You will like this article. Very in-depth on CEO Rush:
For a handsome price, a daredevil inventor will bring you aboard his groundbreaking submarine to put eyes on most famous shipwreck of all
www.smithsonianmag.com
I am sure Rush full well knew exactly that the (always used in the industry) perfectly
spherical pressure hull was superior to his "innovative"
tubular shaped pressure hull.
He knew because he developed the submersible design.
As
Interested_But_Confused says in their very informative post:
Normally subs designed for this kind of depth use a perfectly spherical pressure hull. The sphere is inherently much stronger than other shapes because the force applies equally in all directions; there's no inherent weak spot. Spherical hulls have been used successfully on pretty much all previous deep sea vessels, and up to now none of them have had a catastrophic failure.
Rush's
big thing was innovation. He complained that regulations interfered with innovation.
Rush hoped for an explosion in ocean tech innovation.
OceanGate made history:
Titan became the first privately owned sub with a human aboard to dive that deep and beyond, finally reaching 4,000 meters, or about 13,000 feet—a little deeper than where the
Titanic lies.
“Stockton is a real pioneer,” says Scott Parazynski, a 17-year NASA veteran, “It’s not easy to take a white sheet of paper,
come up with a new submersible design, fund it, test it and mature it. It was an incredibly audacious thing to do.”
View attachment 430546
A rendering of OceanGate’s
Titan submersible exploring the deck of the
Titanic. OceanGate
In a 2019 interview about the Titan, OceanGate CEO Stockton Rush lamented the effect of safety regulations on the commercial submersible industry.
news.yahoo.com