TITAN FALL

Disturbing new theory on Titan sub implosion as experts claim crew were ‘dragged to their deaths’ by cheap ‘mothership’

THE doomed Titan sub might have imploded after it was damaged while being dragged out to sea through the choppy waters of the Atlantic, experts said.

Brits Hamish HardingShahzada Dawood and his son Suleiman Dawood all died on board on June 18 - along with Stockton Rush, the OceanGate CEO, and Paul-Henri Nargeolet.

Advertisement
Experts said the way the sub was dragged out to sea might have damaged itCredit: The Mega Agency
The five people on board all died after the sub 'catastrophically' implodedCredit: The Mega Agency
The debris was pulled from the bottom of the North Atlantic after the disasterCredit: AP

Rush came up with the sub's unique design, hoping it would become a new industry standard.

But engineering experts said moves designed to slash costs and make sea exploration more profitable may have led to the disaster.

The experts compared the Titan with the Alvin - a US government research sub that has completed more than 4,500 deep sea dives since 1973 with no accidents.

They pointed out a number of design and protocol changes that may have led to the implosion of OceanGate's sub on its dive to the Titanic wreckage.

Advertisement

Unlike the Titan, the Alvin is a sphere with an all-titanium hull - and it's transported to dive sites on the deck of a dedicated mothership before a large crane puts it in the ocean.

Meanwhile, Titan had no dedicated mothership.

Instead, it was towed through the rough waters of the North Atlantic by a smaller chartered vessel - the Polar Prince.

The Polar Prince was smaller and older than the ships OceanGate had used in previous years in an apparent cost-cutting move.

Advertisement

Most read in The Sun

'HEARTBROKEN'
World champion boxer, 35, dies suddenly after Jake Paul link
MEAN UNITED
Man Utd fans blast Jim Ratcliffe after he cuts £40k donation to club charity
'YES A MILLION TIMES'
Liam Payne’s ex announces engagement two months after singer's death
STAR GONE
Popular rapper dies aged 32 after weeks in hospital from gunshot wound

Experts told that the way the sub was dragged out to sea could have damaged the vessel and led to the catastrophic implosion.

The Alvin travels on a dedicated ship fitted with custom winches, hangars and a machine shop - and a large crane places it into the ocean.

Arnie Weissmann, editor-in-chief of Travel Weekly, took an OceanGate voyage in May - using the same Polar Prince mothership.

He said: "I thought the sub and platform were being tossed around pretty roughly."

Advertisement