If you take a submarine down 100 feet and open the hatch, you’re not going to die (from anything other than drowning or maybe your superior strangling you.) You’re at around 3 bar or 43.5 psi.
That’s literally at the low range of pressure that comes out of your tap.
Even at 200ft you’re looking at pressure that’s just barely enough to cause damage to your house plumbing, but nowhere near the pressure needed to hurt a human.
At about 500 feet, you’re looking at pressure that would come out of a fire hose. Not fun to get hit by, but not necessarily lethal. Most injuries would be from being pushed into things, not the water itself. And you’re definitely not becoming a paste.
Are you under the impression that the moment the hatch opens, the water instantly normalizes the pressure inside the vessel? Because that is by no means what happens.
Sorry, what era do you think the original hypothetical is in, exactly?
You seem to be assuming the human attempting to enter said vessel is somehow augmented to enable transit in those conditions (much less survive the initiating blast/breach), among other sophomoric assumptions.
I truly don’t have time or bandwidth to hand-in-hand walk you through this. 🤌🏼
I’m sorry, do you have any concept of displacement? I’m having trouble pinpointing your level of cognitive disconnect, honestly.
If you take a submarine down 100 feet and open the hatch, you’re not going to die (from anything other than drowning or maybe your superior strangling you.) You’re at around 3 bar or 43.5 psi.
That’s literally at the low range of pressure that comes out of your tap.
Even at 200ft you’re looking at pressure that’s just barely enough to cause damage to your house plumbing, but nowhere near the pressure needed to hurt a human.
At about 500 feet, you’re looking at pressure that would come out of a fire hose. Not fun to get hit by, but not necessarily lethal. Most injuries would be from being pushed into things, not the water itself. And you’re definitely not becoming a paste.
Are you under the impression that the moment the hatch opens, the water instantly normalizes the pressure inside the vessel? Because that is by no means what happens.
Sorry, what era do you think the original hypothetical is in, exactly?
You seem to be assuming the human attempting to enter said vessel is somehow augmented to enable transit in those conditions (much less survive the initiating blast/breach), among other sophomoric assumptions.
I truly don’t have time or bandwidth to hand-in-hand walk you through this. 🤌🏼
Augmented? The current free diving record is over 800 feet. That’s just a human, doing human shit. No augmentation.
You’re inability to actually respond with anything more than “I can’t even! 💅” is really not helping your cause.
You’re quite literally claiming that the water pressure that comes out of your tap is enough to turn the human body into a “bio jam” instantly.