Titan (submersible)
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''Titan'', previously called ''Cyclops 2'', was a submersible created and operated by underwater exploration company
OceanGate Oceangate, Ocean Gate, or ''variation'', may refer to: * Ocean Gate, New Jersey, USA ** Ocean Gate School District *** Ocean Gate Elementary School, see Ocean Gate School District * Oceangate Tower, Meridian Quay, Swansea, Wales, UK * OceanGate, ...
. It was the first privately-owned submersible with a claimed maximum depth of , and the first completed crewed submersible with a hull constructed of titanium and carbon fiber composite materials. After testing with dives to its maximum intended depth in 2018 and 2019, the original composite hull of ''Titan'' developed
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damage and was replaced by 2021. In that year, OceanGate began transporting paying customers to the wreck of the ''Titanic'', completing several dives to the wreck site in 2021 and 2022. During the submersible’s first 2023 expedition, all five occupants were killed when the vessel imploded. OceanGate lost contact with ''Titan'' on 18 June and contacted authorities later that day after the submersible was overdue for return. A massive international
search and rescue Search and rescue (SAR) is the search for and provision of aid to people who are in distress or imminent danger. The general field of search and rescue includes many specialty sub-fields, typically determined by the type of terrain the search ...
operation ensued and ended on 22 June, when debris from ''Titan'' was discovered about 1,600 feet (500 metres) from the bow of the '' Titanic''.


Background

Since the discovery of the ''Titanic'' wreckage in 1985, limited tours of the wreck have been conducted, including the (Finnish-made) Russian ''Mir''-class submersibles in the 1990s, which captured the footage for the opening scenes of the eponymous 1997 film. After carrying tourists to the wreck of the '' Andrea Doria'' in 2016, OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush said "there's only one wreck that knows... if you ask people to name something underwater, it's going to be sharks, whales, ''Titanic''." OceanGate's ''Titan'' was used for several survey expeditions of the ''Titanic'' wreckage site, starting in 2021. Rush stated that ''Titan'' could be used to explore the debris field and accurate scans could be used to build a 3-D model of the wreck.


Design and construction


Features

''Titan'' was and weighed with a maximum payload of . It moved at up to using four electric thrusters, arrayed two horizontal and two vertical. According to OceanGate, the vessel carried sufficient oxygen to sustain a full complement of five people for 96 hours. The entire pressure vessel for the crew used five major components: two hemispherical titanium end caps, two matching titanium interface rings, and the internal diameter, carbon fiber-wound cylindrical hull. The forward hemispherical end cap could be detached from its interface ring, becoming a hatch that allowed crew members to enter the crew compartment before a mission, and exit at its conclusion. In addition to the crew compartment, ''Titan'' included a landing skid structure and an outer fiberglass composite shell covering mechanical equipment; both the skid and shell were bolted to the titanium interface rings. OceanGate's calculations showed the cylinder that formed the center section of the crew compartment should have a wall thickness of , which they rounded up to ; it consisted of 480 alternating layers of pre-preg unidirectional cloth, laid in the axial direction, and wet-wound filament, laid in the hoop direction. Spencer Composites completed the design and assembly of the cylinder in 2017 after curing it at for 7 days. Each titanium end cap had a wall thickness of . One interface ring was bonded to each end of the cylindrical hull, and the end caps were bolted to the interface rings. The penetrations for external cables ran through the interface rings. The forward end cap was fitted with a acrylic window, shaped as a conical frustum thick. According to Rush, it would protrude into the cabin by during dives. ''Titan'' was equipped with a real-time acoustic monitoring system, which OceanGate claimed could detect the onset of buckling in the carbon fiber hull prior to catastrophic failure. Rush held a patent on the system. ''Titan'' was controlled with a modified game controller, similar to ''Cyclops 1''. Once the occupants were aboard, the hatch was closed and bolted from the outside; there was no way to open the hatch from inside the vessel. In addition, there was no on-board location system; the support ship which monitored the position of ''Titan'' relative to its target would send text messages to ''Titan'' providing distances and directions.


Construction

OceanGate began developing a composite carbon fiber and titanium-hulled submersible in collaboration with the University of Washington's Applied Physics Laboratory (APL-UW) in 2013, tentatively named ''Cyclops 2''; the first titanium structural components were ordered in December 2016 from Titanium Fabrication Corp. (TiFab), and OceanGate signed a contract with Spencer Composites in January 2017 for the carbon-composite cylinder. Spencer previously had built the composite pressure hull for the single-person '' DeepFlight Challenger'' for Steve Fossett to a design by Graham Hawkes. Spencer Composites was given challenging performance targets for ''Cyclops 2'', which was meant to withstand working service pressure with a factor of safety of 2.25× for its intended maximum depth of , and provided six weeks to complete the design. In March 2018, ''Cyclops 2'' was renamed to ''Titan''; and Rush described it "an amazing engineering feat" during its launch in 2018. In an interview published in 2020 with Teledyne Marine, a subsea technology company, it was noted that many Oceangate employees were recent graduates. Rush responded that he, unlike other submarine enterprises, "wanted isteam to be younger, be inspirational" instead of including "ex-military submariners," who he described as "a whole bunch of 50-year-old white guys".


