CNN reporter Rick Sanchez's latest addition to the annals of disaster porn starts off mundane and quickly gets frightening. Anyone suffering from claustrophobia or an irrational fear of H20 might want to steer clear of this clip. Sanchez teamed up with Florida cops to demonstrate the best way to escape a car that has ended up underwater. (We imagine this happens quite a bit in Florida, where "Cops" episodes often feature drunk-driving busts, and the median age for drivers is 129.)
"My father always told me, if you're scared, just say you're scared," Sanchez intones before being submerged. "Guess what, folks -- I'm a little scared."
The steps are so simple that even the sort of idiot who drives his car into a lake can manage them: Undo your seat belt, unlock the door, open the window, get out. We were shaking our heads at the obvious here until the reporter's third attempt to extricate himself from a sinking sedan became a bit more complicated -- the door gets stuck, rescue divers can't batter their way in, and the fearless reporter has to breathe through an emergency air supply. "I try to push on the door -- but it seems jammed," Sanchez says. "Admittedly, it's a chilling moment."
Other sources say it's important to keep that seat belt on until you're ready to bolt to safety. Personally, that seems like wiser advice than what's offered by Sanchez's instructor. But hey -- your life, your call.
Now if it's frightening enough to escape a sinking car while a disaster response team waits on the banks with a winch to pull you out if anything goes wrong -- imagine what this would feel like in a real emergency. You don't want to be left to your own panicked devices ... a real disaster calls for real survival gadgets.
Sanchez mentions the generic 'power punch' -- a handy tool used to smash your window should it refuse to roll down underwater. We prefer the "LifeHammer," which sounds like something Thor, God of Thunder might carry. It's basically the Swiss army knife of "OMG-my-car-is-sinking-underwater" devices, allowing you to cut your seatbelt and break your window. With any luck they'll add a bottle opener so that you can crack that celebratory Budweiser on dry land.
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Tuesday 29 September
By Heavytoka
Or keep a gun in your car so you can shoot the window out and make a quick exit.
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Thursday 01 October
By TJ Phelan
I don't think so. I think that if you shoot a gun, the bullet will fly through the window and hit a fish
Thursday 01 October
By Harvey
RE; YOUR ADVICE. HEED MINE; TOKE A LITTLE LESS AND REMEMBER TO BRNG YOUR EARMUFFS IF YOU WANT TO SAVE YOUR HEARING!!
Thursday 01 October
By Nancy
Yeah, and hope you do a little more damage than a little hole the size of a bullet to slip thru.
Thursday 01 October
By mark
Shooting a gun underwater is a bad idea. If you do shoot after the car hits the water make sure the gun is above the water line.
Thursday 01 October
By Joe
Hey Nancy. Ever seen what happens to a window when you fire a bullet through it? Clearly not if you think a bullet makes a tiny hole one would have to swim through. The bullets breaks the integrity of the entire sheet of glass. Add to that the pressure pushing in on the glass from the water and it will instantly break the entire window open. So, yes. Firing a gun to break the window would work faster and more efficiently than a hammer.
Thursday 01 October
By eddie
Great Idea, but suppose you have mishap and the bullet ricochets in the car and shoots your passenger then you have a larger problem than the water hitting the car and filling up the seats with water, just a thought!
Thursday 01 October
By Wren
But what if you can't get the gun before it gets wet?
Thursday 01 October
By NATE
NANCI, even a small calibre handgun such as a 22 will completely shatter a car window. The glass in car windows is made to shatter into thousands of tiny, blunt, pieces. I know from shooting out hundreds of windows and windshields on junkyard cars in my teens.
Thursday 01 October
By Dave
Yeah - car door glass is made so it will crumble into tiny pieces on impact. So the little glassbreaking hammers (or a bullet) will do the trick if you still have air space to work with inside the car. You will find it more difficult to swing a hammer under water and a pistol, unless it's designed to work under water, might just blow up in your hand. In that case, the little spring loaded pen-like device might be the best bet. One could go full-on paranoid and carry all three I reckon, or just hope one of the windows broke on it's own on the way in.
You can't count on being able to open the door. Chances are, on the way to the drink, there will have been some kind of impact or rollover that has crumpled the body enough to jam the door, so one of the side windows will likely be your exit.
At the end of the day it will be best to have contemplated various methods of escape beforehand. A video that demonstrates "the right way" by lowering an old clunker (say a '69 Oldsmobile, just for example) into the water with a crane is very unlikely to resemble the circumstances in which you'll find yourself. There will be no emergency air tank or divers standing by, and other occupants might escape without helping you. So as they say, it's up to you Mary Jo. Survival is not a guarantee.
Thursday 01 October
By NATE
WREN bullets don't get wet. The powder is ealed inside a metal casing. The days of "keeping your powder dry" ended about a century and a half ago.
Thursday 01 October
By Erin
A gun would be of little use in this situation.. Bullets do NOT move at the same force or speed while under water..
Thursday 01 October
By daniel
I always unbuckle my seat belt when driving ovver bridges and roll the window down. It's inconvenient buu when I think of the consequences it's a very litle part of time that might help to save your life
Thursday 01 October
By Bill
don't you know a gun can't fire under water...you would be a dead one
Thursday 01 October
By Richy
I thought Ted Kennedy was teaching this course, he could do it with a load on and then walk home..
Friday 02 October
By PAB
Sure, and blow your hearing straight out. Smart. Just carry a window breaker.
Tuesday 29 September
By Rob
They did this on Mythbusters and showed that it doesn't take much of a pressure differential to keep you from opening the door or the window. Their suggestion (assuming you don't have a hammer) was to open the door immediately upon hitting the water. If you wait, you probably won't be able to open it. The same goes for attempting to open the windows. If water has reached the window by the time you attempt to open it, don't expect to be able to.
Of course, if you remain calm and hold your breath you might be able to wait until pressure equalizes and open the door after the fact. Still, I wouldn't want to bet my life on that.
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Thursday 01 October
By Johnny R
The window can be kicked out. The farther the car sinks..the greater the pressure on the door.
Thursday 01 October
By John F. C. Taylor
I saw the same episode of Mythbusters. Also read the coments posted under yours. Every tool suggested in the following posts were dtested on the Mythbusters episode. Thing is both the Mythbusters and CNN episodes dealt with the "victim" being a fully aware adult male. There was no compensation for whatever stress caused by the accident or maybe something else that may have affected the person's ability to think clearly in this scenario.l
Thursday 01 October
By radman1331
I got crank windows :)