@@presidential3228 I’m not Liam Neeson. I just know death is unavoidable. Why fear something you can’t avoid? If you fear death so much then you forget how to live. I’ve seen it up close plenty of times. It’s just a everyday thing.
It's said the power cut off first, making the sub do a steep nose dive They would all have been thrust to the front of the sub on top of each other, in the dark, for long enough to realize what was going on
No, I really doubt they knew for certain it was coming, they would have heard some intense creaking and bangs before the implosion, and to be fair, that is a typical thing to hear in a deep sea submersible, not so much heavy bangs, though, every bang is the surface area of the vessel denting inwards.
Yes they died instantly but there was quite a long build up of impending doom hanging over them with knowing what was about to happen. That itself is more terrifying.
@@ryanellis2502 Carbon fibre breaks down over time while under extreme pressure. It doesn't matter if it took 500 trips or 20 the carbon fibre can was always filled with impending doom and that so called engineer was a fool for not realizing this.
@@montyrayza7220The engineers who warned the company about this risk were fired instantly. Don't blame it on the engineers, blame it on the money hungry company.
The explanation from one youtuber that the power failed causing the lights to go out, then the sub nosed down and fell for a while in pitch black before imploding, sounds like an absolute nightmare, worse that any of my recurring falling elevator nightmares.
Our instructor just used this earlier as an example to demonstrate the pressure changes as an introduction for our Hydraulics review. RIP to the 5 on board Edit: it's been 10 months and 13k likes WOW! THAT'S THE MOST LIKES I'VE HAD! Thanks people! Also my review is done and I passed the civil engineering licensure exam and I am now a licensed civil engineer.
The exact moment of death might have been instant, but the seconds leading up to it certainly were not. They likely knew something bad was going to happen without knowing when. Truly a shitty way to go.
"Dieselling", it's called. Like the molecules in diesel fuel which ignite under compression within the engine. These poor fuckers where ignited for a millisecond in that deathtrap vessel... Ex-submariner here.
Yep indeed on that. The same as when people say, “They were 2 miles below the water,” or “There were 100s of people looking for them in the water.” It is hard for the human brain to comprehend a lot without going through it first hand first. Zero mental scaling ability or high comprehension of events as a species.
@@liyahhimuch faster than that, there are 1000 milliseconds in 1 second. This is why the original commenter is having a difficult time trying to comprehend the speed cause it really isn't even something we can process. We take 50 milliseconds to blink and that's not even something we notice most of the time.
[Cuts to a scene of him in another room] So here we have a sub.....mersible. Sub meaning "subway" like the sandwhich and merisble meaning "mercy" which is French.....for thank you [raises eyebrow, long pause]
This entire event didn’t matter to me until I heard the young guy was afraid to go but he wanted to do something amazing with his dad so he swallowed his fear and climbed in. That was the moment where I felt sorry for the kid. RIP
They were compressed but squeeze is also correct. They didn't squeeze like how we squeeze coke cans. They were compressed probably like how metals are compressed in junk yard
As dark as this sounds. I’m glad this is what got them. The alternative is way worse. Stuck in that claustrophobic space with 5 others and panic slowly seeping in. Those few days would’ve been the longest and most horrible days of their lives. May they RIP
I mean since they found the debri quickly, maybe they could’ve been saved if they went through a few more days of torture. Only speculation though, since they are rich and not trained people, they probably wouldn’t know how to conserve oxygen
I saw an interview with a retired sub commander. He said they were probably in full panic mode with all the sounds the Titan was making before it imploded.
@@tonysoflayour reasoning is flawed on many levels, 1 hearing any abnormal noise like cracking or shifting thousands of feet underwater is going to be very concerning anyways, 2 construction wasn’t 100% carbon fiber, 3 there has been cases where carbon fiber that’s hollow have either imploded or exploded so idk where you got that from as it’s most certainly happened
5 Rich guys, i think nobody will miss them really much. EDIT: you guys are really Just brainwashed, tons of people die everyday and nobody cares, then if 5 millionaires die because of their dumbness, its a world tragedy
It's reassuring to know that they didn't suffer but humbling to realise that their brains wouldn't have even had time to process what was happening to them.
Not really. If a person is in the bottom of the ocean and suddenly raises to the top he/she instantly dies because all the air inside him burst out. But the other way around, from top to bottom, he/she survives, because this time air inside his veins just compresses a % bit more, but his lungs and ear drums take a massive shock that later kills him. It depends on how the submersible was build and what depth they were, usually engineers design stuff to start concaving in a specific spot if there is a risk of explosion or implosion.
@@miguelcarunchod.1493 Have you not watched the video or read any news articles? They were instantly crushed... Not talking about air compression in someone's blood?
@@JMHMellors the submarine* insta crushes, not the humans inside, and the more air gap between the submarine's walls and them, the more chances of survival.
@@miguelcarunchod.1493Yes really. Despite your best effort and ramblings, they were gone in a split second. This guy is also incorrect. From memory, there are two pain responses, the second (being the real tangible one that you can actually perceive) is something like 1.5 seconds. These people felt nothing.
