• r_thndr@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 day ago

      I thought the same way, then became an American engineer. Fuck a horsepower, because it’s so goddamned context dependent.

  • GissaMittJobb@lemmy.ml
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    3 days ago

    Am I assuming correctly that we’re looking at a big succ-situation, where the diver will big forced through the tube no matter what?

    • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      It’s a difference of like 7 psi over an area of what looks like maybe 30 square inches, which would be uncomfortable to get caught in, but I don’t think you’re getting Byford Dolphined

      • BleatingZombie@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        If you were on your back and had your legs above the hole, is 7 psi strong enough that you wouldn’t be able to fight it?

        I guess another question would be “how strong would it be compared to gravity?” (if anybody has any idea)

        • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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          23 hours ago

          It very much depends on the size of the hole. 7 psi over 1 square inch is 7 lbs, but the same pressure over 100 square inches is 700 lbs.

          For a naive estimate, the hole looks around 6 inches wide, which gives it an area of around 30 square inches, so there’s like 200 lbs of water pressure over the area of the hole. An even more naive assumption is that if you were “standing” over the hole in the wall, you would feel 200 lbs of pressure forcing you “down,” which I think most people could easily handle. I’m doing more than that right now!

          Unfortunately I don’t know how to even start to calculate the force of the water on you as it rushes past you, but my gut instinct is that it wouldn’t be more than the total pressure in the hole

    • lad@programming.dev
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      1 day ago

      The families of the divers eventually received compensation for the damages from the Norwegian government, 26 years after the incident.

      Well, it’s good that some justice was finally achieved, but that is depressing level of covering up (as usual)

    • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      For more clarification, they were on the high pressure air side. The kind of dives they were doing involved long periods of acclimation to the different pressures involved, so the diving bell was pressurized to 9 atmospheres. Someone fucked up, and the door opened. 9 atmospheres turned into 1 atmosphere very quickly, and the only good thing is that it happened so fast that the deceased wouldn’t have even noticed

      If you want to see an episode of a podcast about engineering disasters which is itself, ironically, an engineering disaster, well there’s your problem

      • adj16@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Just for what it’s worth, it looks like it was actually an equipment malfunction, not someone fucking up, that caused the accident. The company claimed the person fucked it in an attempt to cover their asses, and they were eventually found to be hiding the truth in a court of law.

      • JokeDeity@lemm.ee
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        2 days ago

        No one fucked up, they finally settled on it being a mechanical failure.

        Edit: the company and government fucked up, I meant to imply none of the divers fucked up.

        • Kalothar@lemmy.ca
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          2 days ago

          The company fucked up by not updating their equipment, even though they knew it was outdated and dangerous

          “The North Sea Divers Alliance, formed by early North Sea divers and the relatives of those killed, continued to press for further investigation and, in February 2008, obtained a report that indicated the real cause was faulty equipment. Clare Lucas, daughter of Roy Lucas, said: “I would go so far as to say that the Norwegian Government murdered my father because they knew that they were diving with an unsafe decompression chamber.”[11] The families of the divers eventually received compensation for the damages from the Norwegian government, 26 years after the incident.[12]

  • Spiritsong@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    Wouldn’t this human in theory become a crumpled sausage like what happened to the crab by the leaking underwater pipe?

    • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      Not at 15 feet. I don’t know enough to say how fast the water would be leaving that hole, but it’s maybe a couple hundred pounds of pressure. If he even got caught, it would be super uncomfortable, but he ain’t about to get ∆p’d

      If you wanna see a real crab-in-a-pipe situation, look up that Byford Dolphin everyone’s talking about

      • AnIndefiniteArticle@sh.itjust.works
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        1 day ago

        Let’s convert to metric so we can tell.

        15 ft is about 5 m.

        Water pressure increases by 10,000 pa per meter (rhogh, rho=1000 kg/m^3, g~10m/s^2), so total pressure is 50 kpa, or 1/2 earth atmospheric pressure.

        One side of that hole has ambient pressure of 1 atm. The other side has that plus water pressure totalling 1.5 atm.

        A pressure is just an energy density. Multiply by the cross-sectional area of the interface to get the energy gradient across the interface. An energy gradient is a force. We don’t have a measure of the cross-sectional area of the hole, but if we expect a person to fit through let’s call it 1m^2.

        50 kpa = 50 kJ/m^3, so total force felt across this opening is 50kN which is the equivalent weight of five metric tons.

