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Submarine used for tourist visits to Titanic wreckage goes missing in the Atlantic Login/Join 
Conservative in Nor Cal constantly swimming
up stream
Picture of PR64
posted Hide Post
Watched the documentary.

It was the CEO’s owners fault.

He fired all the staff that told him it’s not safe.

Hubris killed him and others.

He registered it out of the United States to avoid our safety rules.


-----------------------------------
Get your guns b4 the Dems take them away
Sig P-229
Sig P-220 Combat
 
Posts: 3950 | Location: Nor Cal | Registered: January 25, 2011Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Quit staring at my wife's Butt
Picture of XLT
posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by HRK:
Sound underwater travels at approximately 1500 meters per second, so to travel 900 miles (which is roughly 1,448,000 meters), it would take around 965 seconds (or about 16 minutes).

Calculation:
900 miles = 1,448,000 meters [conversion]
Speed of sound underwater = 1500 meters/second
Time = Distance / Speed = 1,448,000 meters / 1500 meters/second = 965 seconds


cliffy Claven is that you?
 
Posts: 5821 | Registered: February 09, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Member
posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by PR64:
Watched the documentary.

It was the CEO’s owners fault.

He fired all the staff that told him it’s not safe.

Hubris killed him and others.

He registered it out of the United States to avoid our safety rules.


Its a shame that due to the CEO's pride, arrogance and greed multiply people lost their lives. Unfortunately pride, greed and arrogance ends up killing a lot of innocent people in one way or another.
 
Posts: 2158 | Location: USA | Registered: December 11, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Lawyers, Guns
and Money
Picture of chellim1
posted Hide Post
How Oceangate's Titan Ignored 60 Years of Solid Engineering




"Some things are apparent. Where government moves in, community retreats, civil society disintegrates and our ability to control our own destiny atrophies. The result is: families under siege; war in the streets; unapologetic expropriation of property; the precipitous decline of the rule of law; the rapid rise of corruption; the loss of civility and the triumph of deceit. The result is a debased, debauched culture which finds moral depravity entertaining and virtue contemptible."
-- Justice Janice Rogers Brown

"The United States government is the largest criminal enterprise on earth."
-rduckwor
 
Posts: 26937 | Location: St. Louis, MO | Registered: April 03, 2009Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Just because you can,
doesn't mean you should
posted Hide Post
This was such a fundamentally flawed vehicle that even if a passenger had done minimal research before signing up, they could have seen lot's of warning signs.
Carbon composite construction is an amazing product for appropriate uses but this was the opposite of that in every way.


___________________________
Avoid buying ChiCom/CCP products whenever possible.
 
Posts: 10723 | Location: NE GA | Registered: August 22, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
safe & sound
Picture of a1abdj
posted Hide Post
quote:
Carbon composite construction is an amazing product for appropriate uses but this was the opposite of that in every way.


Yet:

quote:
But a Rhode Island company that specializes in building carbon fiber pressure vessels for submersibles has compiled an impressive record of safety and reliability that says the material can be used in this application, as long as the vessel is designed and tested properly.


Composite Energy Technologies (CET) provides carbon fiber pressure vessels to commercial and government customers such as the Office of Naval Research that have never failed in their dives to much deeper sites than Titanic, said president Chase Hogoboom in an interview with Design News.



So let's stop blaming something that does work when done properly, and focus the blame where it really belongs.


________________________



www.zykansafe.com
 
Posts: 16273 | Location: St. Charles, MO, USA | Registered: September 22, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
safe & sound
Picture of a1abdj
posted Hide Post
quote:
So let's stop blaming something that does work when done properly, and focus the blame where it really belongs.



NTSB report as of October 2, 2025

https://www.ntsb.gov/investiga.../Reports/MIR2536.pdf

quote:
3.2 Probable Cause

The National Transportation Safety Board determines that the probable cause
of the hull failure and implosion of the submersible Titan was OceanGate’s
inadequate engineering process, which failed to establish the actual strength and
durability of the Titan pressure vessel and resulted in the company operating a
carbon fiber composite vessel that sustained delamination damage that was
subsequently exacerbated by additional damage of unknown origin, resulting in a
damaged internal structure that subsequently led to a local buckling failure of the
pressure vessel. Contributing were US and international voluntary guidance and US
small passenger vessel regulations that were insufficient to ensure OceanGate
adhered to established industry standards. Also contributing was OceanGate’s
flawed analysis of their pressure vessel monitoring system data, which led to their
continued operation of a damaged pressure vessel.


________________________



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Posts: 16273 | Location: St. Charles, MO, USA | Registered: September 22, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Shall Not Be Infringed
Picture of nhracecraft
posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by a1abdj:
quote:
Carbon composite construction is an amazing product for appropriate uses but this was the opposite of that in every way.

Yet:
quote:
But a Rhode Island company that specializes in building carbon fiber pressure vessels for submersibles has compiled an impressive record of safety and reliability that says the material can be used in this application, as long as the vessel is designed and tested properly.


