The Titanic 3D Model - As You've Never Seen Her Before

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
  • RMS Titanic explored as never before as a 3D model.
    This 3D model of the Titanic has been built using the original plans for the ship and allows us to explore the Titanic in great depth and with great accuracy.
    Laid down in March 1909 she was launched a little over two years later and completed just under a year after that, on 2 April 1912. Her size was immense: at 882 feet 9 inches long, she was the largest moveable man made object on earth.
    This was a major engineering challenge and it revolutionised shipbuilding. No one had ever tried to build a ship the size of the Titanic or her sister ships Olympic and Britannic, ever before.
    It took an entire year to put the Titanic’s frames in place. She was built with 2000 hull plates mostly 6ft wide and 30ft long, weighing up to three tons. The hull was held together with over three million iron and steel rivets.
    After her launch, her funnels were added, completing her height to 175ft from the keel to the top of her funnels. Under the water, the red part of the hull was painted with red lead, which is lead oxide paint. For the rest of the hull and the main superstructure, the pigments used were white lead, white zinc and carbon black.
    The Titanic was such a remarkable achievement that 100,000 people turned out to watch her launch.
    The lookout post was fifteen metres above the deck. Lookouts worked in shifts of two hours and there was a large bell to ring if any danger was sighted and a telephone to help them communicate with the bridge. They were not, however, issued with binoculars…
    The ship was commanded form the bridge which gave easy access to the outside and a commanding view forward. In 1912 there was no electronic navigation, positioning or collision avoidance systems. Judgment of course and speed was all done by eye.
    The radio room with the latest Marconi radio equipment was located on the boat deck, as close to the top of the ship as possible to keep the feed line to the antennae short. The transmitter was the most powerful at sea able to contact either New York or London from the centre of the Atlantic.
    The First Class accommodation was high up in the ship away from the noise of the machinery. The suites were lavishly decorated in styles of different historical periods. The largest had their own private section of deck.
    The Third Class accommodation was split between either end of the ship in the lower decks. Single men were in the bow and single women and families were in the stern where they were subjected to the noise and vibrations of the engine and propellers.
    The 20 lifeboats were carried on the uppermost deck but 32 more, featured in the original design were never put in place, to create space for the wealthy to exercise. This meant that the Titanic only had sufficient lifeboats for 33% of her passengers.
    The Titanic’s band would often perform on the forward half of the boat deck.
    At 11.40 on 14 April 1912, the Titanic was 370 miles south of Newfoundland, in 12,500 feet of water - nearly two and a half miles, travelling just under her top speed of just under ten metres per second, when an iceberg was spotted by the lookout.
    He telephoned the bridge with the words ‘Iceberg right ahead’. It was 100 ft tall, the size of an eight-story building, and with no light to reflect it, the iceberg appeared almost black.
    The order was given hard to starboard, to turn the ship to port but she struck on the starboard side, tearing as many as six different holes in her hull, all along the lines of her hull plates, suggesting that the rivets snapped off.
    Water poured in at seven tons per second, fifteen times faster than it could be pumped out. The hull was divided into sixteen watertight compartments but they did not extend all the way up to the top of the ship, so the water flooded into each one at a time, as the bow began to sink. Within 45 minutes, 1500 tons of water were in the front section of the ship, and she snapped in half. Each section hit the seabed with such force that it created an enormous debris field, the stern burying itself fifteen metres below the sea bed. 1534 lost their lives.
    This video has been made to go alongside an audio episode of the Mariner’s Mirror Podcast in which Dr Sam Willis speaks with Don Lynch, a historian and member of the Titanic Historical Society, the original and largest Titanic society in the world, and who has spoken to more survivors of the Titanic than anyone else alive and was the official historian for James Cameron's 1997 film Titanic. The episode and full transcription can be found at the Society for Nautical Research’s website snr.org.uk.
    #history #maritime #maritimehistory #maritimeeducation #anchor #historyfacts #historygk #scale #scalemodel #scalemodelbuilding #scalemodelling #shipmodeling #shipmodel #titanic #titanichistory

Комментарии • 778

  • @cats2927
    @cats2927 2 года назад +39

    4:50 it defies physics right there

    • @ccrider3435
      @ccrider3435 Год назад +9

      You wern't there! Maybe physics were different back then!
      👻

    • @-_deploy_-
      @-_deploy_- Год назад

      ​@@ccrider3435 yeah just like colors were just white, black and grey

    • @red-trinity7390
      @red-trinity7390 Год назад

      This was made in 2022. There was no way that the ship could just break very fast. I swear, I think it happened to be the stern only being attached to the double keel while the ship actually split in half.
      And hey, this is just what I think it is.

