OceanGate Titan Sub Debris Video Shows How It Imploded

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Jeff Ostroff reviews videos released by the U.S. Coast Guard of the doomed OceanGate Titan submersible wreckage sitting on the ocean floor just 330 yards from the bow of the RMS Titanic, which sank in 1912. The wreckage of the OceanGate Titan sub was recorded as rescuers discovered the debris field with the Pelagius Research ROV known as Odysseus 6000. The ROV Odysseus 6K is an easily transportable, extremely capable and deep-sea system that integrates into ships. The ROV supports executing time-critical search, rescue, and recovery operations.

This video shows the Ocean Gate Titan submersible's tail cone and a piece of carbon fiber in the foreground.

🎥 WATCH NEXT:
🎥 Link to Azget Industries YouTube Channel 3D Titan Video:
Titan Submersible and how it Imploded... parts of submersible recovered 1600 feet from the Titanic

00:00 Introduction to Coat Guard Video of OceanGate Titan Sub on Ocean Floor
00:16 Aft section of Titan Submersible on Ocean Floor
00:36 OceanGate Titlan Logo on the side of Titan Sub Debris
01:09 Location on Titan sub where debris was attached
01:30 Azget Industries 3D model of OceanGate Titan Submarine
02:05 About Pelagius Odysseus 6K ROV that captured video
03:59 2nd Coast Guard Video of Titan Sub wreckage
06:14 How Carbon Fiber Titan hull was glued to titanium domes
08:40 More analysis of Titan wreckage
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Knowing the titanic is looming in the darkness just past this, totally out of sight as though it’s not even there…..is unsettling.

EnderZigg
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The way it looms upright on the barren seafloor. A monument to one man’s hubris, and a tombstone for the other four.

Ett.Gammalt.Bergtroll
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Thank you for mentioning my work! I will do an update with the new information we have.

AzgetFX
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Great comment on the titanium surface prep and no gloves. I work around spacecraft and your comments are common knowledge for us. Those guys are so cavalier!

russelllayman
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Interestingly enough the parts of the pressure vessel made out of the proper material (titanium) survived almost completely unscathed

Alexiosftw
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Wow I didn’t know they constructed it like this. I’m a NACE certified industrial and protective coatings engineer for context, basically I engineer protective coatings for extreme environments. You are absolutely correct, that titanium should have been sandblasted with an SP5 white blast abrasion at least, before the application of anything. Not only that, but it’s is insane to me they thought ANY adhesive would endure pressures so vast to secure carbon fiber to a titanium ring. That is unbelievable to me. There’s no adhesive in the world, not even polyamide epoxy dendrimers that can endure CONSTANT liquid pressure stress that extreme reliably.

The “constant” is also a key aspect. It’s not intermittent strain, it is ceaseless strain. Kinda similar to muscles. You can withstand muscle strain easier and far longer with brief intermittent strain than you can with constant strain. Constant strain will lead to strength failure much faster

anthonya
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Seeing the brand name on the ocean floor is darkly poetic

nikkimaraviglia
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It is absolutely wild to me that they glued that thing together. I know nothing of mechanical engineering, harsh environments or anything related, but if someone told me they were going to glue together a pressure vessel to go even a few metres underwater, I'd have thought they were completely out of their minds. Absolute madness.

chuck_stones
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First the titanic, now the titan... in 100 years, someone will dive the same spot with a vessel called "tit"

AmrothEldarion
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I feel most for the kid that didn’t even want to go but did so because of his father. Sad all the way around

barkburton
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I’m a high school drop out who has built homes for 30 years. And I’ve fully understood since I was 18 that you can not join rigid and flexible materials and put them under serious pressures.

SticksAandstonesBozo
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I love the pic of Rush wearing safety glasses and helmet on the deck of a ship... clearly safety was always his priority...

roblonsdale
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imagine going deep down in the ocean to see one of the most famous tragedy’s ever, just to end up being a different tragedy.. imagine the irony if now people went on a second tour to see the ocean gate sub.

tailwhup
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Watching this all i can think about is how smug and smart Stockton thought he was. The way he talked about the titan reminded me of confidence someone has when they are scamming the hell out of people and thinks nobody is gonna stop him

neotheseattledj
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Absolutely spot on, this man knew that it wasn’t safe but still took crazy amount of money to risk 5 lives

mrwilson
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I can’t even imagine the kind of fear those men must’ve been before they perished. Seeing videos of what the implosion could’ve looked like for their bodies is absolutely haunting. They didn’t experience any pain from the implosion because it happened faster before their brains could process it but.. the fact that they were gone just like that. No traces of them left behind. It’s absolutely devastating. I really hope ocean gate shuts down, this tragedy could’ve been preventable. RIP to all the victims ❤️

jungwonhrs
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I never expected them to have such high quality and well lit video. It's really crazy when you realize whatever was left of the passengers was likely compressed into that debris that was pushed into the titanium end cap.

bobbygetsbanned
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The guy who put on the ratchet strap must’ve slapped it and said “she’s not going anywhere”

pointsix
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naming the sub almost like the name of the Titanic is already a bad omen. And oceangate seems similar to watergate. Hehe

vincentnavea
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Seeing the name "OceanGate" on the ocean floor with the Titatic somewhere close by reminded me of the Heaven's Gate cult for some reason.

GeckoHiker
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