        Size of the hole absolutely matters. If it’s only the size of a fist (10cm x 10cm) then instead of 5 metric tons it’s only 50 kg of equivalent weight, or about the weight of a person and easily survivable.

        • Victor@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Let’s convert to metric so we can tell.

          15 ft is about 5 m.

          Water pressure increases by 10,000 pa per meter (rhogh, rho=1000 kg/m^3, g~10m/s^2), so total pressure is 50 kpa, or 1/2 earth atmospheric pressure.

          This is very interesting. I like unit conversions.

          What I did was just take 21-14 psi, and then converted that to bar or atm. I got a number close to ½.

          I was like, half an atm? Can’t be that bad? I can handle 1 full mf atm literally all mf day mf.

          But I guess that’s different somehow? I just don’t understand how yet. If anyone would care to go into it with me… 🙏

          • AnIndefiniteArticle@sh.itjust.works
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            23 hours ago

            The atmosphere is big and heavy. Small pressure changes on order 1% means hurricane. 50% of an atmosphere pushing on something is a lot.

            Note, this is all Earth’s atmosphere.

            Titan’s atmosphere is energy-denser than ours at 1.5 atm. Titan is Saturn’s largest moon.

            Venus has 96 atm. Absolutely crushing and hard to visit at all.

            Mars varies from like 0.3-0.6% seasonally as significant portions of its CO2 atmosphere deposit onto the poles as dry ice glaciers in a runaway greenhouse style. CO2 snows out, temps drop, more snows. Keeps going till the sun comes back. Sunlight sublimates the ice back into the atmosphere in a similar runaway fashion. Like a deep breath in and out with the seasons. The weight of all that ice falling and leaving keeps that red lump beating every year. Don’t believe those who say Mars is dead. We don’t know yet. Don’t count out anything with a breath and a beat. What is life on a planetary scale, anyhow?

            The gas giants have atmospheric pressures so high it kind of stops making sense to use these as comparisons, and instead we have to look to geology for analogues as deep within the earth we also approach these energy densities.

      • Spiritsong@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Yeah I read the entire Wikipedia entry on the Byford Dolphin and I almost threw up because how vivid the description is. I think this would be my third time saying this but that’s not a nice way to go (to die) at all.

          • Dasus@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            You aren’t kidding that they weren’t kidding. I genuinely felt a bit of a ping of nausea and had to mentally distance myself a bit from imagining it too vividly.

              • Dasus@lemmy.world
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                24 hours ago

                I genuinely had already forgot this and to look what you we’re concerned I’d remember.

                I’ve been smoking daily for uhm, a few years now.

      • zeezee@slrpnk.net
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        2 days ago

        They also alleged the accident was due to a lack of proper equipment, including clamping mechanisms equipped with interlocking mechanisms (which would be impossible to open while the chamber system was still under pressure), outboard pressure gauges, and a safe communication system, all of which had been held back because of dispensations by the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate.

        Fatigue may also have taken its toll on the crew, who had been working for longer than 12 hours

        Builder of the rig Aker ASA’s Gross Profit was 7.16B

        Norway’s oil and gas tax revenue soars to record $89 bln

        Imagine forcing your workers into more than 12h shifts, running on 30 year old equipment, the government straight up refusing to upgrade said equipment, while making billions in profits - they don’t call it gross profit for no reason…

      • Canonical_Warlock@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        Fuck all of this

        Normally when people say this it is at least a bit of an exageration, but not in this case. That is some straight up nightmare fuel.

        Heres a taster for those of you who don’t want to read the whole thing.

        …bisection of his thoracoabdominal cavity, which resulted in fragmentation of his body, followed by expulsion of all of the internal organs of his chest and abdomen…

        • Tidesphere@lemmy.world
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          19 hours ago

          Am I reading the right article? I read the entire wiki article linked above and, quite honestly, the part you’ve quoted here is the only piece that even approaches being gruesome, and is very medically sanitized. What are people referring to when they say that the descriptions made them want to vomit and all this stuff?

        • Dasus@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          You know how often a picture is worth a thousand words?

          I feel like those words are worth a thousand pictures. All of them NSFL.

      • CouncilOfFriends@slrpnk.net
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        2 days ago

        The wildest part to me is someone having the last name Coward. The only way that surname makes sense is if it was changed from something worse like Kiddiddler.

  • over_clox@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    I don’t see the problem.

    I mean, I don’t swim, but the dynamics seem to make sense.

    What am I missing?

    Edit: Ah, don’t go near the water passage, right?