Missing Titanic submarine has 'no escape pod and can only be opened from ... trends now

Missing Titanic submarine has 'no escape pod and can only be opened from ... trends now
Missing Titanic submarine has 'no escape pod and can only be opened from ... trends now

Missing Titanic submarine has 'no escape pod and can only be opened from ... trends now

A journalist who travelled on the same submarine that has gone missing near the Titanic with five people on board has described how it was cobbled together from abandoned pipes and driven by a games console controller. 

CBS correspondent David Pogue said passengers on the Titan submersible are sealed inside the main capsule by 17 bolts that can only be opened from the outside - with only 90 hours of oxygen.

'There's no backup, there's no escape pod - it's get to the surface or die,' he told the BBC.  

Mr Pogue - who descended to see the Titanic last year - compared the sub to something put together by MacGyver - the TV series character known for his ingenuity in making devices from different items to get out of difficult situations. 

Recalling the interior of the submersible in November, he described white camping lights on the ceiling, off-the-shelf security cameras, Ziploc bags for a toilet and construction pipes as ballast. 

CBS correspondent David Pogue is seen inside the submersible, which he described as very basic

CBS correspondent David Pogue is seen inside the submersible, which he described as very basic 

The journalist holding up a games controller that is used to control the sub

The journalist holding up a games controller that is used to control the sub 

Mr Pogue visited the Titanic onboard a Titan submarine last year

Mr Pogue visited the Titanic onboard a Titan submarine last year 

'The main centre section looks like a shiny white tube about minivan length. It's made of five inch thick carbon fibre which no one has ever used in a submersible before,' he told Unsung Science. 

'At each end of the white tube is a tiny silver dome. The front end cap has a 22-inch round window made of seven-inch thick plexiglass so you can see out. When you get to the bottom of the ocean - that's your view of the Titanic. 

'If you have to go to the bathroom you can crawl into the window end of the sub and hang up a black cloth for privacy. There's a one foot square box on the floor that contains Ziploc bags. 

'There are a couple of touchscreen PC monitors on the floor of the sub but there are no controls. The multi-million sub is controlled with a games controller.' 

Mr Pogue said it would be impossible for those inside it now to escape without help.

Speaking to the BBC yesterday, he said passengers were sealed inside the main capsule by 17 bolts that were applied from the outside and could only be removed by an external crew.

He told The Context programme that the craft - which he said was 'not made for consumers' - had seven different functions to allow it to resurface and it was 'really concerning' none of these had worked.

He added that these resurfacing capabilities would be irrelevant if the sub became trapped or sprang a leak.

'There's no backup, there's no escape pod - it's get to the surface or die,' he said. 

Mike Reiss, a writer who took the Titanic submersible trip last year, appeared on BBC Breakfast to discuss his experience today. 

'It couldn't be lower tech, you just drop down for 2 and half hours,' he explained.

'The ship is propelled by very tiny motors that look like a fan you would have on your desk and it is steered by an X-box joystick from a game system.

'You are very taken with how simple it is.'

People inside a Titan taking photos of the wreckage on their smartphones through a round window at the front

People inside a Titan taking photos of the wreckage on their smartphones through a round window at the front 

The trips to the Titanic are operated by OceanGate, a company based in Washington

The trips to the Titanic are operated by OceanGate, a company based in Washington

A view of the famous wreck taken from one of OceanGate's subs

A view of the famous wreck taken from one of OceanGate's subs 

Mr Reiss said they experienced some technical faults, adding: 'It's pitch dark down there and the radar, the compass stopped working. We spent most of our time down there just flailing around, trying to find the biggest thing in the ocean.'

The writer said he was 'not optimistic' for the people inside the sub. 

'I know how vast the ocean is and how very tiny this craft is,' he said. 

Shahzada Dawood, 48, one of Pakistan's richest men and a UK-based board member of the Prince's Trust, and his son Sulaiman, 19, are among the group stuck on the tiny

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