Originally Posted by :
A search and rescue operation is currently underway to locate a submarine that went missing during an expedition to the Titanic.
The U.S. Coast Guard was looking for the submarine Monday morning after it disappeared during the expedition from St. John's, N.L. The infamous 1912 wreck is located more than 600 kilometres southeast of the province in the North Atlantic Ocean.
The trip to the Titanic was being run by OceanGate Expeditions, a U.S.-based company. It uses a five-person submersible named Titan to reach the wreckage 3,800 metres below the surface. OceanGate's website advertises a seven-night voyage to the Titanic for US$250,000 per person, or approximately CA$330,000.
"We are exploring and mobilizing all options to bring the crew back safely," an OceanGate spokesperson said in an email to CTV News. "Our entire focus is on the crewmembers in the submersible and their families."
Those tours are a series of five eight-day missions to the Titanic with the money raised by tourists going towards Titanic research. Posts on social media show the ship launched from the St. John's area last week.
Did they really have 5 people in this?? Or do they have a larger version??
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
Some sources are now saying that the submersible tried to ascend before imploding, indicating that they knew something was wrong.
Anyone else think that the "live failure tracking" system was showing a hull failure? It's also possible that the window started cracking, but I thought I saw a photo of it being recovered intact.
Alternately, they may have started hearing the hull cracking, as was described and deemed harmless in the testing, but recognized that it was getting louder or something.
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
Some sources are now saying that the submersible tried to ascend before imploding, indicating that they knew something was wrong.
Anyone else think that the "live failure tracking" system was showing a hull failure? It's also possible that the window started cracking, but I thought I saw a photo of it being recovered intact.
Alternately, they may have started hearing the hull cracking, as was described and deemed harmless in the testing, but recognized that it was getting louder or something.
There's a transcript floating around the internet that's supposed to be the text communication between the Titan & the mother ship. If they are real there was about a 20 minute period where they knew there were issues (the hull breach detection system supposedly went off) & they couldn't get the submersible to surface even after blowing the ballast tanks.
If the accounts are true, there appears to have been a couple situations where the sub could not abort a dive and return to the surface. During one they had to physically rock the weights off, and another they just sat down there waiting for the auto time release to go off, and in another he apparently figured out how to drop them manually.
Even if his hull monitoring system went off, it appears the odds of them stopping a dive were somewhere around 50/50 on a good day. [Reply]
Originally Posted by ScareCrowe:
There's a transcript floating around the internet that's supposed to be the text communication between the Titan & the mother ship. If they are real there was about a 20 minute period where they knew there were issues (the hull breach detection system supposedly went off) & they couldn't get the submersible to surface even after blowing the ballast tanks.
Well that was horrifying. Sounds like they knew they were in big trouble for at least 20 minutes before implosion. I can't imagine the sheer terror they were going through knowing they were in all likelihood about to die [Reply]
‘Human remains’ recovered from debris of Titan submersible
US Coast Guard says salvage mission was undertaken in an agreement with the Navy and the new materials were offloaded at an unnamed port
By
Our Foreign Staff
11 October 2023 • 1:32pm
The intact aft portion of the Titan is brought to shore for investigation
The US Coast Guard has recovered remaining debris, including presumed human remains, from the Titan submersible that imploded on its way to explore the wreck of the Titanic, killing all five onboard.
The Coast Guard said that the recovery and transfer of remaining parts was completed last Wednesday, and a photo showed the intact aft portion of the 22-ft (6.7m) vessel.
Additional presumed human remains were carefully recovered from within Titan’s debris and transported for analysis by US medical professionals, the Coast Guard said.
The salvage mission, conducted under an agreement with the US Navy, was a follow-up to initial recovery operations on the ocean floor approximately 1,600ft (488m) away from the Titanic, the Coast Guard said.
The new materials were offloaded at an unnamed port.
The Coast Guard previously said it recovered presumed human remains along with parts of the Titan after the debris field was located at a depth of 12,500ft (3,800m).
Most of the wreckage from the submarine was salvaged in June
Investigators believe the Titan imploded as it made its descent into deep North Atlantic waters on June 18.
The search mounted after Titan went silent captured the world’s attention. The submersible was attempting to view the British passenger liner that sank in 1912.
The Coast Guard’s Marine Board of Investigation said investigators from the US National Transportation Safety Board and the Transportation Safety Board of Canada joined the salvage expedition, and the Coast Guard is coordinating with international investigative agencies to schedule a joint review of the evidence to determine the next steps for forensic testing.
The Marine Board of Investigation, meanwhile, will continue its analysis and witness interviews ahead of a public hearing on the tragedy, officials said on Tuesday.
OceanGate, the operator of the vessel, has since gone out of business. Among those killed in the implosion was Stockton Rush, the submersible’s pilot and the chief executive of the company.
I could buy a lot of margaritas, beach time, and T&A with $250,000.
Or I could go 2 miles underwater to see a sunken ship in a confined space with someone who may rip off a fart and not be able to excuse myself from the room.