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Today's "Breaking news":Titan submersible disaster was preventable, Coast Guard states
Posted on 8/5/25 at 8:46 am
Posted on 8/5/25 at 8:46 am
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PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — The Coast Guard’s report on the Titan submersible disaster that killed five on the way to the Titanic said Tuesday the implosion was “preventable.”
The disappearance of the Titan off Canada in 2023 led to a search that grabbed worldwide attention, and the Coast Guard convened its highest level of investigation in the aftermath.
The Titan was owned by OceanGate, a private company based in Washington state. The operator of the submersible, OceanGate head Stockton Rush, was among the five on board who died. There were no survivors.
The report found the company’s safety procedures were “critically flawed,” noting that the core of the failures inside the company came down to “glaring disparities” between their safety protocols and actual practices.
The submersible disaster has led to lawsuits and calls for tighter regulation of the developing private deep sea expedition industry.
Posted on 8/5/25 at 8:46 am to East Coast Band
Anybody who saw that documentary knew this months ago. Stockton Rush was a piece of shite human being.
This post was edited on 8/5/25 at 8:48 am
Posted on 8/5/25 at 8:48 am to East Coast Band
quote:
Titan submersible disaster was preventable
well, yeah gif
Posted on 8/5/25 at 8:48 am to East Coast Band
By simply not putting that piece of shite under pressure?
Posted on 8/5/25 at 8:49 am to East Coast Band
Must be a slow news day. 
Posted on 8/5/25 at 8:50 am to East Coast Band
It was a long-term suicide by Stockton Rush. Slowly at first, then suddenly.
Posted on 8/5/25 at 9:05 am to East Coast Band
quote:
Titan submersible disaster was preventable, Coast Guard states

Posted on 8/5/25 at 10:30 am to East Coast Band
quote:
Today's "Breaking news":Titan submersible disaster was preventable, Coast Guard states

Posted on 8/5/25 at 10:32 am to caro81
Now that’s some breaking news. Hope they got OT pay coming to this conclusion
Posted on 8/5/25 at 10:37 am to caro81
tighter regulation ?
If you are going to do something like that, much less pay big money to do it, don't you take some responsibility for making those decisions? Do you really need the gubment (sic) to step in with a thick rule book? Or for someone to say "that creaking sound is/is not according to regulation 102-4-gh"?
If you are going to do something like that, much less pay big money to do it, don't you take some responsibility for making those decisions? Do you really need the gubment (sic) to step in with a thick rule book? Or for someone to say "that creaking sound is/is not according to regulation 102-4-gh"?
Posted on 8/5/25 at 10:40 am to East Coast Band
quote:
PORTLAND, Maine (AP) — The Coast Guard’s report on the Titan submersible disaster that killed five on the way to the Titanic said Tuesday the implosion was “preventable.”
Our tax dollars at work.
This has been beat to friken death. No shite it was preventable. Mostly by the jerkoff who owned the outfit who could have listened to experts instead of thinking he was some kind of carbon fiber sub pioneer.
Posted on 8/5/25 at 10:51 am to East Coast Band
At this point, all I really want to see is video of the DEI-loving uber-tard being gooified in the mini-sub.
Posted on 8/5/25 at 10:54 am to East Coast Band
quote:
The submersible disaster has led to lawsuits and calls for tighter regulation of the developing private deep sea expedition industry.
stupid
Posted on 8/5/25 at 10:57 am to real turf fan
quote:
tighter regulation ?
I think the regulation they're suggesting is based around passenger operations. OG was able to skirt a lot of things by labeling their paying passengers as crew of the sub even though they weren't really needed do anything mission-critical.
Basically sounds like they want to eliminate the gray area which OG operated in, which everyone should agree with.
Posted on 8/5/25 at 11:01 am to East Coast Band
Stay on land like god and nature intended.
Posted on 8/5/25 at 12:12 pm to East Coast Band
Avoidable by not going places you don’t belong.
Posted on 8/5/25 at 12:26 pm to FinkyStinger
quote:
Stay on land like god and nature intended.
Forgot about that whole Moses thing, huh?
Posted on 8/5/25 at 12:36 pm to East Coast Band
As a reminder, submersibles are insanely easy to make safe. They're so safe, the Coast Guard didn't even have protocols on what to do.
There is a submersible that is capable of reaching the deepest parts of the oceans that has been in service for over 60 years.
DSV Alvin
So, it is not novel or inaccessible technology. It's just expensive (and heavy). OceanGate (Stockton Rush) wasn't pursuing carbon fiber for the application because it was in any way better (except lighter and cheaper). He was "breaking rules" and not in a good way.
Take the Alvin or the ultramodern Limiting Factor. They're very heavy and very expensive to operate. Even if you could operate the Alvin with 1 expert pilot, you could only bring 2 paying customers. Likewise, the Limiting Factor (which you can deploy and retrieve several times in the same day, all the way to the bottom of the sea if you have its specialized mothership) is only a 2-seater. 1 pilot, 1 "passenger/mission specialist/customer". OceanGate had to make carbon fiber work to have 4 or 5 people in the tube to make the thing profitable more quickly.
Now, I don't think Rush was doing it for the money alone, but he needed it to be profitable in the short-term as well as all the other things he was stroking his own ego with.
Carbon fiber is fantastic material for aerospace applications. If it was suitable for deep sea operations, it would have already been in use. It isn't. You need steel or titanium for a pressure hull going to the depths of the ocean. Carbon fiber is great for a positive pressure environment, like airframes or even automobiles. But not when there is immense compressive/crushing pressure.
There is a submersible that is capable of reaching the deepest parts of the oceans that has been in service for over 60 years.
DSV Alvin
So, it is not novel or inaccessible technology. It's just expensive (and heavy). OceanGate (Stockton Rush) wasn't pursuing carbon fiber for the application because it was in any way better (except lighter and cheaper). He was "breaking rules" and not in a good way.
Take the Alvin or the ultramodern Limiting Factor. They're very heavy and very expensive to operate. Even if you could operate the Alvin with 1 expert pilot, you could only bring 2 paying customers. Likewise, the Limiting Factor (which you can deploy and retrieve several times in the same day, all the way to the bottom of the sea if you have its specialized mothership) is only a 2-seater. 1 pilot, 1 "passenger/mission specialist/customer". OceanGate had to make carbon fiber work to have 4 or 5 people in the tube to make the thing profitable more quickly.
Now, I don't think Rush was doing it for the money alone, but he needed it to be profitable in the short-term as well as all the other things he was stroking his own ego with.
Carbon fiber is fantastic material for aerospace applications. If it was suitable for deep sea operations, it would have already been in use. It isn't. You need steel or titanium for a pressure hull going to the depths of the ocean. Carbon fiber is great for a positive pressure environment, like airframes or even automobiles. But not when there is immense compressive/crushing pressure.
This post was edited on 8/5/25 at 12:41 pm
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