I hope i'm not insulting anyone and i realy hope none of you personally knew anyone who died on that sub. Tragic deaths are always awfull.
But the more i heard and read about that hobby DIY submarine, the more ridiculous the story became to me. Again, i don't want to insult anyone, but when i first read about it i couldn't help laughing about the whole idea of going to the debts of 4 kilometers (where you're being exposed to a pressure of 400 kg per square centimeter) in a cobbled-together, uncertified, dive tub, held together and working with the most low-tech, cheap, band-aid solutions one could think of.
I believe the moment that thing went missing, it was pretty clear that it had imploded.
There is some footage of the first failed human attempts of flight. Including a guy who jumped off the eifeltower with strapped-on wings. He probably tried a chair first, and when that didn't work he must have thought that he needed something higher to jump from.
That's exactly what this was.
The reason oceangate operated off the coast of canada, and that he did not try to get his submarine certified, is that the guy behind it knew that he would never get that thing certified anywhere, and that he would never have been allowed to operate that thing commercially from any first world country.
You truly have to be a sort of don quixote to, being fully aware of all these flaws, continue to dive in that contraption yourself anyway.
Let's call this guy a tragic hero, because this is going to be a movie or a novel some day. And well, eccentric people are the driving force behind human civilisation. And evolution. Even when it's just for winning darwin awards.
But the more i heard and read about that hobby DIY submarine, the more ridiculous the story became to me. Again, i don't want to insult anyone, but when i first read about it i couldn't help laughing about the whole idea of going to the debts of 4 kilometers (where you're being exposed to a pressure of 400 kg per square centimeter) in a cobbled-together, uncertified, dive tub, held together and working with the most low-tech, cheap, band-aid solutions one could think of.
I believe the moment that thing went missing, it was pretty clear that it had imploded.
There is some footage of the first failed human attempts of flight. Including a guy who jumped off the eifeltower with strapped-on wings. He probably tried a chair first, and when that didn't work he must have thought that he needed something higher to jump from.
That's exactly what this was.
The reason oceangate operated off the coast of canada, and that he did not try to get his submarine certified, is that the guy behind it knew that he would never get that thing certified anywhere, and that he would never have been allowed to operate that thing commercially from any first world country.
You truly have to be a sort of don quixote to, being fully aware of all these flaws, continue to dive in that contraption yourself anyway.
Let's call this guy a tragic hero, because this is going to be a movie or a novel some day. And well, eccentric people are the driving force behind human civilisation. And evolution. Even when it's just for winning darwin awards.