logo
Chinese farmer turns inventor with homemade 7-metre submarine

Chinese farmer turns inventor with homemade 7-metre submarine

On a quiet river in central China's Anhui province, villagers in Hanshan county stopped to stare as a sleek black shape sliced through the water with a low mechanical growl.
Advertisement
It was not a military test or an industrial prototype. It was a home-made submarine – designed, built, and piloted by
Zhang Shengwu , a 60-year-old farmer with no engineering degree and no blueprint to follow.
Zhang's boatbuilding has become a viral sensation in China. Photo: Handout
'I'd watched boats all my life,' Zhang told Dawan News, a government-affiliated outlet, referring to the years he spent managing a tiny riverside dock in his village. 'But I always felt something was missing.'
Fascinated by invention since childhood, he had often dreamed of building machines that were beyond the means of his rural life. But it was not until 2014, when a programme on state broadcaster CCTV featured a submarine slipping beneath the waves, that one idea took hold with irresistible force.
The homemade submarine made by Chinese farmer Zhang Shengwu is lowered into a river in Hanshan county on July 2. Photo: AFP
'I'd seen wooden boats and iron boats,' he said. 'But never one that could go underwater.' Within days, he had scraped together 5,000 yuan (US$700), bought steel plates, a battery and an engine – and began building in secret while his wife was away caring for his mother-in-law.
Advertisement
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

6 Chinese university students drown on mine field trip in Inner Mongolia
6 Chinese university students drown on mine field trip in Inner Mongolia

South China Morning Post

time14 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

6 Chinese university students drown on mine field trip in Inner Mongolia

Six university students drowned in an industrial tank during a field trip to a mining operation owned by China's most prestigious gold producing company, according to state news agency Xinhua. One teacher was also injured in the incident, which occurred on Wednesday morning at China National Gold Group's Wunugetushan copper-molybdenum mine in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region, it said. The students, from Northeastern University in Liaoning province, drowned after a grating panel gave way and they fell into a flotation tank. They were pulled from the tank in the mine's processing plant, but could not be revived, according to Xinhua. The report did not give further details about the victims or the incident. State broadcaster CCTV said the regional government would launch an investigation into the incident. The tank is used to process ore. Photo: Handout According to the official Jimu News in the central Chinese city of Wuhan, the victims were in their third year and majoring in mineral processing engineering.

6 students from Chinese university drown in mine processing tank in Inner Mongolia
6 students from Chinese university drown in mine processing tank in Inner Mongolia

South China Morning Post

timea day ago

  • South China Morning Post

6 students from Chinese university drown in mine processing tank in Inner Mongolia

Six university students have drowned in an industrial tank while on an educational visit to a mining operation connected to China's most prestigious gold producing company, according to state news agency Xinhua. One teacher was also injured in the incident, which occurred on Wednesday morning at China National Gold Group's Wunugetushan copper-molybdenum mine in the Inner Mongolia autonomous region, it said. The students, from Northeastern University in Liaoning province, drowned after a grating panel gave way. They were pulled from the tank in the mine's beneficiation plant, but rescue efforts could not revive them, according to Xinhua. The report did not provide further details on the victims, nor any indication of where responsibility might lie for the accident. 02:27 China rolls out world's largest fleet of driverless mining trucks powered by Huawei tech China rolls out world's largest fleet of driverless mining trucks powered by Huawei tech According to the official Jimu News in Wuhan, which published interviews with students from Northeastern University on Thursday, the victims were in their third year and majoring in mineral processing engineering.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store