    • @jayhoward2364
      @jayhoward2364 Год назад +2

      no, it really doesn't.
      since the front half is full of water, it is 10x more heavy than the back half, which would cause a teeter totter effect, breaking the ship in 2.
      The front half sinks immediately due to being already full of water.
      the back half has a only a few flooded compartments, weighing that half down where the ship broke off.
      due to the compartments that didnt flood yet, it creates an air pocket causing the rear end to rise, while simultaneously sinking where it originally broke off.

    • @beniciogonzalez3488
      @beniciogonzalez3488 3 месяца назад

      @@ccrider3435yeah really happy the devs patched the physic glitch’s.

  • @USEditor
    @USEditor Год назад +1

    11:40 p.m. on Sunday, April 14, 1912 - when the Titanic contacted the iceberg (*not "15th").

  • @micktuber
    @micktuber Год назад

    Brilliant video.

  • @RuzoOwzy
    @RuzoOwzy Год назад +1

    Until now, I didn't understand why it broke into half pieces. 20+ good years.
    I can now graduate 🎓.

  • @metricdeep8856
    @metricdeep8856 Год назад

    Available for download? In Step file or sokidworks?

  • @somethingtojenga
    @somethingtojenga Год назад +1

    4:49 That's not how physics works lol... the completely detached back end of a ship, not even full of water, doesn't just bounce up into the air...

  • @MrPawelGajewski
    @MrPawelGajewski 2 года назад +1

    1534 ppl? Where did that number come from. It is commonly accepted that 1490 people perished however maximum number suggested by US commision was 1517. So its between 1490-1517

    • @DerpyPossum
      @DerpyPossum 2 года назад

      The exact number was 1,496, so he was off by quiet a few people lol.

    • @shaynewheeler9249
      @shaynewheeler9249 Год назад

      Titanic Radioactive ☣️☢️☣️☣️☣️☢️☣️☣️

  • @kevinluschak5241
    @kevinluschak5241 Год назад

    Heard the First class passenger s had everything they needed.

  • @davidmccann9811
    @davidmccann9811 Год назад

    The props are all wrong, and look like something off of the Normandie. The blades are too wide and square for Titanic, which had seperate blades bolted on.

  • @zhackiethedog
    @zhackiethedog Год назад +33

    I like how everyone is telling you that she had a 4 bladed central propeller, then links a picture of Olympic's propellers.

    • @CitizenMio
      @CitizenMio Год назад +4

      Cherry on the top being that Olympic herself also had a 3 bladed central propeller. Albeit for a short time, finishing the experiment Titanic obviously couldn't. If only there were pictures of that refit that everyone could confuse for being Titanic and the circle would be complete. ;)

    • @davidmccann9811
      @davidmccann9811 Год назад +3

      There is some evidence that when Titanic sailed she had three bladed props in all three positions.

    • @shaynewheeler9249
      @shaynewheeler9249 Год назад

      Coal fired steamship Titanic

    • @Katoshi_Takagumi
      @Katoshi_Takagumi Год назад

      @@CitizenMio Yes, now that you mention it I seem to remember them experimenting with a 4 blade propeller, but I think it produced too much vibration.

    • @221b-l3t
      @221b-l3t Год назад

      ​@@CitizenMioProbably was one but it's lost. Most likely a picture would have been taken just to document the experiment but most images didn't survive including video of the launch of Titanic (and Britannic). Olympic luckily is preserved as you probably know.

