Don't think there will be a happy ending to this one.
"The crew closes the hatch, from the outside, with 17 bolts. There's no other way out," Pogue said in his November report.
Pogue told the BBC on Monday that, to his knowledge, the pod had at least seven functions that could help it resurface. But there's no solution to the submersible being trapped underwater, or a way out if water were to start leaking into the compartment, Pogue added.
"There's no backup, there's no escape pod," Pogue told the BBC. "It's get to the surface or die."
Is there any kind of ballast on that sub?Sounds like banging is every 30 minutes. Like they are trying to signal from inside the sub. Still a long shot to find them. And if they did, it sounds like there is no equipment available to go to the depths to retrieve it.
From the article I posted earlier:Is there any kind of ballast on that sub?
I assume they simply jettison the weight of the pipes instead of blowing out water from any ballast tanks."You steer this sub with an Xbox game controller, some of the ballast is abandoned construction pipes," Pogue told the BBC.
Which button on the X-box controller releases the ballast?I assume they simply jettison the weight of the pipes instead of blowing out water from any ballast tanks.
That's for divers. Being in an enclosed sub that is more or less atmospheric pressure, that should not be an issue. Unless the hull is breached, but in that case they are toast anyway.Doesn't there still have be a controlled ascent to allow the pressure to equalize in a way that prevents the people inside from getting the bends (air bubbles in the bloodstream)?
Locating the missing sub is one thing, but I don't think there is a way to actually get it to the surface once it's found. JMO
The submersible has done about 25 trips to the Titanic over the past three year. It takes about 2-1/2 hours to descend and the same to ascend, plus Titanic viewing time...total trip time, 10-12 hours.I wonder how long a full descent down to the wreckage site and an ascent back up to the surface from it usually takes?
I think so. It's most likely at the bottom of the ocean somewhere. And will be even harder to find then the Titanic (And that took like 10 years to find.) I don't think there is much hope to rescue these people alive. Miracles do happen, but chances are extremely thin at this point.So it's possible this will never be found in our lifetime.