... it ran out days ago (assuming it didn't implode):

  1. The 96 hours thing comes from the Oceangate website factsheet. Do you think they ACTUALLY tested that by putting five people in it for 96 hours?

  2. Whatever went wrong with the sub (electrical failure, implosion) probably compromised the oxygen supply or made it redundant.

  3. The 96 hours assumes they breathed evenly. Do you think they weren't panicking and trashing and screaming and hyperventilating?

  4. Oxygen is only one part of the problem, the other is dangerous CO2 buildup. These subs have CO2 removal systems that need replacing every 10 hours or so. They would be inhaling dangerous levels of CO2 long before they ran out of oxygen.

They're mega, mega dead.

  • AernaLingus [any]
    ·
    1 year ago

    I don't get cheaping out on this when you're actually going to use the thing yourself. It's one thing to cut corners when others' lives are at stake (par for the capitalist course), but I looked up the cost of one of the vessels that went to the deepest point in the ocean (~3x the depth of the Titanic wreck) and it was $37 million. A billionaire could buy that shit in cash if they wanted to...boggles the mind.

    • POKEMONGOTOTHEGULAG [none/use name]
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      Dude was such a massive sucker that he actually believed in the SV horseshit about innovation. It's reminiscient of the rubes who didn't get vaxxed and then died.

      The left underestimates how many people are actually just really stupid and not knowingly gaming the system.