Americas Oceangate Sub Crisis

Americas
Well good news, they found out today that it imploded and they all died and were turned to paste in less than a second. They found the debris on the seafloor near the Titanic. At least they probably weren't at the bottom waiting for the air to run out.
honestly, this was all the fault of the crew members mainly because the CEO of OceanGate (Stockton Rush) has swept a bunch of safety concerns under the rug. Some of which date back to 2018.
 
honestly, this was all the fault of the crew members mainly because the CEO of OceanGate (Stockton Rush) has swept a bunch of safety concerns under the rug. Some of which date back to 2018.
Lives are a loss, including the CEO. the company is going to be suit up their ass because of everything that happened. this would’ve been a great experience, but the great almighty dollar was more of a concerned.
I fear because of everything that happens. People are probably not well they’re gonna be banned from the wreck.
 
honestly, this was all the fault of the crew members mainly because the CEO of OceanGate (Stockton Rush) has swept a bunch of safety concerns under the rug. Some of which date back to 2018.
Lives are a loss, including the CEO. the company is going to be suit up their ass because of everything that happened. this would’ve been a great experience, but the great almighty dollar was more of a concerned.
I fear because of everything that happens. People are probably not well they’re gonna be banned from the wreck.
 
Lives are a loss, including the CEO. the company is going to be suit up their ass because of everything that happened. this would’ve been a great experience, but the great almighty dollar was more of a concerned.
I fear because of everything that happens. People are probably not well they’re gonna be banned from the wreck.
The water pressure at 12,500 feet is over 5000 pounds per square inch. There are some places that are just too dangerous for a private company.
 
The water pressure at 12,500 feet is over 5000 pounds per square inch. There are some places that are just too dangerous for a private company.
Like I said before, the blame is on the CEO who swept a bunch of legitimate safety concerns under the rug from former OceanGate employees turned whistleblowers. Now that would be his grave mistake, and I mean grave mistake because he's already in his grave.
 
The water pressure at 12,500 feet is over 5000 pounds per square inch. There are some places that are just too dangerous for a private company.
Them being a private company wasn't the problem. A lot of military vessels can't operate at that depth either.


The problem was them not engineering the vessel for that depth, something we know can be done because it has been done before.
 
This Youtuber is thanking his lucky stars:


A YouTuber says he rode in the Titan submersible just days before it went missing.

His footage shows OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush discussing issues with the sub's "life support" system.

Jake Koehler says in the video that the sub had issues "every day" during his trip.

A YouTuber who rode inside the Titan submersible just days before it went missing shared footage of his nine-day excursion in the Atlantic Ocean, which included OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush expressing concern over issues with the sub's control systems.

Jake Koehler posted the nearly 30-minute video to his YouTube channel DALLMYD on Friday. Koehler's channel has more than 13 million subscribers and typically features videos of himself finding lost items while diving.

The video chronicles Koehler's journey to St. John's in Newfoundland, Canada, where he joined the Titan submersible for its third mission. The submersible went missing during its fifth mission on June 18. The US Navy later confirmed that the sub imploded shortly after it started its descent.
...

"It could have been anything," Koehler continued. "Long story short, every day they did have some problems, and we tried to fix every little thing to make sure everything was perfect for our opportunity to dive to the Titanic."

Koehler added that the issues with the sub "seem weird now," but at the time they seemed like an "everyday thing."

Luckily for Koehler, his trip to the Titanic — which is more than 12,000 feet below the surface of the ocean — didn't happen. But he did still get to take a test dive to a depth of about 30 feet.

"I would have been in that submarine, and my fate could have been just like the five who lost their lives just recently on mission five," Koehler said.

 
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