I'll only believe it's over when @surf calls itSome of you really think these dudes are still alive. Listen man, this search is so they can say they tried....not one of them believe they gone find this sub. Its one with the Titanic now
I'll only believe it's over when @surf calls itSome of you really think these dudes are still alive. Listen man, this search is so they can say they tried....not one of them believe they gone find this sub. Its one with the Titanic now
Yes.Even if they made it to the top, they can’t open the vessel from the inside. Does anyone know why it was constructed this way?
Manually deploy the retrieval balloons.Pretty insulting for them to keep telling the general public that this is still a rescue mission. Even you do find them 13,000 feet on the bottom of the ocean floor.. then what?
I'll only believe it's over when @surf calls it
For realSome of you really think these dudes are still alive. Listen man, this search is so they can say they tried....not one of them believe they gone find this sub. Its one with the Titanic now
Coward.my name ain’t got shyt to do with water
LinkWhat happens when Titan sub's oxygen runs out? Our reporter Eloise Alanna has spoken with Dr Ken Ledez, a hyperbaric medicine expert at Memorial University in St John’s, Newfoundland.
Dr Ledez explained some of the factors at play for those onboard the missing Titan sub.
He says surviving after oxygen runs out will depend on a person's metabolism and some may survive longer than others.
"It’s not like switching off a light, it’s like climbing a mountain," he said.
"They're going to do everything they can to reduce their oxygen consumption, they're going to rest, they're going to try to be as relaxed and calm as possible because they know that too much activity will cause more metabolism - creating more carbon dioxide."
Dr Ledez also says "hyperthermia could be their friend".
"There is a possibility if they cool down enough and lose conscience they could live through it... The heart beat can be really slow when cold," he said.
"Could they go on a week after the limits? I doubt it. But some may survive longer than others."
why is this a US issue? this company operated out of Newfoundland - Canada, and the nut job CEO was the only US citizen. Plus the Brits have a strong Navy, they can chip inHot Take:
The brits are going to be extra salty due to them thinking the U.S. stalled the salvage ships that are just arriving.
The Navy just rolled out the Deep Ocean Salvage system that can reach the ocean floor.
Now they gotta weld it onto another ship.
Could take 24 hours.
Basically this is no longer a SAR mission.
They are probably suffocated and frozen by now.
why is this a US issue? this company operated out of Newfoundland - Canada, and the nut job CEO was the only US citizen. Plus the Brits have a strong Navy, they can chip in
The Navy told Magellan and another retrieval company to stand down until they flew all their sorties.why is this a US issue? this company operated out of Newfoundland - Canada, and the nut job CEO was the only US citizen. Plus the Brits have a strong Navy, they can chip in
why is this a US issue? this company operated out of Newfoundland - Canada, and the nut job CEO was the only US citizen. Plus the Brits have a strong Navy, they can chip in