Design issues

In 2015, when Rush visited
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seeking lessons learned from "Project Deep Search", DOER's president, Liz Taylor, specifically warned him against using carbon fiber; in 2023, she recounted that carbon fiber specifically has "been shown to not be very happy when it's being immersed first of all and then being hollow on the inside or just one
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on the inside and then having the tremendous pressure of the ocean trying to push in on it, it's not the right material". The
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's committee on Manned Underwater Vehicles drafted a private letter to Rush in March 2018, expressing concerns with the design of ''Titan'' and urging him to have the ship "classed" (certified by a
ship classification society A ship classification society or ship classification organisation is a non-governmental organization that establishes and maintains technical standards for the construction and operation of ships and offshore structures. Classification societies ...
), partly because the marketing of the submersible, which stated it would meet or exceed the standards of DNV, was misleading because OceanGate had no intentions to have the vehicle tested by DNV. Although the letter was not sent, the chair of the committee said he had "a frank conversation" with Rush following which they "agreed to disagree". Rob McCallum had consulted for OceanGate in 2009, but left over his concerns that vessel development was being hurried. In 2018, he emailed Rush, warning him the development cycle and refusal to have the ship classed was "potentially placing yourself and your clients in a dangerous dynamic," adding that in Rush's "race to ''Titanic'' you are mirroring that famous catch cry: 'She is unsinkable.'" Rush's response called the email "a serious personal insult" and complained about "the baseless cries of 'you are going to kill someone.'" In 2019, OceanGate published a blog post explaining why ''Titan'' was not classed. In the post, OceanGate said "the vast majority of marine (and aviation) accidents are a result of operator error, not mechanical failure" and argued that classification focused solely on the physical state of the vessel and not its corporate actions, which it characterized as a "constant, committed effort and a focused corporate culture" of "maintaining high-level operational safety". Journalist David Pogue, who participated in an OceanGate ''Titanic'' excursion in 2022, noted that ''Titan'' was not equipped with an emergency locator beacon; during his expedition, the surface support vessel lost track of ''Titan'' "for about five hours," and adding such a beacon was discussed. "They could still send short texts to the sub, but did not know where it was. It was quiet and very tense, and they shut off the ship's internet to prevent us from tweeting." Screenwriter Mike Reiss confirmed the submersible lost contact on each of the four dives he had made with OceanGate and said "that seems to be just something baked into the system". As an example, Reiss reported that it took three hours to locate ''Titanic'' during one dive, despite landing only from the wreck.


