I've been really pulled into the missing sub saga the last few days. Partly because it relates to current/previous jobs, and partly because of the background/interest in that industry. Some rather random thoughts:
- the design had serious questions raised over it about 5 yrs ago. The person raising the questions was fired (more for HOW he shared info to others, apparently, but in the end, the design issues appear they remained). It wasn't classed, as the CEO was on record for saying classification rules stifle innovation. In reality, the company didn't want to spend the money/time and was trying to shortcut a process designed to keep lives safe.
- millions of $ are being spent for this rescue. Normally, I wouldn't make note of that - rescues for people making not-so-smart decisions happens all the time. I daresay most Search & Rescue efforts are due to humans making poor decisions somewhere. I think the 2 things that irk me about this is: the sub's design had a history of not meeting standards, some articles highlight the issues that have popped up, and they still went down! It also bothers me that similar funds aren't spent on 1000's of migrants/refugees throughout the world that face challenge/get lost crossing open waters. It just smacks of hypocrisy that people making a dangerous leap to get themselves/their kids to a better life (and how desparate must someone be to get into an over-filled, unseaworthy boat?!) barely raise an eyebrow when they go missing/lost at sea, but a couple billionaires get all the attention/money possible to get them back (and again, if the company had done its job right, the chances for requiring this rescue would be greatly reduced)
- I should add: let's try not to get this thread off-track into an argument about immigration/etc. But if someone REALLY wants to, try to first spend a few moments and imagine themselves in a situation so shitty, so hopeless, that they feel the best future for them/family is to escape by any means possible. Read a few of those stories please. I'd imagine MANY would do the same (and likewise many Ukrainians have been met with open arms following Russia's invasion, but I digress)
- I don't have much thoughts for the 2 billionaires. They spent the money, they've done similar things, they knew & acknowledged the risks. I have some sympathy for the French explorer guy; probably a contractor/employee, paid to provide story & commentary, probably felt pressured to go along (or at worst, got numb to the issues that have occurred). I have ZERO sympathy for the CEO - his attitude, decisions, influence led to this disaster. He bears full responsibility. I DO have sympathy for the 19yo kid. I don't care if someone says "he's an adult" or you assume he's a spoiled rich kid - he was trusting in his dad to make a good decision and protect him and now he's dead. I doubt very much that he's evil or deserving; at worst, he was probably spoiled but I'm guessing that unless they all died instantly, he was a pretty scared dude...(and his dad was experiencing terrible regret).
- I do think they're dead. Full respect to the search teams for keeping going (I know from previous jobs that the "96 hrs Oxygen" is based on MANY things. Its not like they're alive at 96.0 hours then dead at 96.1 hours, OK? CO2, O2, temperature, water...all factors for how long they'll live.) But honestly, I think something mechanical happened and the thing imploded or had a severe leak that killed them very quickly. I've been in trainers that simulate water leaks at very shallow depths and I've seen what 3000psi leaks do to nearly material, so anything in that range, in that size tube, is catastrophic. THere's no pumps, no escape.
- According to one article, the sub is supposed to have a fail-safe release mechanism that allows it to re-surface (probably something that releases the ballast). If that's the case, either it failed too, or it imploded/flooded and the release mechanism would have no effect.
- If it was on the surface, the P-3/P-8's would find it; their radar's are designed to pickup periscopes (filter out wave reflections) so as long as portions of the sub was above the water, it should have been found.
- Even when its found, they need an ROV and hoist mechanism to lift it up. People are referring to the "weight" but that's not important, its how 'buoyant' it is now (which will be most affected by whether its flooded or not). If it miraculously is NOT flooded, then its actual weight only matters when it needs to be pulled out of
the water.
- Just watched the latest USCG press conference. Good job by the Captain, IMO. The bit about classifying sounds was interesting, but the Woods Hole guy is (obviously) correct - what things sound like below water (remember the sonobuoys that picked up the sounds are at the surface of the water, and sound travels in all sorts of funky ways due to pressure & temp gradients) can be very distorted to the human ear. I've heard all sorts of ringing & clicking underwater that was biologics. Banging on a hull may not be as clear as you'd think from Hollywood...
