World's Deepest-Diving Unmanned Submarine Lost 48
XenonOfArcticus writes "Kaiko, the world's deepest-diving submarine was lost in in late May off Japan, after it snapped its tether as a typhoon approached. Kaiko entered the record books in 1995 by diving 36,008 feet to the bottom of the Challenger Deep - the ocean's deepest point."
Re:No remote control? (Score:1)
Either that, or you need to think about how well radio works in water (think ELF, for example).
Re:No remote control? (Score:3, Informative)
Kaiko is designed to float to the surface and emit a tracking signal if its tether is broken. Although searchers briefly detected the beacon, they were unable to locate the probe and suspected it has either drifted off site or sunk to the bottom.
Re:No remote control? (Score:1)
Allright, I guess I forgot about issues with radio wave propagation in water. I hang my head in shame instead.
Re:Recent events (Score:4, Funny)
Tragic demise of Bill Gates, I fear.
Re:Recent events (Score:2)
Next is learning from these mistakes. Like we have done throughout history.
Re:Recent events (Score:3, Insightful)
Hang on there cowboy. This probably just needs to be filed under the "Shit Happens" category. Spacecraft have always been blowing up because it is mighty difficult to build something that reliable goes through all that punishment. Experimental aircraft have always crashed, because they're experimental. You do experiments, and when s
Re:Recent events (Score:1)
Admittedly that is no the kind of thing you are talking about, but when you are doing somethign "experimental," you know going to space, trying to keep somethign at 1 bar pressure over a trench that extends 7 miles down; in an oncoming typhoon no less, fai
Re:hmmm (Score:2, Informative)
READ THE [CENSORED] ARTICLE
Re:hmmm (Score:1)
Thanks (Score:3, Funny)
On behalf of all naval engineers, I would like to thank you. You see, with all the design tradeoffs involved in engineering a submarine, we completely forgot to add any useful safety features or redundancy of any kind. Thank you very much for you excellent insight, we will incorporate these obvious, yet overlooked features into the next generaion of unmanned submersibles.
Re:Thanks (Score:3, Funny)
Re:hmmm (Score:4, Interesting)
I am not privy to the design plans, but somehow this whole episode reeks of a malfunction of some failsafe system. I find it difficult to conceive of some design engineer not hedging his bets against something as inevitable as a severed tether.
Another poster noted RF being lossy underwater. My guess would been to place piezoelectric sonar transducers on the hull and ping them in the event the sub considered itself lost. It wouldn't take that much energy, but if you knew what kind of racket you were listening for, it would stand out from the normal oceanic noises.. kinda like those old war sub stories of marooned submariners taking a wrench and tapping out the morse code for SOS on the steel hull of the submarine.
Re:hmmm (Score:2, Informative)
What you do is drop (release) the ballast weight that made it heavier than water and become lighter, in the case of t
It's not lost... (Score:3, Funny)
... it's hanging out with James Cameron. ;)
Re:It's not lost... (Score:1)
Nitpick (Score:5, Informative)
An interesting article about how to calculate the ocean's depth [utdallas.edu] was put together by Nathan Becker, a student at the University of Hawaii when the report was written in 2001.
Re:Nitpick (Score:3, Funny)
This may even be more tedious
Re:Nitpick (Score:1)
The ocean in question would be the (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The ocean in question would be the (Score:2)
Re:The ocean in question would be the (Score:2)
YOU MEAN IT'S MOVING?!?! This can only be one thing, a WMD made by the Japanese. They better be prepared to be liberated.
Re:Nitpick (Score:2)
What the hell is "where it's at "?
A preposition is something you should never end a sentence with.
Ya'll ain't gots no good English or ya jist wanna sound uneduhkated?
"Where is it?"
Now that would be English.
Re:Nitpick (Score:2)
Don't you listen to Beck? The song goes..
Where it's at, I got 2 turntables and a microphone,
Where it's at, I got 2 turntables and a microphone,
Where is it, I got 2 turntables just doesn't sound right.
Location of The Deep (Score:4, Informative)
Wikipedia entry for Challenger Deep [wikipedia.org]
The Trench is located east of the Matianas Islands [graphicmaps.com]
Hope this helps you find it.
Re:Nitpick (Score:1)
Nitpicking nitpick (Score:2)
Re:Probably destroyed. (Score:2)
Re:Probably destroyed. (Score:1)
Our entire world[view] (Score:1)
Simple concept such as 'blow ballast' have NO relation at all to the conditions that exist just 7 miles from home, when that 7 miles is DOWN and there's WATER ALL THE WAY. IIRC the closest thing to Fail-Safe under such conditions is [was] a flotation envelope filled with gasoline and ballasted to negative with iron 'scrap' held in place by electro-magnets.
T
What I think happened... (Score:1)