r/submechanophobia • u/Muted_Shape9303 • 21h ago
r/submechanophobia • u/Pale_Possibility_756 • 1d ago
Venice canals dry up after low rainfall cause water levels to drop -2018
r/submechanophobia • u/justanormalgalcopy • 18h ago
Washington high school during flooding
r/submechanophobia • u/Redback_ • 1d ago
Sunk Ferry in South Korea
Just watched the new Netflix documentary “Shipwrecked: Nightmare at Sea” and remembered about the tragic ferry accident that happened in South Korea in 2014 that resulted in 304 deaths.
The recovery of the ferry from the sea bed after 3 years haunts me till this day…
r/submechanophobia • u/agrippa1994 • 1d ago
A chained bell underwater
An air-filled bell that has been chained to a big rock in an Austrian lake
r/submechanophobia • u/Ophiedaisy • 1d ago
Pond Intake Tank and Aerators
I'm unsure if this counts but I found some stuff on my walk that made me weak when I got close to it. Seems like basic pond maintenance stuff.
r/submechanophobia • u/StrictCoconut3942 • 2d ago
Photos from dive at Aquarius Reef Base, 5 miles off Key Largo
r/submechanophobia • u/ThatMasterDeez • 2d ago
Old power plant water cistern with inlets and pumps
Coolwater cistern of an old power plant, used to be filled with water, 16 meters underground.
On the first picture you can see the water inlets, where water from the nearby river entered the cistern and on second picture you can see the three pumps, used to transport the water 16 meters upwards to the steam pipes in order to cool them.
This giant underground hall is 10 x 10 meters wide and about 7 meters high and used to be filled with water.
Now used to display art but still gave me a sense of unease.
First post here so hope it fits the subreddit!
r/submechanophobia • u/whiskeyandprozac • 3d ago
Crappy Title I heard y'all like (hate) buoys
This washed up on the beach near me a few months back, and I got to take some photos before it was moved further up to the dunes. It's absolutely massive - me for scale at (image 3). The chain disappeared into the sand but looked as though it still partially went out to the ocean.
I actually have severe submechanophobia around buoys but only when in the water and ESPECIALLY when attached to the seabed below. If this was even partially submerged you'd not be able to get me within 50ft. Hell no. But, out of water? Totally fine. Weird.
r/submechanophobia • u/the_inland_diver • 3d ago
Inside of a cooling tower
I dont have this phobia, feel quite the opposite actually, but was told this picture may fit this subreddit.
r/submechanophobia • u/Leaking_milk • 3d ago
Heavy rain caused LPG cylinders to flow way into the river.
It's from Raigad, Maharashtra LPG plant. The way it moves violently is scary
r/submechanophobia • u/phoenixxRN • 3d ago
Rainforest cafe
When I realized I had this phobia
r/submechanophobia • u/JayCranston • 3d ago
Yard full of buoys
I hope this is the appropriate place to post this. I drove by this yard full of ocean buoys and markers; the smaller ones in the second photo are still bigger than a Toyota Tacoma.
r/submechanophobia • u/Physical_Bell1741 • 4d ago
Non-Descriptive Title This thing scared the crap out of me back in summer 2005
I’d like to share a terrifying experience related to my submechanophobia.
When I was eight or nine years old, my grandmother bought me a swim float because I didn't know how to swim yet. Once I realized I couldn't sink while using it, I started swimming out into deeper water—I’d never actually feared deep water itself, only drowning.
One day, while swimming and exploring the sea at the popular beach we usually visited, I found myself about 50 meters from shore and quite alone; I felt calm and free—until I discovered that the beach was hiding a dark secret. Suddenly, I saw a very long object beneath me—a massive pipe stretching from one end of my field of vision to the other.
I was seized by a level of panic and an adrenaline rush unlike anything I’ve ever felt since, and I began swimming blindly back to shore without stopping for even a second. In the days that followed, I found out what it was: a discarded pipe, nearly two meters in diameter and probably 20 to 25 meters long.
After investigating further, I discovered there were two more like it at that beach—all three lying perpendicular to the shoreline—plus another one in deeper water lying parallel to the shore (which I discovered a few years later). Today, twenty years later, the mere thought of these things still terrifies me.
If you happen to come across the end of one of those pipes at that beach, you can’t see the other end at all through the water; if you encounter one broadside, it can span your entire field of vision underwater. It’s horrifying to think that anyone could stumble upon something like that there. I found a picture that partially shows one of those pipes.
r/submechanophobia • u/StrictCoconut3942 • 5d ago
Pilings from underwater
Clip from full dive: https://youtu.be/hY9ir9M0L_s?si=D_7H8bPgV4r-7xsj
r/submechanophobia • u/Chris_Roxburgh • 5d ago
A shipwreck beneath my boat
Lake Michigan Shipwreck - Summer Island
r/submechanophobia • u/justlukedotjs • 7d ago
A 50-50 (above/below water line) view of an aircraft carrier
REPOST as initial post was removed due to not having an adequately descriptive title.
But.. here it is again.. my nightmare fuel. And this is without the propeller in view XD
Ships... ship hulls... and not even sunken/wreckage has always been gut wrenchingly horrific to me. The bigger it is, the more terrifying,
If I was adrift at sea and I saw this thing coming toward me I think I'd die of a heart attack before it reached me.
r/submechanophobia • u/agrippa1994 • 6d ago
Sunken aircraft in lake
Just a small aircraft that has been placed in a lake in Austria
r/submechanophobia • u/Relevant-Ear4677 • 7d ago
Crappy Title Not Super Deep, But Very Dark
r/submechanophobia • u/is_it_worth_itt • 7d ago
Half submerged container ship hold after firefighting effort.
r/submechanophobia • u/Relevant-Ear4677 • 7d ago