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To: spirited irish
[June 28, 2023 Daily Mail article] Recovered debris from the OceanGate TITAN Cyclops 2, hauled ashore in Canada; the titanium front end "bell" cap "hatch:"

- - -

"It’s hard to imagine an implosion of that magnitude leaving so many large pieces, including the wires, intact."

The tail section was mounted to the structural support system - not mounted directly to the pressure hull assembly itself. Some cables ran from the tail section to the pressure hull where, for some of the cables, there appeared to be a bulkhead-type fitting situated at the top (12 o'clock position #) of the pressure hull near the front titanium ring. There, cables passed through the hull. Cables also ran to various external (outside the pressure hull) components of the submersible.
(# One of the photos in the news, of Stockton Rush sitting inside the pressure hull, showed a cable run at the 12 o'clock position, described. Yet, I remain uncertain about, exactly where all the cables entered/exited the pressure hull.)

In the photo (reply 50) that reveals the starboard tail section view and components, there are a few WHITE rectangular shapes that are not deformed.

"Is it usual to use epoxy in submersibles?"

There are many types of epoxy for marine applications. A lot of Research & Development goes into testing and nudging epoxy compounds toward a finished product that works within a range of parameters, including pressure. Some applications, are for encapsulating electronics; and such an application is probably the case for some of the components within one or more of the aforementioned WHITE rectangular shapes that you see in the revealing, starboard view of the tail section.

58 posted on 06/29/2023 5:49:38 AM PDT by linMcHlp
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To: spirited irish

Re the WHITE rectangular shapes - probably containing electronics. Epoxy used in order to encapsulate the electronics that need protection, and then the rectangular box shape is filled with an oil . . . and thusly, is resistant to pressures at depth.


60 posted on 06/29/2023 6:03:05 AM PDT by linMcHlp
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To: linMcHlp

I used to work as a contractor on site at a flagship facility of a large, well-known company that makes many types of adhesives, along with lots of other stuff.

I picked up a few tidbits of info over the years, and adhesives can really do some amazing things, but I wouldn’t want to trust my life to epoxy at 6000 psi.

Trivia: the adhesive on post-it notes was invented by accident, as part of the process of inventing some other type of adhesive.


65 posted on 06/29/2023 6:29:52 AM PDT by NorthWoody (Half of all people are below average, and half of those are in the bottom 25%.)
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