Testing and inspection

OceanGate claimed on its website as of 2023 that ''Titan'' was "designed and engineered by OceanGate Inc. in collaboration ithexperts from NASA, Boeing, and the University of Washington." A -scale model of the ''Cyclops 2'' pressure vessel was built and tested at the University of Washington Applied Physics Laboratory; the model was able to sustain a pressure of , corresponding to a depth of approximately . After the disappearance of ''Titan'' in 2023, the University of Washington stated that the Applied Physics Laboratory had no involvement in "design, engineering, or testing of the ''Titan'' submersible." A Boeing spokesperson also said that Boeing "was not a partner on the ''Titan'' and did not design or build it." A NASA spokesperson said that NASA's
Marshall Space Flight Center The George C. Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), located in Redstone Arsenal, Alabama (Huntsville postal address), is the U.S. government's civilian rocketry and spacecraft propulsion research center. As the largest NASA center, MSFC's first ...
had a Space Act Agreement with OceanGate, but "did not conduct testing and manufacturing via its workforce or facilities." Rush had touted partnerships with NASA, Boeing, and UW to Pogue in 2022 in response to a question about the perceived " MacGyvery jerry-rigged-ness " improvisational design based on the use of off-the-shelf components. David Lochridge, OceanGate Director of Marine Operations, inspected ''Titan'' as it was being handed over from Engineering to Operations and filed a quality control report in January 2018 in which he stated that no
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of the carbon fiber hull had taken place to check for voids and delaminating which could compromise the hull's strength. Instead, Lochridge was told that OceanGate would rely on the real-time acoustic monitoring system, which he felt would not warn the crew of potential failure with sufficient time to safely abort the mission and evacuate. The day after he filed his report, he was summoned to a meeting in which he was told the acrylic window was only rated to depth because OceanGate would not fund the design of a window rated to . In that meeting, he reiterated his concerns and added he would refuse to allow crewed testing without a hull scan; Lochridge was dismissed from his position as a result. OceanGate filed a lawsuit against Lochridge that June, accusing him of improperly sharing proprietary trade secrets and fraudulently manufacturing a reason to dismiss him. The suit was settled in November 2018. Initial shallow dive testing with a crew was conducted in Puget Sound. OceanGate said that testing of ''Titan'' without a crew to was performed in June 2018 to validate the design, conducted near
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, near the edge of the
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, as the platform would only need to be towed () to depths exceeding . During a subsequent human-piloted descent, Rush became the second solo human to descend to on 10 December 2018, after
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, who in 2012 dove to Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench, approximately . Partway through that solo dive in December 2018, Rush used the vertical thrusters to overcome unexpected positive buoyancy when descending past , which caused interference with the communication system, and he lost contact with the surface ship for approximately one hour. In April 2019, OceanGate announced that a crew of four had set a record by descending in ''Titan'' to . Karl Stanley, who had participated in the April 2019 dive alongside Rush, later sent an email to Rush stating his concerns with loud cracking noises they had experienced during the dive. In Stanley's opinion, the noises were associated with a potential "flaw/defect in one area being acted on by the tremendous pressures and being crushed/damaged," adding he felt it meant there was "an area of the hull that is breaking down." In a later email, Stanley was more blunt in his assessment: "I think that hull has a defect near that flange, that will only get worse. The only question in my mind is will it fail catastrophically or not." Rush responded by stating more tests would be conducted. After the tests were completed in January 2020, the hull of ''Titan'' began showing signs of cyclic fatigue and the craft was de-rated to . The Spencer-built composite cylindrical hull either was repaired or replaced by
Electroimpact Electroimpact is an aerospace engineering manufacturer founded by Peter Zieve in July 1986 and based in Mukilteo, Washington. History Electroimpact was founded by Peter Zieve in July 1986 in Seattle, Washington after he invented low voltage elect ...
and Janicki Industries in 2020 or 2021, prior to the first trips to ''Titanic." ''According to Rush, the carbon fiber materials had belonged to Boeing, but OceanGate had purchased them at a significant discount because they were past their shelf-life. Boeing stated they had no record showing they sold carbon fiber to OceanGate or Rush.'' In the first half of 2021 shallow water test dives were made in Washington state with prospective ''Titanic'' expedition passengers. In spring of 2021, one passenger did a test dive in ''Titan'' to a depth of 500 meters in Possession Sound with Rush as pilot. The passenger said that the test dive went well, and was satisfied with the safety of the submersible. He applied for a spot on the ''Titanic'' expedition, and participated in an OceanGate ''Titanic'' expedition later that year. In May 2021 television host Josh Gates and camera operator Brian Weed did a ''Titan'' test dive in Puget Sound. The dive was aborted due to multiple technical issues, reaching a depth of only 30 meters. During Gates and Weed's dive, communications were lost, the propulsion system encountered errors, and the computers on the submersible stopped working. Rush tried to reboot the submersible using its touchscreen but was unable to. Gates and Weed declined OceanGate's invitation to take part in a '' Titanic'' Expedition, which began a month later.


''Titanic'' tourism operations

''Titan'' dives to ''Titanic'' took place during multi-day excursions organized by OceanGate. The passengers and crew would embark on the support ship from St. John's, Newfoundland, and sail southward for two days until they reached the location of the ''Titanic'' wreckage. The support ship remained stationed above the wreckage site for five days, during which dives to ''Titanic'' were attempted aboard ''Titan''. Two dives were generally attempted during each excursion, though many dives were cancelled or aborted before reaching ''Titanic'' due to bad weather or technical malfunctions. The final two days of the excursion were spent sailing back to port. Non-crew passengers were called "mission specialists" by OceanGate. Mission specialists either paid for their spots or were invited guests such as journalists or YouTubers. When OceanGate's initial plans for the ''Titanic'' expeditions were announced in 2017 each tourist's seat was priced at US$105,129, a price OceanGate chose because it was the price of the ticket for the Vanderbilt suite on ''Titanic'' in 1912, adjusted for inflation. Paying customers later paid up to $250,000 for the excursion. OceanGate did not offer refunds. If a customer's dive was cancelled they were offered a spot on an excursion the following summer for free if the dive had been cancelled due to technical issues, and for half price if the dive had been cancelled due to weather conditions. Continued testing of the novel hull precluded operations in 2018. By 2019, the cost of a ticket on ''Titan'' to view ''Titanic'' had risen to $125,000; 54 tourists had signed up for one of six voyages that were scheduled to begin on 27 June, but those plans were delayed until 2020 because permits could not be secured for the surface support vessel. The proposed operation involved (sailing under a non-Canadian flag), and would have violated the Coasting Trade Act, which prohibits foreign-flagged vessels from conducting commercial voyages with origin and destination ports in Canada, analogous to the United States' Jones Act. In January 2020, the original hull was de-rated to maximum depth after signs of fatigue were found, and the
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delayed the procurement of carbon fiber filament needed to build a replacement hull. In November 2020, Rush announced the first voyage to ''Titanic'' would be delayed to May 2021.


