A
former
OceanGate
contractor,
Antonella
Wilby,
testified
before
a
U.S.
Coast
Guard
panel
on
Friday
that
the
company’s
Titan
submarine,
which
imploded
last
year
during
a
dive
to
the
Titanic’s
wreckage,
relied
on
an
incredibly
convoluted
navigation
system.
As
Wilby
described
it
during
the
US
Coast
Guard
Marine
Board
of
Investigation hearing,
the
Titan’s
GPS-like
ultra-short
baseline
(USBL)
acoustic
positioning
system
generated
data
on
a
sub’s
velocity,
depth,
and
position
using
sound
pings.
Images
of
the
remains
of
the
Titan
submarine
lying
on
the
floor
of
the
Atlantic
Ocean
were
shared
as
part
of
the
US
Coast
Guard
hearing,Screenshot:
U.S.
Coast
Guard
video
courtesy
of
Pelagic
Research
Services
That
information
is
typically
automatically
loaded
into
mapping
software
to
keep
track
of
a
sub’s
position.
But
Wilby
said
that
for
the
Titan,
the
coordinate
data
was
transcribed
into
a
notebook
by
hand
and
then
entered
into
Excel
before
loading
the
spreadsheet
into
mapping
software
to
track
the
sub’s
position
on
a
hand-drawn
map
of
the
wreckage.
The
OceanGate
team
tried
to
perform
these
updates
at
least
every
five
minutes,
but
it
was
a
slow,
manual
process
done
while
communicating
with
the
gamepad-controlled
sub
via
short
text
messages.
When
Wilby
recommended
the
company
use
standard
software
to
process
ping
data
and
plot
the
sub’s
telemetry
automatically,
the
response
was
that
the
company
wanted
to
develop
an
in-house
system,
but
didn’t
have
enough
time.
Wilby
was
later
taken
off
the
team
and
flew
home
after
telling
supervisors,
“This
is
an
idiotic
way
to
do
navigation.”
She
also
testified
that
after
Dive
80
in
2022,
a
loud
bang
/
explosion
was
heard
during
the
Titan’s
ascent
and
that
it
was
loud
enough
to
be
heard
from
the
surface.
This
mirrors
testimony
given
yesterday
by
OceanGate’s
former
scientific
director,
Steven
Ross.
Like
Wilby,
he
said
that
the
sound
was
attributed
to
a
shifting
of
the
pressure
hull
in
its
plastic
cradle,
although
Wilby
testified
that
there
were
only
“a
few
microns”
of
damage.
According
to
Ross,
six
days
before
the
Titan
submarine
imploded,
the
sub’s
pilot
and
the
company’s
co-founder,
Stockton
Rush,
crashed
the
vessel
into
a
launch
mechanism
bulkhead
while
the
vessel
was
attempting
to
resurface
from
Dive
87.
The
incident
was
caused
by
a
malfunction
with
a
ballast
tank,
which
inverted
the
submarine,
causing
other
passengers
to
“tumble
about,”
according
to
the
Associated
Press.
No
one
was
injured
during
the
incident,
but
Ross
said
he
did
not
know
if
an
inspection
of
the
sub
was
carried
out
afterward.
Original author: Andrew Liszewski
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