@@chalupaman2121those people on the ship were stupid af fr fr of o payed 250k to get on a sub to go down to the titanic and saw THAT controller i wouldnt of went
Yeah if you don’t count the minutes or hours of panic and fear as the vessel was creaking and the attempts the captain was making to contact the people on the surface…
pretty sure the creaking noises it made before that happened probably scared the shit out them as before the implosion everything will start making noises as it starts to give away
Thank god they didn’t even realize that they died because one of the passengers convinced his son to come with him and I’m happy he didn’t realize he just killed his son
That guy wanted a project without any "old white guys" because it wasn't "inspiring" enough for ethnically diverse wannabe engineers. Well...all those "old white guys?" They were PROFESSIONALS. IDC what you think about diversity quotas, but if you fuck around with those pressures at that depth...nature doesn't give a Rats ASS what your "inspirational team" looks like. You cut corners? You WILL find out. Nature straight up didn't care that those guys were billionaires. Literally a non-factor. I am sorry that they couldn't see what a con man that CEO was though. RIP to his victims.
No submarine is made for that amount of pressure, cut corners or not, in fact, the reason it's so instant is that it was actually holding up well until the structure couldn't handle it, and all the accumulated energy of the pressure got released at once, so a more expensive and prepared submarine would've suffered the same if going deep enough
@@juanjosenavarro8527correct. Its like going into a coma, losing consciousness, or taking general anesthesia. You don’t know or realize your unconscious, you just are. I had a rhinoplasty and have zero memory of anything that happened in the operating room.
The fraudulent CEO 15 min ago, when his faulty batteries died and he had one of his suicidal thoughts to just go on with that useless mission, because who knows, how many trips that vehicle would still be holding togeth... oh, never mind... They knew, they were trapped and things went wrong...
When death comes knocking on your door, you can’t ask for a bigger gift than dying in less than a millisecond, when it’s lights out before your senses could process the event.
It is a mercy that they wouldn’t have felt pain, but sadly, the last few minutes of their lives would’ve been terrifying. I’m especially thinking of the 19-year-old who was only there to support his dad. So sad.
@@nukedude2433an aunt said he didn't want to go...from what I've read,she was an estranged aunt and wouldn't have known. The mother has spoken out and said he was excited to go. She actually gave up her seat for him.
There's a tape going around on RU-vid that here you can hear them scream screaming so they lived a little while it was a slow squash until complete closing
When you think about it. This was kind of a blessing, A terribly sad unfortunate blessing. Rip to these unfortunate souls but they will never ever have to suffer my heart goes out to the families affected
@@duarteduarte3649so you dont care about the 5 people? Sick. Just sick. Imagine your Dad, Mom, brother, sister (if you have any), or any other relative died in that. Would you have been sad?
@@datonedude7358well, that's entirely different. It's normal for people not to care for people they don't have any relation to, it's different if it's their loving families
@@KarlJayce.Blud definitely wasn't watching the video💀 The entire "crushed to death by an implosion" thing took less than a millisecond, how the hell could they feel pain for a second if they were reduced to a bloody mist within less than a millisecond💀💀💀
@@TU-ESSTULTUS but honestly does that carbon fiber hull really crush that hard on their bodies that they would die instantly? if that happened in typical submarine that is made of steel it probably would crush you instant.
@@johnnymclaneutah Another buffoon who didn't watch the video💀💀💀 It doesn't matter what kind of material the submarine was made of, what killed them wasn't the imploded carbon fiber hull, it was the immense pressure of the ocean that crushed them into mist To explain it to your thick skull, the carbon fiber hull was only made to resist the pressure that was pushing inwards, this is because the deeper you go, the higher the pressure becomes; the moment the hull broke, the pressure was no longer being counteracted, allowing the pressure being exerted upon them to crush the squishy pilots
@@johnnymclaneutah Well, the submarine crunched down to like 1 inch thick in a millisecond, and since pressure is super high that low, i would expect it to be like being crushed by 500 industrial-grade hydraulic presses from every side, and once something goes wrong, all of them activate at once and crush you instantly. When you are that deep with the pressure so high, water is like a solid rock, that can move.
BS except for the part where they heard the hull cracking for 3 to 5 minutes before implosion and tried to resurface! scared out their minds with terror, they knew what was happening! sadly! they went down to fast, they were 1200 meters deeper than what they should have been.
They were freezing cold down there!! So cold that they could develop frostbite in their extremities if sitting too close to the view window for too long. RIP 🪦
This reminds me of that one deep diving implosion of the dolphin work site where a diver got imploded so fast that he was forced to pass through an opening half the size of his body
That diver didn't implode, he experienced very rapid explosive decompression which mutilated his body beyond recognition and flipped his organs inside out.
Fun fact: 10 years before the Titanic sank, a book was released that was a story similar to what happened to the Titanic. The ship in the book was named Titan. Irony.
@@CoolOkay_closure for what even, you guys are such stupid hiporites. Gladly you don't have to feel closure for the thousand people having to die every day, getting tortured by monster and whatnot. But at least you have closure. That's so important, let's hope you suffer more.
This is what happens when you cut corners. My brother told me that one of the engineers at the place in his internship skipped the safety protocols and next thing ya know he was electrocuted and fried to death. There's a reason for every safety rule out there.