For those who are unaware: A couple billionaires, a pilot, and one of the billionaires’ son are currently stuck inside an extremely tiny sub a couple thousand meters under the sea (inside of the sub with the guys above).

They were supposed to dive down to the titanic, but lost connection about halfway down. They’ve been missing for the past 48 hours, and have 2 days until the oxygen in the sub runs out. Do you think they’ll make it?

  • @fubo
    link
    English
    31 year ago

    The owners decided not to do so as the process only certified that the vessel itself is safe for use, and does not verify the procedures for operation or the training of the crew. Their logic for not classing was that most ocean failures are the result of poor procedures or poor crew decisions, ignoring entirely that the reason most failures fall into those to cases is because the vessels themselves are vetted (via the classing process) to eliminate the hardware as a failure mode.

    Brilliant.

    All safety problems are root-caused to equipment or crew procedures. The equipment problems are eliminated through diligence and care, thus leaving only crew procedure problems.

    At this point, all remaining safety problems are crew procedure problems. This means equipment isn’t really much of a safety hazard and there’s no need for all that diligence and care about equipment, is there?