  • @jonathanpardoe8722
    @jonathanpardoe8722 Год назад +2

    If you are going to do a study on Titanic at least get the facts right . The crows nest was occupied by crewmen who it was rightly stated did not have binoculors . That is in some minds one of the reasons for the disaster . It is not ! All crows nest lookouts unlike Cunard , had to have regular eye tests at opticians and those that are aware will say that any object in the ships path is firstly spotted by the naked eye , Only then can the binoculors be used as the motion of the ship through the binoculors can lead to massive eye strain . My own binoculors on my boat are hardly ever used for that reason and are only 8 x 50 strength . Binoculors on the fateful voyage would not have been the slightest use whatsoever .

  • @ThusithaThanthirige
    @ThusithaThanthirige Год назад +1

    Greetings From Super Extremes- Sri Lanka
    💚 💛 ❤ 💙 💜

  • @PanyingPilot
    @PanyingPilot 2 года назад +64

    This is as good as it gets. I am in awe of the diligent and careful work done. To think that this is available to the world wide audience is a gift of knowledge. Thanks.

  • @goldfing5898
    @goldfing5898 2 года назад +13

    Great video, very informative. I have learned quite a lot of things about Titanic during the last year on RUclips, but there is always still so much to learn. In this case, e.g. the antenna for the Marconi Room. It was part of the "rope" or wire connecting the forward and aft mast, as it seems. Also, the sinking process with the water exceeding the bulkheads on E deck is visualized very clearly.

  • @jorditordera
    @jorditordera Год назад +62

    It has never been explained to me this way before: so clearly, simplified, but yet accurate, and straightforwards. I loved how clearly and easy the laws of physics felt when you were explaining how the water got inside the ship.

  • @zms8092
    @zms8092 2 года назад +33

    It doesn’t look any bigger than the Mauritania

    • @nathanzadro6393
      @nathanzadro6393 Год назад +20

      You be blasé about some things, but not about Titanic! She’s nearly 100 feet longer than Mauretania, and FAR more luxurious!

    • @laislabella
      @laislabella Год назад

      Shut up rose!

    • @OnlyintheER
      @OnlyintheER Год назад

      My Wang is bigger than the Mauritania

    • @bluekg13
      @bluekg13 Год назад

      You gonna cut her meat for her, too, Cal?

    • @chandanyadav1567
      @chandanyadav1567 Год назад +4

      Im the king of the world oooooooooooooo

  • @DerpyPossum
    @DerpyPossum 2 года назад +7

    Paint scheme’s wrong, window layouts are wrong, information is wrong on multiple levels, sinking sequence is dead wrong, death toll is wrong.
    *”…Allows us to explore the Titanic with great accuracy”* ain’t lookin’ so true right now.

  • @Magnanimousking92
    @Magnanimousking92 Год назад +1

    For the wealthy to exercice….? 😂😂😂💀💀💀

  • @rexoates4484
    @rexoates4484 Год назад +2

    Besides the human loss, what a waste. Brand new ship on it’s maiden voyage and destroyed. And totally preventable.

    • @Gabrocol
      @Gabrocol Год назад +1

      and shes still claiming lives

  • @judyannlemay618
    @judyannlemay618 2 года назад +3

    “What a Grreat Forensic Analysis” ;]

  • @arronhawken8310
    @arronhawken8310 2 года назад +6

    One common thing about Titanic models is that they make the funnels yellow? The funnels were buff but closer to orange than yellow.

    • @皮一下很开心-f9t
      @皮一下很开心-f9t 2 года назад

      I think yellow funnels are more common... But the real colour is Khaki. I remember there is the Queen Mary or Queen Elizabeth(forgot) and the RMS Olympic's picture. All people know that Olympic is so similar with Titanic. So, that picture can be an example. Sorry I can't found the picture for you... 🤣😅

    • @arronhawken8310
      @arronhawken8310 2 года назад

      Forgive me but Titanic’s funnel colour was actually called buff. Khaki is a dark green colour

    • @皮一下很开心-f9t
      @皮一下很开心-f9t 2 года назад +1

      Oh sorry I found this bright yellow but the system said that is Khaki.

  • @movieloversattyanonda
    @movieloversattyanonda Год назад +1

    this is good information... ❤❤❤

  • @loganwhite8094
    @loganwhite8094 Год назад +4

    Titanic honor and glory has been working on their model for years, this reminded me of them

  • @QbanoPuraSepa
    @QbanoPuraSepa Год назад +1

    Didn’t even need to get in a sub to get this wonderful look at the titanic… I’m here dry as fuck!

