Does anyone, by any chance, know of video footage of a sub (not this sub, but any sub) imploding, where the video footage is taken from inside the sub?
Hereβs a video showing an imploding railroad car which, by all accounts that Iβve read, is larger than the submersible that imploded (sorry for the YouTube link):
I know that. But as the other comments have stated, any video inside a imploding submarine at depth would not survive the implosion. The video just gives some perspective on how quickly an implosion happens at normal atmospheric pressure.
Does anyone, by any chance, know of video footage of a sub (not this sub, but any sub) imploding, where the video footage is taken from inside the sub?
Any such video would not have survived the implosion. It would subjected to the same forces described above.
ππππ
Well, im hoping for either a wireless camera, or a specialized camera for such a purpose. I really would like to see an implosion for myself.
There would be no way to transmit that data under water as signal strength of any wireless communication is drastically cut under water.
This. This is why the video from those loitering suicide drones cuts off.
The very nature of a submarine implosion is that everything gets destroyed in less than a second.
Hereβs a video showing an imploding railroad car which, by all accounts that Iβve read, is larger than the submersible that imploded (sorry for the YouTube link):
https://youtu.be/Zz95_VvTxZM
That's just an implosion resulting from a SINGLE atmosphere of pressure, now multiply that times 375 for the pressure at 12,000 feet in the ocean.
I know that. But as the other comments have stated, any video inside a imploding submarine at depth would not survive the implosion. The video just gives some perspective on how quickly an implosion happens at normal atmospheric pressure.
An atmospheric collapse happens at the speed of sound in air.
A collapse in waterhappens at the speed of sound in water. Which is like 20Γ faster.
Theres a depth where the speed caps at that. Deeper and its just the force/pressure of the crushing increasing