Marine

$48-million Triton 36000/2 submersible takes you to the bottom of the deepest oceans

$48-million Triton 36000/2 submersible takes you to the bottom of the deepest oceans
The Triton 36000/2 is built to make repeated dives to the deepest ocean sites on Earth
The Triton 36000/2 is built to make repeated dives to the deepest ocean sites on Earth
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DSSV Pressure Drop and lander
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DSSV Pressure Drop and lander
Part of the Triton 36000/2 electrical system
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Part of the Triton 36000/2 electrical system
Locations for the Triton 36000/2 dive expedition
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Locations for the Triton 36000/2 dive expedition
Air bottles aboard the Triton 36000/2
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Air bottles aboard the Triton 36000/2
Forging the pressure hull for the Triton 36000/2
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Forging the pressure hull for the Triton 36000/2
The Triton 36000/2 pressure hull
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The Triton 36000/2 pressure hull
Triton 36000/2 being launched
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Triton 36000/2 being launched
Triton 36000/2 during recovery
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Triton 36000/2 during recovery
A lander on the seabed
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A lander on the seabed
The landers carry sensors and acoustic modems
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The landers carry sensors and acoustic modems
The Triton 36000/2 in the water
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The Triton 36000/2 in the water
DSSV Pressure Drop
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DSSV Pressure Drop
Detail of Triton 36000/2's hull
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Detail of Triton 36000/2's hull
The Triton 36000/2 is built to make repeated dives to the deepest ocean sites on Earth
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The Triton 36000/2 is built to make repeated dives to the deepest ocean sites on Earth
View gallery - 14 images

If you like the water, don't mind cramped spaces, and have a spare US$48 million lying around, then Triton Submarines has a submersible that can take you and a passenger to the bottom of the deepest ocean. With its support ship thrown in for the sticker price, the Triton 36000/2 Hadal Exploration System is designed to make repeated visits to the nadir of the seabed for science, exploration, or the ultimate joyride.

Submersibles have come a long way in the past half century. In the 1960s they were the reserve of major navies, scientific institutes, and pioneering deep-sea engineering firms. Today, they've become the playthings of the very rich. For the right price, you can buy a wide variety of underwater vessels, with Triton even working on a luxury submersible with Aston Martin.

But as with all luxury items, the private submersible market is a game of oneupmanship and the Triton 36000/2 is about as oneupmany as you can get. This isn't just an acrylic sphere with electric motors and some ballast that can be dropped off the boat dock of a superyacht for a quick spin around the coral reef. It's a cutting-edge deep-sea vessel that can rival the real record breakers. And though anyone with the scratch can buy it, the system is also being marketed to governments, philanthropic organizations, and research institutes.

Triton 36000/2 being launched
Triton 36000/2 being launched

What sets the Triton 36000/2 apart is its spherical, 3.54-inch-thick (90-mm) titanium pressure hull that Triton says took new, advanced forging techniques to produce without any welds or similar weak spots. With an inner diameter of 59 in (1.5 m), it can carry two passengers in its ergonomically-designed leather seats to the deepest spot in the ocean – the Challenger Deep, which bottoms out at about 36,000 ft (11,000 m). At that point, the water is always near freezing, in total darkness, and the pressure is in excess of 16,000 psi (1,089 ATM).

This is a place that only three people have visited before and only as one-offs. According to Triton, the Triton 36000/2 has been tested at the Krylov State Research Center in St. Petersburg, Russia to 20,305 psi (1,382 ATM), as well as on deep dives in the Bahamas. It has a pressure safety factor at least 20 percent greater than it will ever encounter. In addition, it can go to those depths repeatedly on trips of over 16 hours – including the 2.5-hour descent. Triton claims that this repeatability is a first for manned submersibles operating that such depths.

To achieve this, the 11.7-tonne (25,700-lb) vessel has a 64-kWh, 24-V electrical power system running on Li-Fe-P batteries that supply the life support systems, manipulator, 10 electric thrusters, four wide-angle cameras and ten 20,000-lumen LED lamps. In the event of an emergency, it has life support for 96 hours and can jettison its batteries, thrusters, manipulator, and ballast to achieve positive buoyancy.

The Triton 36000/2 pressure hull
The Triton 36000/2 pressure hull

Because the Triton 36000/2 is designed for extreme ocean depths, the purchase price includes its support ship, the DSSV Pressure Drop. This 224-ft (68-m) diesel electric vessel displaces 2,000 gross tons and can carry 47 passengers and crew as well as the Triton 36000/2. The former US Navy submarine seeker and NOAA science and survey vessel has a stern-mounted A-frame for releasing and recovering the submersible, as well as a climate-controlled hangar, support systems, wet and dry labs, specimen freezers, and a media suite. In addition it has the latest Kongsberg-Simrad EM-124 multi-beam sonar for topographic mapping of the ocean floor.

And like any good seller, Triton is also throwing in three unmanned landers with L3 Systems-supplied acoustic modems to aid in the Triton 36000/2's navigation and to relay communications to the mothership. They also have six push-core samplers for collecting geological and biological samples from the seafloor, as well as up to 10 L (2.6 gal) of seawater. They can also record data on the way up and down using their conductivity, temperature and depth sensors, and their time-lapse cameras.

The Triton 36000/2 is currently on a world expedition during which it will conduct over 50 dives to the five deepest locations on Earth. These include the Puerto Rican Trench, the Meteor Deep in the Southern Ocean, the Molloy Deep off Greenland, and the Challenger Deep in the Marianas Trench, along with other dives to historic shipwrecks. Once these are completed, the Triton 36000/2 submersible will be available for delivery in 2019.

Source: Triton via SuperyachtNews

View gallery - 14 images
2 comments
2 comments
BrianK56
At 36,000 feet down it sounds more dangerous than outer space.
Expanded Viewpoint
Either direction, up or down, is equally fraught with dangers from which there is little, if any, chance of rescue. We survive most easily on dry land, and moving off from there is gets riskier with each step that we take.
Randy