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 Brent, 
> Can a reasonably safe ambient or wet, oil drum 
submarine be designed 
> and built? I believe there are lots of options. The Chinese oil drum > submarine builder will likely put his sub in shallow water for testing > and see he needs a lot more keel weight before he even gets into it. > He can add more weight to the wheel assemblies and/or a keel of some > sort below the hull. The RV Needlefish had the same basic metacenter > problem, and Bill found that out without ever diving it. Bill owned a very large and successful marina, and had 
almost unlimited  
resources available to him.  Bill tested his sub by 
lowering it from a 
crane into a relatively shallow area of water used for boat launching at the marina, so that if there were a problem he would not be in danger of entrapment and drowning. His sub was connected to the crane at all 
times. 
> How many people have died in 1 ATM and/or ambient propane tank sub? I don't know, but I do know the facts surrounding a couple 
of engineering  
students who 
built what they considered a safe sub, but in which one of  
them died.  The other fortunately survived 
the ordeal, but suffered severe 
trauma. I interviewed both the mother of the deceased, and the survivor last year. Interestingly, the day prior to the accident they had performed an exact similar dive in the sub without incident, and ther e fore assumed that the sub was safe for shallow-depth diving. Funny  
 how you can't determine the safety of a sub by the number  
> I have literature in my K-250 paperwork that has the 
George 
> Kittredge saying that you can build your whole K-250 sub out > of A-36 mild steel and be just fine. He did say how ever that > A516 Gr 70 is a great upgrade. Here is the quote. What did he say about using 55-gallon drums? 
> Designing a $2,000 US 1 ATM sub that anyone in the 
world could find 
> the same materials for the same price, is not likely. When one has > the need and/or desire to construct a inexpensive sub, it's not > always about getting new products cheaply, but usually about found > objects that are very cheap or even free. To build those same > objects brand new would be in many cases very expensive. I have two > used, but solid nice 500 gallon propane tanks with half hemisphere > heads that I got for free from a neighbor. Should I not use them for > a 1 ATM sub because they are not made of new A-516, they have a > little bit of rust on them, and they smell funny? You talk about cost as if safety is a constant that 
doesn't have to 
be accounted. It's not, and has to be built into the cost of the sub. You can't base your design and fabrication on cost of materials alone if you are serious about having expectations of diving and returning to the surface safely, consistently. At some point, you are going to have to assess the risk of 
failure associated with the design and 
materials you have chosen. Regarding your second point 
about materials.  Whether it is true or 
not, people have suggested 
that the time, effort, and cost required to 
modify a propane tank for sub-use, is ultimately more expensive than just ordering the parts and starting from scratch. Perhaps that is not strictly true from the perspective of cash-out-of-your-pocket if the propane tanks have cost you nothing. However, it does seem to be the general consensus. Therefore, the issue does not appear to be whether a modified propane tank is better/worse than a similar raw design from a performance perspective, but rather that the propane modification is definately worse from a time/labor perspective, and certainly from the chemical "smell" inherent in propane tanks. > The heads are robot 
welded with three passes. Most of us can't weld 
> even close to that good. Besides I would likely have to cut one end > off to install the ribbing unless I cut the ribbing into three > sections. I'm sure you realize that 
once you cut the end off to install the 
ribbing, the quality of the robot welds are immaterial since the weak link is now the the weld you made to reattach the end. > One thing that this 
group needs to be reminded of from time to time, 
> is that the synergy of experiences and combined brain power of this > global group, is incredible, if not impeded. If you are suggesting that 
people who have an interest in safety are 
an impediment to this group, then I strongly disagree with you. Jon 
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