The Devastating Impact of Underwater Pressure: Making Shrunken Heads

If you’ve ever wondered why it’s so important to properly pressurize and depressurize a submarine, this image should explain it for you. What you’re looking at is three identical styrofoam heads, each of which has been exposed to a different depth pressure.

Posted up on Reddit by contributor SpyTrain_from_Canada, the picture shows just how nasty the pressure can get as you descend into the ocean. The head on the left is the way it came from the styrofoam head factory, while the one in the middle was exposed to a depth of 1000 feet, and the one on the right got hit with a depth of 2000 feet. According to my calculations, the middle head got hit with about 459 psi, while the smallest one experienced a whopping 903 psi. Ouch. These things have lots of air in them, so they compress down super small. SpyTrain said the small ones were hard as a rock after they became shrunken heads.

Now imagine what would happen if that were a human being sent down to the bottom of the ocean without proper pressurization. Your skull would be crushed, your eyeballs would implode, your organs would turn to mush, and basically, you’d have a very bad day.

Titan Underwater Drone: See Under the Sea

Chinese drone maker Geneinno is now taking pre-orders for its Titan 6-thruster underwater imaging drone. With prices starting at $1199, it’s one of the most affordable true underwater drones on the market. Its maker also claims that it has the highest available pressure rating, meaning it can dive deeper than other drones.

This drone is capable of diving down to a depth of 492 feet (150 meters), with a maximum forward speed of 2 m/s (4 knots, 6.6 ft/s). It should capture some amazing underwater footage in up to 4K UHD, as well as 8-megapixel still images. It’s got a bright a 3,000 lumen lighting system, and streams remote footage at 1080p resolution. The lens has 160-degree wide FoV and color correction dive filters as well.

The Titan Underwater Drone also has an extension port that allows you to add options like sonar, a robotic arm, an underwater microphone, and more. It has a 1/2.3-inch Sony CMOS image sensor, 32 GB of onboard storage, and a 9,000 mAh battery that will deliver up to 4 hours of runtime per 2-hour charge.

It comes with a wireless surface unit with 50 meters (164 feet) range, plus an option to extend to 150 meters (492 feet) via cable. You can control it via Bluetooth using a dedicated drone controller, or use the app to control it with your smartphone or tablet.

The Titan underwater drone recently raised over $200,000 on Kickstarter, where you can still pre-order one for yourself.

[via Mike Shouts]

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The Last Diving Mask You’ll Ever Need

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These sure aren’t your great grandaddy’s swimming goggles! This ultramodern twist on underwater specs, called D-Mask, addresses many of the issues divers currently encounter. Secured around the forehead, jaw, and chin, the design may cover the full face, but the result feels less restrictive than traditional goggles.

While it’s usable on its own, by simply connecting the unit to an air tank, users can breathe easy and more naturally without the need of a sealed mouthpiece. It’s also equipped with an innovative bone-conduction radio system that makes it possible to enjoy tunes or communicate with other divers conversationally – something that was impossible and limited to basic sign language before. Other cool features include built-in LED headlamps, and a head-up projected display that indicates water conditions, depth, pressure and weather all on the front shield.

Designer: ZJ-DDG

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Can be used for snorkeling or take the oxygen bottle for scuba diving.

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The coordinates can be set before diving.

Built-in LED lights.

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