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That's assuming that the sub remained intact or developed a slow leak and simply fell to the bottom. From what I hear, a sudden implosion seems more likely.
With the pressure down there salty water ingress is almost certain with subsequent mechanical and corrosion damage.
Quote from: alancalverd on 22/06/2023 21:36:32That's assuming that the sub remained intact or developed a slow leak and simply fell to the bottom. From what I hear, a sudden implosion seems more likely. mobiles are small and may survive an implosion ...especially the microchips...
no oxygen down there due to high pressure
mobiles are small and may survive an implosion ...especially the microchips...
Have I missed something?
Quote from: championoftruth on 22/06/2023 21:41:02mobiles are small and may survive an implosion ...especially the microchips...But if the sub suddenly collapsed without warning (that's what we mean by catastrophic implosion) nobody would be giving a commentary on it. The last word on most cockpit voice recorders is "sh1t"* but that comes at the time the foreseeable impact becomes unavoidable.*almost always in English - the result of mandatory training.
Pressure = force/area. since a microchip is only about 3cm square hence less pressure on it
is solid state with no cavities there is a chance of data recovery.
The pressure at that depth is about 350 tons per square metre.
I can't remember any data but the energy release was stunning.
Currents and the fact that, if they possibly could have, the crew would have surfaced.