They were in the middle of the dive when communicationMay be they got stuck after venturing into the wreckage.
I imagine that would be like searching for a dime inCan they eventually send a non person device down with a camera? I'm claustrophobic as fuck so I don't think I could ever get in it. Plus I'm about 249,000$ short.
There is no way they would risk going inside the wreckage with a sub even if that is possible.May be they got stuck after venturing into the wreckage.
I would love to ride a penis capsule.2 billionaires and 2 millionaires pay 250k to that trip. What is worth it?
It's like Bezos going to space in a penis capsule. Would you have really cried if it had exploded?
There is so many other things these fuckers could have done with their money that would bring real value to humanity.
I do not wish anyone to die yet I would appreciate putting things in perspective.
The submarine surely must be equipped with beacons of all kinds.I imagine that would be like searching for a dime in
the beach in darkness with a flashlight.
If the shell or the window fail at that depth, the death is instantaneous. The implosion also destroys all the systems. The only thing that usually survives is the emergency beacon(if they had one) that floats to the surface and activates, but, like everything else in those harsh conditions, that can fail, too. I'm surprised that the service crew didn't monitor the descent closer and only relied on the communications from the sub.The submarine surely must be equipped with beacons of all kinds.
What is inexcusable is, that they did not have another vessel on standby in case of problems.
I would have thought the failure of the shell including window would be the least likely failure. They know exactly the depth they are going to, and could not have gone any deeper. But of course, it is a possibility.If the shell or the window fail at that depth, the death is instantaneous. The implosion also destroys all the systems. The only thing that usually survives is the emergency beacon(if they had one) that floats to the surface and activates, but, like everything else in those harsh conditions, that can fail, too. I'm surprised that the service crew didn't monitor the descent closer and only relied on the communications from the sub.
Not at a depth of 13,000 ft.Send in Gordon Tracy for recovery operation
"Thunderbird 4 is International Rescue's technologically advanced submarine, with a maximum operating depth of 30,000 feet."Not at a depth of 13,000 ft.
worse is wasting all that engineering brilliance to build a stupid sub so stupid people with money can go on an stupid adventure but I am sure that technology$250k to go see an old sunken ship. Stupid