The Titanic

I’m not sure I recall the exact circumstances, but didn’t the divers from the Byford Dolphin accident die through a high pressure accident whilst deep sea diving?

This did remind me of that but that was kind of the other way round.

During the depressurisation routine somebody undid a latch and it explosively decompressed. Meaning all the air rushed out of the chamber they were in causing them to kind of explode from the inside out, whereas these poor bastards will have been crushed akin to getting clapped by multi-tonne weights.m

Equally unpleasant though for all involved.
 
At those pressures, what happens to the human body? Apologies for being graphic. Does the human body explode,does it get squashed flat, or is it something else?

Two questions in one:

If a human entered the water and sank to these depths, the result would be externally essentially the same as at surface - your thoracic cavity would be internally destroyed, but the body wouldn’t be crushed like a tin can.

In a circumstance like this where even though it’s an implosion it’s still a rapid decompression, most likely the body ripped apart..

Key would be that you’d be dead before you had a clue what had happened, so mercifully it would literally be a case of blink and you’d be gone.
 
Two questions in one:

If a human entered the water and sank to these depths, the result would be externally essentially the same as at surface - your thoracic cavity would be internally destroyed, but the body wouldn’t be crushed like a tin can.

In a circumstance like this where even though it’s an implosion it’s still a rapid decompression, most likely the body ripped apart..

Key would be that you’d be dead before you had a clue what had happened, so mercifully it would literally be a case of blink and you’d be gone.
Last sentence sums it up. As gruesome as it, they'll have been dead before their brains could comprehend what was happening. The families will doubtless be grief-stricken but at least knowing they didn't suffer offers some degree of solace.
 
Just imagine that the Titanic lookout had seen the iceberg earlier, or raised the alarm quicker , the captain had slowed down, or turned the wheel in the opposite direction then the Titanic wouldn't be where it is today, the timeline would be completly different . Decisions made a hundred years ago still shaping the history of the Titanic today .
 
Just imagine that the Titanic lookout had seen the iceberg earlier, or raised the alarm quicker , the captain had slowed down, or turned the wheel in the opposite direction then the Titanic wouldn't be where it is today, the timeline would be completly different . Decisions made a hundred years ago still shaping the history of the Titanic today .
Fate. It's a simultaneously wondrous and frightening thing mate.
 
Two questions in one:

If a human entered the water and sank to these depths, the result would be externally essentially the same as at surface - your thoracic cavity would be internally destroyed, but the body wouldn’t be crushed like a tin can.

In a circumstance like this where even though it’s an implosion it’s still a rapid decompression, most likely the body ripped apart..

Key would be that you’d be dead before you had a clue what had happened, so mercifully it would literally be a case of blink and you’d be gone.
Couple of questions

Why do you believe the body would not cave in?
Why do you believe there would be a rapid decompression?
 
Two questions in one:

If a human entered the water and sank to these depths, the result would be externally essentially the same as at surface - your thoracic cavity would be internally destroyed, but the body wouldn’t be crushed like a tin can.

In a circumstance like this where even though it’s an implosion it’s still a rapid decompression, most likely the body ripped apart..

Key would be that you’d be dead before you had a clue what had happened, so mercifully it would literally be a case of blink and you’d be gone.
It would be an implosion. so crushed like a tin can at depth..decompression is when you surface, so a potential explosion..all depends on the depth it happened at and circumstances, but with debris on the sea bed sounds like an
implosion. Feel we will never know the truth.. but that window at the front not being approved for the depth must have been a a major risk. Hopefully they died quickly..Very sad.
 
Just imagine that the Titanic lookout had seen the iceberg earlier, or raised the alarm quicker , the captain had slowed down, or turned the wheel in the opposite direction then the Titanic wouldn't be where it is today, the timeline would be completly different . Decisions made a hundred years ago still shaping the history of the Titanic today .
If the titanic hadn’t sank, that means the film wouldn’t have been made, which means I wouldn’t have had a very pleasant night with some lass from work who was going through a separation.

Mad how shit works.
 
Just imagine that the Titanic lookout had seen the iceberg earlier, or raised the alarm quicker , the captain had slowed down, or turned the wheel in the opposite direction then the Titanic wouldn't be where it is today, the timeline would be completly different . Decisions made a hundred years ago still shaping the history of the Titanic today .
And we'd never have seen Kate's Norks
 

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