(inspired by a question on reddit, I’ll post a reply too)

  • @HoagieBoy
    link
    English
    41 year ago

    There has to be a solution that would have allowed them to send a buoy up to transmit a mayday and coordinates like some life boats do. This would help the rescue teams to narrow the search grid. I wouldn’t have gone down in that thing, but if I WAS, I would at least feel better with something like that.

    • @[email protected]OP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      51 year ago

      A beacon should work as I described in a separate response. A buoy could work too, but the buoy a) would need to be designed to float up from 4 km and still be functional at the surface b) the sub doesn’t necessarily know where it is below the ocean. GPS doesn’t work down there!

    • @notatoad
      link
      English
      31 year ago

      they were two miles deep. sending up a tethered buoy means holding two miles of string on the sub, which would be completely impractical. sending an untethered buoy doesn’t really help anything, because by the time it goes two miles up to the surface, it could have drifted way further than that in any other direction.

      • @HoagieBoy
        link
        English
        11 year ago

        I was suggesting untethered. I understand it would drift, what I think it would do is 1) let everyone know they are alive and in trouble and 2) give folks who understand ocean currents the ability to try to hone in on a search area. Maybe they already have a tight search area and this would not help, I just don’t know. It sure is starting to feel like the thing imploded and the magic untethered buoys from my mind would not help anyway.

    • @linearchaos
      link
      English
      11 year ago

      One of their issues is the unit itself had no idea where it was. It relied on a communication back to a boat on the surface to figure out where it was, and that communication had failed during every dive so far.