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View Full Version : Search intensifies for Argentina's sub with 44 crew members as oxygen supply may be running low



Teh One Who Knocks
11-21-2017, 11:52 AM
By Bradford Betz | Fox News


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US Navy joins search for missing Argentine submarine.

A multinational search intensified on Tuesday for Argentina’s missing submarine with 44 crew members off the country’s coast as the clock may be ticking on the crew’s oxygen supply.

The German-built San Juan submarine has been missing since Wednesday when it reported a battery failure and lost contact with the Argentine Navy. Two Argentine navy ships detected signals day ago from about 220 miles off the coast at a depth of 650 feet, but the source of the signals could not be determined, the BBC reported.
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“Some sources were saying that this was banging on the hull in Morse code signals,” Enrique Balbi, a navy spokesman, said. He said the sources could not be verified.

The submarine reportedly carried enough food, oxygen and fuel for the crew to survive about 90 days on the sea’s surface, but only enough oxygen to last seven days underwater, he said.

The submarine was originally scheduled to arrive Sunday in Mar del Plata, a navy base about 250 miles southeast of Buenos Aires.

A U.S. Navy P-8 Poseidon aircraft assisted in the search efforts by deploying its first aircraft on November 18 and a second ship with special tracking equipment and deep-sea rescue modules on November 20, the US Air Force stated.
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Argentine President Mauricio Macri met with family members at the base as they waited for news about their loved ones. Concerned family members have taken to social media to plead for help in the search process.

“Pray so that my husband, Fernando Santilli can return home,” Jessica Gopar wrote on Twitter. “He’s in the San Juan submarine.

More than a dozen international vessels and aircraft have joined the search for the missing submarine, which has been set back by stormy weather that has caused waves up to 20 feet. Eleven boats and 10 planes from Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Peru, South Africa, Uruguay, and the UK were assisting in the search as well, Balbi said.

Muddy
11-21-2017, 01:30 PM
That sucks.. Should these guys really be fucking around with subs though? Just because we make it look easy doesn't mean it is..

Goofy
11-21-2017, 01:46 PM
That sucks.. Should these guys really be fucking around with subs though? Just because we make it look easy doesn't mean it is..
:-s

Muddy
11-21-2017, 02:06 PM
:-s

I'm not trying to be mean.. But really.. This is a technology that you cant just slang and bang through.

Would you go on an aging German submarine piloted by Argentinians?

Goofy
11-21-2017, 02:34 PM
You just sounded extremely condescending...... I wouldn't go on a submarine full stop which is besides the point anyway.

Muddy
11-21-2017, 02:44 PM
You just sounded extremely condescending...... I wouldn't go on a submarine full stop which is besides the point anyway.

Lots lost in type vs talk.. Id go on a US or Russian sub if invited.. I wouldn't go on a Russian sub piloted by Hondurans though. It's just crazy..

Hal-9000
11-21-2017, 04:40 PM
You'd think any vehicle that goes underwater would have a built in GPS locator that doesn't run on the main batteries.

Muddy
11-21-2017, 04:50 PM
Be quiet you smug bastard.

Hal-9000
11-21-2017, 04:52 PM
:hand: puzzled, not smug

That thing goes 650 feet underwater and can support the crew for seven days....no GPS.

My shit phone can be turned off and the world can still find me :lol:

Muddy
11-21-2017, 04:54 PM
http://i68.tinypic.com/2qk6scz.gif