Composite Energy Technologies (CET) provides carbon fiber pressure vessels to commercial and government customers such as the Office of Naval Research that have never failed in their dives to much deeper sites than Titanic, said president Chase Hogoboom in an interview with Design News.

So let's stop blaming something that does work when done properly, and focus the blame where it really belongs.

Yup, if only EVERYTHING could've been done completely differently! Wink


____________________________________________________________

If Some is Good, and More is Better.....then Too Much, is Just Enough !!
Trump 47....Making America Great Again!
"May Almighty God bless the United States of America" - parabellum 7/26/20
Live Free or Die!
 
Posts: 10855 | Location: New Hampshire | Registered: October 29, 2011Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Just because you can,
doesn't mean you should
posted Hide Post
Nuclear sub hulls are normally made of steel and that should have been a hint.


___________________________
Avoid buying ChiCom/CCP products whenever possible.
 
Posts: 10723 | Location: NE GA | Registered: August 22, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
safe & sound
Picture of a1abdj
posted Hide Post
quote:
Yup, if only EVERYTHING could've been done completely differently!


quote:
Nuclear sub hulls are normally made of steel and that should have been a hint.



If you'd have taken the time to read the report, there's absolutely nothing in it that says that carbon fiber is/was an improper material.

It did cite improper engineering, improper testing, flaws during the manufacturing process, damage caused during use and storage, and improper processes to address that damage as causes which led to the accident during the 88th dive. If those issues were applied to any other construction material, I suspect the results would be identical.

Despite the fact that the investigation did not cite the carbon fiber material itself as the cause, and the fact that there are other successful deep sea submersibles using carbon fiber, some will continue to insist it was the material.


________________________



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Posts: 16273 | Location: St. Charles, MO, USA | Registered: September 22, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Shall Not Be Infringed
Picture of nhracecraft
posted Hide Post
^^ I made NO claim, other than that they did everything wrong!

"Improper engineering, improper testing, flaws during the manufacturing process, damage caused during use and storage, and improper processes to address that damage as causes which led to the accident during the 88th dive"...Sooo, Improper EVERYTHING! Wink


____________________________________________________________

If Some is Good, and More is Better.....then Too Much, is Just Enough !!
Trump 47....Making America Great Again!
"May Almighty God bless the United States of America" - parabellum 7/26/20
Live Free or Die!
 
Posts: 10855 | Location: New Hampshire | Registered: October 29, 2011Reply With QuoteReport This Post
His diet consists of black
coffee, and sarcasm.
Picture of egregore
posted Hide Post
If you look at pictures of the bathyscaphe Trieste that went three times as deep as this craft, the part that hangs underneath is the crew compartment. It is spherical in shape.





"The Almighty, He put some livin' things on this earth so a man can eat." - Festus Haggen, Gunsmoke
 
Posts: 31565 | Location: Johnson City, TN | Registered: April 28, 2012Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Member
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The problem with Carbon fiber is that while it is lightweight and very strong, it has very poor impact resistance making it not the correct material for a submersible. So while it "may" be strong enough, if it bumps into anything even relatively small, it would weaken and/or delaminate the carbon fiber and lose a lot of it's strength. If impacted even with a relatively small object, it tends to delaminate and it cuts it's strength greatly.

It's used in my industry on race boats as well as non load bearing panels and such to save weight on high performance and/or low draft boats (flats fishing boats where less weight equals less draft).

Out where the Titanic is, and other places you'd use a submersible like this, the sea state is generally going to be fairly rough, so craning and loading a submersible onto and off of the deck of a ship, it's going to be swinging around on the lifting bridle and chances are at some point in time it will impact the deck or side of the ship or anything else, as the mothership rolls and it's swinging around on the lifting mechanism. Which with steel, aluminum or most other materials it would be a non-event, with Carbon fiber can be catastrophic.

"Carbon fiber offers superior tensile strength (3.5–6.0 GPa) and stiffness (Young’s Modulus up to 800 GPa), but is brittle under impact. It tends to crack or shatter when subjected to sudden force, making it less suitable for high-impact environments."
https://www.fibreglast.com/blo...nd-impact-resistance

"Although CFRP laminates typically made from pre-pregs have many distinct advantages over conventional materials, they are susceptible to interfacial damage from low-velocity impact events (e.g. tool dropping and impact erosion of small external foreign object debris) [4]. When subjected to impact loading, CFRPs degrade through various failure modes, including matrix cracking, fibre pull-out/breakage, and delamination due to inherent brittleness and poor toughness in the resin-rich regions between adjacent plies [5], [6], [7]. Delamination is one of the most critical failure modes of laminar composites, which can significantly reduce the compressive strength and stiffness because laminar CFRPs with delamination cracks can easily suffer from further crack growth under compression. The result of delamination (often not shown on the composite surface) can be catastrophic, particularly in the aerospace industry where structural failures may result in air disasters [8]. Therefore, any potential structural failures should be carefully prevented in design, manufacturing and maintenance processes."
https://www.sciencedirect.com/...ii/S1359835X22000124

This message has been edited. Last edited by: jimmy123x,
 
Posts: 21735 | Registered: June 12, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
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