  • @markiliff
    @markiliff 2 года назад +9

    Beautifully done.
    (One thing though: I'm pretty ancient but stopped thinking in American units many years ago. Would you cut some slack for the majority in future and give metric equivalents?)

    • @pikachu6031
      @pikachu6031 2 года назад +5

      They’re NOT American Units. The RMS Titanic was a British designed ship. All units were, and still should be, Imperial Units! These units were adopted by the Americans from the British Standard Imperial Measurements! Example, a thou. is a far more accurate measurement than mm! Virtually everything built in the U.K. was still in imperial into the late 1980’s. It should be brought back, and I’ve heard that they are going to start teaching it in schools again. They tried to get rid of yards, utter fail that was! We didn’t want metres or kilometres on our road signs, nor on the football pitch! Nor, and the most important of all, we didn’t want our pint removed! There would have been a war had that happened! Everybody but everybody in the U.K. talks about their height in Feet and Inches, even the youngsters do, that’s because we can all understand that, we say there’s a Foot of snow, not 300mm or what ever the hell it is!

    • @markiliff
      @markiliff 2 года назад +8

      @@pikachu6031 Hush now. I was just suggesting that a 2022 vid could be improved by including units that the rest of the world understands. I didn't suggest removing units used mostly in USA

    • @robertreynolds6725
      @robertreynolds6725 2 года назад

      Just convert metric to imp no big deal ya wanker

    • @dalereed3950
      @dalereed3950 Год назад

      So, are people still weighed in stones? Explain your weight scales.

    • @markiliff
      @markiliff Год назад +1

      @@dalereed3950 MIne weigh in kg. Ditto throughout the medical profession, which is pretty much the only other context for measuring human weight. I remember stones, but they're just as obsolete as lbs.

  • @horizonrider508
    @horizonrider508 Год назад +5

    This video is something else I will record this video and save to my desktop library thank you so much for doing this
    For a Titanic lover I love this ship like crazy I can't explain in words how I feel about Titanic this ship always takes me to the golden age of 1900s .

  • @jonathanpardoe8722
    @jonathanpardoe8722 Год назад +1

    So the Titanic carried 20 lifeboats . How come that the rescue ship Carpathia picked up 23 lifeboats ?? fully documented and available for anybody to view , Captain Rostrom of Carpathia was most specific about the 20 brand new boats from Titanic and the 3 elderly boats from somewhere else along with the 103 or 4 people that had never set foot on Titanic were a;so picked up by Carpathia sat in the elderly boats . Who can answer that one ??? Also and of a sinister note , Rostrom's ship picked up an upturned lifeboat carrying many crewmembers . Rostrom ordered that boat to be tossed back into the sea which is kind of strange for a brand new boat unless the Captain noted some disturbing signs on the boat which would lead to awkward questions later in court regarding how the boat became upturned and what had happened to the original occupants and how the crew had managed to pursuade the original occupants to vacate the lifeboat in order that the crew may be saved . The collective answer was that the crew scrabbled on top of the upturned boat when it was in the water , however Rostrom inspected the boat sides and found that there were no signs of crewmwns boots as they tried to scabble on board the boat , and he knew that boot polish is not affected by sea water and that there were no signs of boot polish on the boat which made the crew's story a pack of lies .

    • @realityanalyst
      @realityanalyst Год назад

      Interesting post.
      I'm leaving this comment and I'm expecting Titanic shills to answer.

    • @gokulgopan4397
      @gokulgopan4397 Год назад +3

      13 lifeboats were recovered. Carpathia could only hold that much. And the upturned one was a collapsible, made of canvas. That collapsible became upturned while unloading it. The water already reached boat deck and Titanic was starting her final plunge. So they couldn't launch it. Both the last 2 collapsibles weren't launched properly.

  • @jotrutch
    @jotrutch Год назад +1

    thats a pretty junky boat!

  • @sauravsaini1014
    @sauravsaini1014 Год назад +5

    Amazing Animation & Explanation!! ❤❤
    Thanks for sharing.

  • @michaelhawthorne8696
    @michaelhawthorne8696 Год назад +6

    Wow that was vivid 😮
    Awesome animation too..👌

  • @cats2927
    @cats2927 2 года назад +5

    5:06 is that a funnel on the wreck?

