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On the ‘floating on the surface of the Atlantic thing’, I believe the water above the titanic is too cold for that. You’d just have hypothermia listed on your death certificate instead of drowning.
A good point. Which means they'd need survival suits and/or a good life raft to not die of hypothermia in minutes. Which they may or may not actually have time to put on in their teeny little sub with freezing water gushing through the giant hatch on the side, even if they had them, which they probably don't. But is there even any point in bringing along that kind of gear given the other issues?
And all of this is probably irrelevant anyways, since it now looks like it did indeed shatter on the ocean floor. Which means the whole crew got mashed into paste faster than they could blink.
I guess it actually was cost-cutting! No need to make it reasonably practical to survive on the surface in this thing when it's already so shoddy it'll probably fail catastrophically at depth anyways.
Well, the idea is probably to put the survival suit on, then open the hatch. But they probably don’t have room for survival suits and life preservers and the record on sub accidents, even ones with experienced designers and no cost cutting, is not keen on crew survival anyways.
Indeed. Like the [H. L. Hunley](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H._L.Hunley(submarine) and it's famous 300% crew fatality rate.
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Bit hilarious visiting the Titanic and... not making provisions to evacuate your vessel safely in case of unforseen events, though.
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