Titan crew said 'all good here' before submersible imploded
Titan crew said 'all good here' before submersible imploded

Titan crew said 'all good here' before submersible imploded

Titan crew said 'all good here' before submersible imploded
Titan crew said 'all good here' before submersible imploded
After decades of journalists attaching the suffix "gate" to anything even remotely scandalous, I was disappointed that I never heard anyone embrace the full stupidity of this practice by referring to this story as "Oceangate-gate"
After some thought, I've decided that we should refer to this apparent lapse by journalists as "Oceangate-gate-gate"
I’ve never understood why gate is used as a suffix in this way.
It originated from the Watergate scandal iirc. Watergate being the Watergate hotel but I guess water and gate are easy to separate and -gate kind of works as a suffix.
Nah, I'll just watch Iron Lung, thanks.
Thanks, I hate it
James Earl Jones
:(
If subnautica taught me anything, he voiced the actual sub.
Now... Which dialogue choice did he take?
To be fair, at the exact moment he said "All good here" it probably was. It just became very ungood, very quickly.
The first one that guy was a genuine idiot.
All good here 👍💥
It was good
Followed shortly by ‘oh shit’ and ‘we dropped two weights’ then ‘guys, it’s getting kind of wet in here…’
Just kidding, mostly.
Serious question: how does a submarine know how much it weighs?
Explosive decompression is almost instantaneous at that depth. They wouldn't have had a chance to even blink.
Implosive compression?
Wouldn't it have happened so fast that they never even registered the pain of being crushed? Like, the signal from the body never even reached the brain, it was so fast.
Yeah, it was definitely intended as humor an attempt at levity.
Yeah, the ocean was decompressed by a tiny bit..
Explosive decompression
Doubly backwards
That's when your spaceship shreds apart.
I assume that the submarine producer gives stats like empty weight from which the current weight can be calculated.
However, weight isn't the important thing in a sub. It's the weight to volume ratio, or buoyancy.
A sub sinks when buoyancy is negative and rises if the buoyancy is positive.
There are three common ways to achieve the changing buoyancy: the most simple one is a vessel with positive buoyancy adding droppable weights until the buoyancy is negative.
Other ways are a neutral buoyancy vessel that uses it's engine power to push itself up or down. Or a vessel that can change it's buoyancy by filling up tanks with water (to reduce buoyancy below neutral) and blow them out with air or other gases lighter than water (to raise buoyancy above neutral). A combination of several methods is also possible.
Amazing how intact the back half is given, you know, explosive decompression.
It was, infact, not all good there.