• @edgarallenpwn
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      612 years ago

      I really didn’t care too much about what was going on until last night when I realized the horror of sitting in a metal tube, knowing you probably won’t be rescued with a ticking timer of when your resources would run out. It seems like the perfect horror movie but irl. I hope implosion was the cause because the alternative has cause my brain to go into a full panic / existential mode and I am just an observer.

      • Corhen
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        142 years ago

        Especially considering that one of the alternatives was, because the sub is bolted in from the outside, they could have been bobbing on the surface, suphocating.

      • Snowpix
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        82 years ago

        Thankfully, if the water pressure is enough to crush the steel hull of a submarine, then you’d be obliterated before you could even think about it. That’s probably the best way to go in such a situation…

      • @atimholt
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        32 years ago

        one of them had secret connections that allowed them to obtain immortality. They are now permanently trapped down there.

      • @worker9
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        32 years ago

        Wouldn’t they just fall asleep from hypoxia? I think I’d prefer that to instant implosion.

        • @restingcarcass
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          72 years ago

          Unfortunately no, losing oxygen in a submarine is a bit different than losing it at altitude. The thing that makes you feel like you’re choking is the relative amount of CO2 in the air you breath. At altitude, the CO2 you exhale dissipates into the atmosphere and you drift off to sleep from hypoxia. In an airtight container the CO2 has nowhere to go, so you’ll die of CO2 poisoning way before you die of hypoxia. The worst headache you’ve ever had, your blood feels like battery acid, vomiting, confusion, then death. Not fun.

        • @Maggoty
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          42 years ago

          Implosion isn’t that bad. You’d never know it happened. It’s too quick for the nerve signals much less any thought process.