Bob DBF
Contributor
For what it's worth, I understand the end comes very quickly in such circumstances although the spiraling/sinking down period prior to 'implosion' must have been horrifying!
The implosion of the USS Scorpion was estimated at 6000 kg of TNT from analyzing the acoustical event. The ARA San Juan being smaller and probably a shallower test depth would be less powerful, but even a tenth of that would be considerable.
If one were an observer onboard, one would have have time to be horrified. All sailors on board would be focusing all their attention on ending the casulty and saving the boat. That is what the selection and training is for, the ship is already sunk, the job is bringing it back up. Every submariner is acutly aware of what can happen to a submarine, the expression is that "it takes a crew to run a submarine, but only one man to sink it".
As a submarine sailor I participated in a number of casualties, one of which could have ended quite badly. My focus was on doing my job and solving the issue(s) at hand, doing anything else would be a waste of time, energy, and problem solving abilities. I liked that trait in my shipmates.
Bob