"I'd like to be, under the sea....in an octopuses garden in the shade"
The Story:
The world's first personal submarines have been launched with a price tag of £65 000 (about R910 000).
Dutch designers claim the subs will make owners feel like they are "flying through the water".
The one-seater version is 2,7m long, and the 3,3 model seats two. Owners who really want to impress can get go-faster stripes and custom paint jobs.
The tiny C-Quester can dive to 50 metres and cruise beneath the waves at up to four knots using electric-propelled thrusters.
It can stay underwater for two-and-half hours straight or 36 hours in the event of an emergency.
The vessel's high-strength pressure hull allows the pilot to submerge in a totally dry cockpit and surface straight from the maximum depth without risk of decompression problems.
Makers U-Boat Worx, which took three years to perfect the subs, said: "Never before has it been possible for the public to explore the underwater world with a one-atmosphere submarine."
But budding Jacques Cousteaus will need to get an underwater pilot's license before they get behind the wheel. -
Ananova.com
can anyone convert that to US dollars?
The Story:
The world's first personal submarines have been launched with a price tag of £65 000 (about R910 000).
Dutch designers claim the subs will make owners feel like they are "flying through the water".
The one-seater version is 2,7m long, and the 3,3 model seats two. Owners who really want to impress can get go-faster stripes and custom paint jobs.
The tiny C-Quester can dive to 50 metres and cruise beneath the waves at up to four knots using electric-propelled thrusters.
It can stay underwater for two-and-half hours straight or 36 hours in the event of an emergency.
The vessel's high-strength pressure hull allows the pilot to submerge in a totally dry cockpit and surface straight from the maximum depth without risk of decompression problems.
Makers U-Boat Worx, which took three years to perfect the subs, said: "Never before has it been possible for the public to explore the underwater world with a one-atmosphere submarine."
But budding Jacques Cousteaus will need to get an underwater pilot's license before they get behind the wheel. -
Ananova.com
can anyone convert that to US dollars?
