Captain Buckeye
Assistant Coach
That or that it's in waters near SEC country.I think that's sped up.
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That or that it's in waters near SEC country.I think that's sped up.
In his defense, it was still presumed that they could’ve been alive at that point. Plus it was legitimately pretty funny despite being crass.This is so wrong... but I chuckled.
So the fun part is at that depth, if/when they had a failure, when the bulkhead lets go, the air gets compressed so quickly it will literally flash fire, meaning whoever was on it incinerated before they drowned.
Apparently, it happened in microseconds and they would have been torn to shreds before they could have cognitively processed pain.So the fun part is at that depth, if/when they had a failure, when the bulkhead lets go, the air gets compressed so quickly it will literally flash fire, meaning whoever was on it incinerated before they drowned.
Apparently, it happened in microseconds and they would have been torn to shreds before they could have cognitively processed pain.
Apparently, it happened in microseconds and they would have been torn to shreds before they could have cognitively processed pain.
Whatever shards of bones and ground beef that remained would have been blown out of the hull with the escaping air and scattered by ocean current for miles.
Whatever shards of bones and ground beef that remained would have been blown out of the hull with the escaping air and scattered by ocean current for miles.
If you ever watched slowmo footage of a ballistics gel getting shot by high velocity rounds, you'll see this effect.
Their bodies ceased to be three dimensional objects and instead became a high-energy physics event.
Speeds visible to the naked eye can vaporize people with somewhat large chunks of bone left over.
They were compressed at an insane speed by carbon fiber shrapnel.
The only thing left of them is not large or visible.
The volume of air of the near final compression would be too small for any of them to fit into, so they probably didn't get roasted, even if that small air pocket reached thousands of degrees. The water's velocity, itself, is what probably turned them into paste. Like hitting concrete at over a thousand miles per hour.
the byford dolphin accident was only 9 atmospheres of pressure and you couldn't even recognize the bodies as anything more than hamburger, if you expect anything beyond toothpaste left of a body after it's been subjected to 1000 atmospheres at the level of the titanic you're going to be disappointed.
More detail please.Whatever shards of bones and ground beef that remained would have been blown out of the hull with the escaping air and scattered by ocean current for miles.
If you ever watched slowmo footage of a ballistics gel getting shot by high velocity rounds, you'll see this effect.
Their bodies ceased to be three dimensional objects and instead became a high-energy physics event.
Speeds visible to the naked eye can vaporize people with somewhat large chunks of bone left over.
They were compressed at an insane speed by carbon fiber shrapnel.
The only thing left of them is not large or visible.
The volume of air of the near final compression would be too small for any of them to fit into, so they probably didn't get roasted, even if that small air pocket reached thousands of degrees. The water's velocity, itself, is what probably turned them into paste. Like hitting concrete at over a thousand miles per hour.
the byford dolphin accident was only 9 atmospheres of pressure and you couldn't even recognize the bodies as anything more than hamburger, if you expect anything beyond toothpaste left of a body after it's been subjected to 1000 atmospheres at the level of the titanic you're going to be disappointed.