO telling about his diving course where he got high on nitrogen while diving in a 100m pit/tube with only a single air tank for the whole squad to share, and that it felt really funny and good. And somehow being a combat engineer sounds safer than most of these stories.
@henryefry3 жыл бұрын
My grandfather worked on sealab III and was the doctor in "dive safely" a safety video from 1992.