One thing I read is that the conbination of the incoming water and pressure....water would be coming in at 2000 mph and the temperature at that spot would be as hot as the surface
Crush depth
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One thing I read is that the conbination of the incoming water and pressure....water would be coming in at 2000 mph and the temperature at that spot would be as hot as the surface
That's cavitation. Only really happens on a very tiny scale (head of a needle), at a specific pin point.
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Norcas gonna Norc.
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Do you have any idea of what 2 1/2 miles of rope strong enough to pull that back up would weigh and the size of it? Would take a Aircraft Carrier to haul it.
5/32 7 x 19 stainless wire rope would be enough. I could carry a mile of that on the back seat of hatchback. Handyman rolls are 305 meters long and can be caried in one arm, just. Five and a bit of those rolls is a mile.
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Well THEY wont be paying their fair share
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I'll tell you what remains. Crab food. Little bits of metal. Footware
Here is your answer from the moment the news broke.
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Here is your answer from the moment the news broke.
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here is a thread crossover ....
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Good eating for the little guys I guess. You know those billionaires eat nothing but stuff like foi gras, chateaubriands and wagyu. You know there's a crab going around down there with a Patek Phillipe in claw, going "Hey EVERYBODY LOOK AT ME ! I'm a BILLIONAIRE!!!"
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"Buy Buy! Sell Sell! C'mon u guyz it's funnai!!!" etc.
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Cameron's vessel looks like a NASA spaceship. The other one looks like a tube that you're gonna die in.
Cameron when down almost 36,000 feet. By himself. In 2012. -
Cameron's vessel looks like a NASA spaceship. The other one looks like a tube that you're gonna die in.
Cameron when down almost 36,000 feet. By himself. In 2012.Facts.
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Hey Astac/Storch/other USN guys- I've read in a few different books that a sub at pretty deep depths - as in our SSN/SSBN/SSGN/DE/etc subs - such as say 7 or 800 feet and deeper, that the pressure at that depth would mean that if they took a torp hit at that depth and the hull had a breach, the resulting rapid compression from the hull failure would cause the air to ignite, and pretty much burn/vaporize all human materials/remains.
Is there any truth to this? I know Clancy had mentioned it in both Red Rock Rover and Red Storm Rising, and some other similar authors have said much the same.
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Hey Astac/Storch/other USN guys- I've read in a few different books that a sub at pretty deep depths - as in our SSN/SSBN/SSGN/DE/etc subs - such as say 7 or 800 feet and deeper, that the pressure at that depth would mean that if they took a torp hit at that depth and the hull had a breach, the resulting rapid compression from the hull failure would cause the air to ignite, and pretty much burn/vaporize all human materials/remains.
Is there any truth to this? I know Clancy had mentioned it in both Red Rock Rover and Red Storm Rising, and some other similar authors have said much the same.
That is what I was taught. At least the heating of the air part. Think of the super heating of air that occurs in a diesel engine on the compression stroke. Whether the humans would be vaporized I don’t know. It makes sense though as their bodies would be instantly compressed along with the hull and the air. So if they are essentially compressed into a pink goo and the air is super heated, I imagine they would burn off.
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Yeah that is how diesels work. Modern ones are something like 24:1 compression. I'm sure there is a formula that can be used to compare the sub to an engine. Where's Holden?
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All you need to do to find him is post something about Covid vax killing people
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Those billionaires in the sub were vaxxed. No wonder they're dead.
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I they were vaxxed then their lack of sense makes sense.