Whelp, I"ve spent yet another 15 min on this subject that I really don't have to spare...
- the design had serious questions raised over it about 5 yrs ago. The person raising the questions was fired (more for HOW he shared info to others, apparently, but in the end, the design issues appear they remained). It wasn't classed, as the CEO was on record for saying classification rules stifle innovation. In reality, the company didn't want to spend the money/time and was trying to shortcut a process designed to keep lives safe.
- millions of $ are being spent for this rescue. Normally, I wouldn't make note of that - rescues for people making not-so-smart decisions happens all the time. I daresay most Search & Rescue efforts are due to humans making poor decisions somewhere. I think the 2 things that irk me about this is: the sub's design had a history of not meeting standards, some articles highlight the issues that have popped up, and they still went down! It also bothers me that similar funds aren't spent on 1000's of migrants/refugees throughout the world that face challenge/get lost crossing open waters. It just smacks of hypocrisy that people making a dangerous leap to get themselves/their kids to a better life (and how desparate must someone be to get into an over-filled, unseaworthy boat?!) barely raise an eyebrow when they go missing/lost at sea, but a couple billionaires get all the attention/money possible to get them back (and again, if the company had done its job right, the chances for requiring this rescue would be greatly reduced)
- I should add: let's try not to get this thread off-track into an argument about immigration/etc. But if someone REALLY wants to, try to first spend a few moments and imagine themselves in a situation so shitty, so hopeless, that they feel the best future for them/family is to escape by any means possible. Read a few of those stories please. I'd imagine MANY would do the same (and likewise many Ukrainians have been met with open arms following Russia's invasion, but I digress)
- I don't have much thoughts for the 2 billionaires. They spent the money, they've done similar things, they knew & acknowledged the risks. I have some sympathy for the French explorer guy; probably a contractor/employee, paid to provide story & commentary, probably felt pressured to go along (or at worst, got numb to the issues that have occurred). I have ZERO sympathy for the CEO - his attitude, decisions, influence led to this disaster. He bears full responsibility. I DO have sympathy for the 19yo kid. I don't care if someone says "he's an adult" or you assume he's a spoiled rich kid - he was trusting in his dad to make a good decision and protect him and now he's dead. I doubt very much that he's evil or deserving; at worst, he was probably spoiled but I'm guessing that unless they all died instantly, he was a pretty scared dude...(and his dad was experiencing terrible regret).
- I do think they're dead. Full respect to the search teams for keeping going (I know from previous jobs that the "96 hrs Oxygen" is based on MANY things. Its not like they're alive at 96.0 hours then dead at 96.1 hours, OK? CO2, O2, temperature, water...all factors for how long they'll live.) But honestly, I think something mechanical happened and the thing imploded or had a severe leak that killed them very quickly. I've been in trainers that simulate water leaks at very shallow depths and I've seen what 3000psi leaks do to nearly material, so anything in that range, in that size tube, is catastrophic. THere's no pumps, no escape.
- According to one article, the sub is supposed to have a fail-safe release mechanism that allows it to re-surface (probably something that releases the ballast). If that's the case, either it failed too, or it imploded/flooded and the release mechanism would have no effect.
- If it was on the surface, the P-3/P-8's would find it; their radar's are designed to pickup periscopes (filter out wave reflections) so as long as portions of the sub was above the water, it should have been found.
- Even when its found, they need an ROV and hoist mechanism to lift it up. People are referring to the "weight" but that's not important, its how 'buoyant' it is now (which will be most affected by whether its flooded or not). If it miraculously is NOT flooded, then its actual weight only matters when it needs to be pulled out of
the water.
- Just watched the latest USCG press conference. Good job by the Captain, IMO. The bit about classifying sounds was interesting, but the Woods Hole guy is (obviously) correct - what things sound like below water (remember the sonobuoys that picked up the sounds are at the surface of the water, and sound travels in all sorts of funky ways due to pressure & temp gradients) can be very distorted to the human ear. I've heard all sorts of ringing & clicking underwater that was biologics. Banging on a hull may not be as clear as you'd think from Hollywood...
Whelp, I"ve spent yet another 15 min on this subject that I really don't have to spare...








