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Mother ship's haunting audio rekindles grief and questions over Titan sub disaster

Mother ship's haunting audio rekindles grief and questions over Titan sub disaster

Time of India24-05-2025

A mother's ship's grief echoes in the depths
On June 18, 2023, aboard the Titan's surface support vessel, silence turned to fear in a moment. Wendy Rush, whose husband
Stockton Rush
founded
OceanGate
and was piloting the Titan submersible, looked up abruptly after hearing a faint but distinct cracking sound. 'What was that bang?' she asked, her voice cutting through the still air. Cameras on the mother ship captured the reaction, a newly released video confirms. The footage was made public Thursday, May 22 by the Marine Board of Investigation, the US Coast Guard's highest inquiry authority.
The sound, similar to a car door slamming, was heard approximately 90 minutes into the vessel's descent to the Titanic wreck, at a depth of about 3,300 meters. Experts now believe this was the very moment the Titan sub imploded, killing all five passengers aboard, including British billionaire Hamish Harding, Pakistani businessman Shahzada Dawood and his teenage son Suleman, French diver Paul-Henri Nargeolet, and Stockton Rush himself.
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Also read:
Fired OceanGate worker claims Titan submarine was unsafe, says co wanted to 'qualify a pilot in a day and make money'
Confusion in communication clouds Titan timeline
Yet shortly after the noise was heard, the mother ship received a puzzling message from the Titan, it had dropped two ballast weights. This message momentarily led crew members to believe the mission was still progressing safely.
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Chris Roman, an oceanography professor at the University of Rhode Island, explained that underwater data transmission often suffers from delays due to buffering and signal processing systems.
'If the 'weights dropped' message was sent a few seconds before the implosion … the computer may not show the message immediately when it is received,' Roman said in an interview with CNN. Just six seconds after the message was received, the mother ship lost all contact with the submersible, confirming the tragic sequence of events.
The Titan's remains were discovered days later on the North Atlantic seabed, just a few hundred yards from the Titanic's own wreckage. The loss sparked an international search and deepened scrutiny over
deep sea exploration
safety.
Also read:
K-4 ballistic missile test: MAD message rings loud and clear
Hubris, wealth and the deep sea frontier
Following the implosion, testimony from the investigation has painted a grim picture of OceanGate's approach to deep sea ventures. Despite repeated warnings about the Titan's structural integrity, the company continued charging $250,000 per seat. Critics argue the tragedy highlights unchecked ambition and a failure to prioritize engineering caution over commercial spectacle.
The renewed attention comes as two documentaries, one by the BBC and another by Netflix are set to dive deeper into the events leading up to the submersible disaster. For defense analysts and families alike, the haunting audio of the
Titan sub disaster
offers both closure and a grim reminder of the stakes in deep sea exploration.

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