''Titanic'' Experience Tour

During the off season OceanGate transported ''Titan'' around the United States on a tour they called the "''Titanic'' Experience Tour" which consisted of both public and invitation-only events. During the tours, visitors were able to step aboard ''Titan'' and view photos of the ''Titanic'' wreckage through the vessel's viewport.


''Titanic'' dives and dive attempts


2021

OceanGate organized five ''Titanic'' excursions during 2021. For the 2021 season, OceanGate selected Canadian-flagged as the surface support vessel. During one unsuccessful dive of 2021, ''Titan'' became stuck at the bottom of the ocean for at least four hours because of mechanical problems, and was unable to ascend to the surface and unable to reach the ''Titanic'' wreckage. Passengers aboard this dive spent 20 hours inside ''Titan'' before they reached surface and were able to get out of the submersible. A passenger aboard this dive told the ''Vancouver Sun'' in 2023 "I really had a great time on that boat trip, even though we got stuck at the bottom."


2022

In 2022 OceanGate again organized five ''Titanic'' excursions. ''Horizon Arctic'' again served as the support vessel for the planned dives. Passenger Alan Estrada reached ''Titanic'' aboard ''Titan'' on 2 July 2022 and documented the experience on his YouTube channel. Estrada described his dive as "one of the more successful ones" as the vessel was able to quickly navigate to the ''Titanic'' wreckage and spent 4 hours exploring it. Reporter David Pogue and crew members from
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took part in OceanGate's fourth ''Titanic'' excursion of 2022, which took place between 9 and 17 July. Pogue boarded ''Titan'' but his dive to ''Titanic'' was cancelled. The other dive that took place during Pogue's excursion did not reach ''Titanic'' either because of technical malfunctions.


2023

For the 2023 survey expedition, OceanGate secured as its support vessel and planned to begin excursions in May. According to Rush, the support ship was changed because the cost of leasing ''Horizon Arctic'' had increased to $200,000 per week. Because of the switch to ''Polar Prince'' the launch and recovery platform needed to be towed to the site, rather than carried on board. Journalist Arnie Weissmann took part in the second excursion of 2023, called "Mission 2" by OceanGate, which was set to depart on 20 May 2023. During Weissmann's excursion no dives reaching ''Titanic'' took place.


Implosion

On 18 June 2023, during the first planned dive of the year, contact with the ''Titan'' was lost during the crew's descent to the wreckage of ''Titanic,'' about south-southeast of the coast of
Newfoundland Newfoundland and Labrador (; french: Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador; frequently abbreviated as NL) is the easternmost province of Canada, in the country's Atlantic region. The province comprises the island of Newfoundland and the continental region ...
. The submersible was carrying tourists Hamish Harding, Shahzada Dawood, his son Suleman Dawood, crew member and ''Titanic'' expert
Paul-Henri Nargeolet Paul-Henri Nargeolet (; 2 March 1946 – 18 June 2023) was a French deep sea explorer and ''Titanic'' expert. Known as "Mr. Titanic", Nargeolet was one of five people who died aboard the submersible ''Titan'' when it imploded on 18 June 2023 ...
, and OceanGate founder Stockton Rush, who was the submersible's pilot. Several hours later, after the submersible failed to resurface at the expected time, the ''Polar Prince'' reported the situation to the United States Coast Guard. Extensive search and rescue efforts commenced. On 22 June 2023, it was confirmed that ''Titan'' had imploded, likely when communication was lost during the descent, instantly killing all five occupants on board. The exact cause remains under investigation, although experts believe the carbon fiber used to construct the hull could have cracked under deep-sea pressure.


Notes


References

{{Titan submersible implosion Crewed submersibles Experimental submarines Shipwrecks in the Atlantic Ocean Submarines lost with all hands Personal submarines