    • @red-trinity7390
      @red-trinity7390 Год назад +2

      Yup. The actual wreck doesn't show a single trace of a funnel on the decks of the ship.

  • @rizebalikcisi
    @rizebalikcisi Год назад +1

    00:23 ah yes cheeseburger per donut unit scale

  • @David-nu6kw
    @David-nu6kw Год назад +2

    I dont understand why they didn't build the compartments in the hull to the ceiling? To the top? Once water enters the ship, its pretty much guaranteed to fill everything in a serious scenario. Im not well versed in engineering however how did someone not say - "Hey this just wont work as the ship angle will automatically change with more water and we will sink"
    If this potential reinactment is fairly accurate, It would suggest the ship would have definitely survived had tje design in the hull been different.
    Also no binoculars for the watcher? It is pitch black out there more often than not at night so maybe the impact would still have happened anyway
    Rest in peace to all those that were on the ship that day.

    • @bogdanflo1212
      @bogdanflo1212 Год назад

      They were cutting costs .... there are speculations that there was a fire in the coal bunker and the ship still sailed

    • @gokulgopan4397
      @gokulgopan4397 Год назад +2

      @@bogdanflo1212 not cutting costs. It's a passenger ship, not a battleship. It needs passenger space.
      The coal fire didn't affect anything. It was a smouldering fire. They don't burn to a temperature that melts mild steel.

    • @gokulgopan4397
      @gokulgopan4397 11 месяцев назад

      The height of watertight bulkheads were based on board of Trade regulations. The watertight bulkheads should've been 3 meters above waterline. That height was sufficient for scenarios they had in mind, their experiences. Nobody envisioned iceberg side scraping and opening up 6 compartments instead of 4.
      Binoculars wouldn't have made much difference. It limits field of view. To spot something, lookouts need wide view and that against the horizon. Binoculars only give an enlarged view which prevents judging the distance and size of the obstacle.

  • @wirianrizanichannel
    @wirianrizanichannel Год назад +4

    Very incredible The Titanic 3D Model, great video sharing

  • @narsimhamurthy1014
    @narsimhamurthy1014 Год назад +3

    No words to appreciate you. Such an excellent video

  • @DXCommanderHQ
    @DXCommanderHQ Год назад +1

    2:18 Weirdly (strangely? Oddly?), insects have "antennae" but the plural of a radio antenna is "antennas" :)

  • @PerfectlyFreedom
    @PerfectlyFreedom Год назад +2

    I like how he keeps referring Titanic as "she", because she's a beautiful ship.

  • @Embracing01
    @Embracing01 Год назад +2

    The lookouts should've been given binoculars, but they were left inside a locker when one of the officers had left the ship in a hurry at Southampton.

    • @eliel_360
      @eliel_360 Год назад +6

      The presence of binoculars would have made no difference.
      It was a really dark night, looking through binoculars would only give you a much more restricted field of view than your naked eyes, also binoculars were only used to get a closer look at something that had already been spotted, in Titanic's case they first spotted a black silhouette and since they were in the middle of the Atlantic it couldn't have been anything other than an iceberg, if they were to look at it with binoculars they would've lost precious seconds (although it was already too late when the iceberg was already spotted)

  • @実藤忠彦
    @実藤忠彦 Год назад +1

    タイタニックの4本目の煙突から煙が上がってないあたり、リアルだなあと思います(4本目の煙突はダミーで、ボイラー室と繋がっていません)。

    • @gokulgopan4397
      @gokulgopan4397 7 месяцев назад

      It did have some smoke. It was used for ventilation mainly from engine room, smoking room and first class galley.

  • @Bbc418
    @Bbc418 Год назад +2

    No, he rang and rang and rang then said “Pick up you bastard!”

  • @ИванМанилов-з4щ
    @ИванМанилов-з4щ Год назад +1

    1:21 I knew Russians had buil it

  • @Embracing01
    @Embracing01 Год назад +1

    100,000 people turned out to the launch?. is that referring to her maiden voyage or the launch at Belfast on the 31st May 1911?. If it's the 31st May then 100,000 people is incorrect, there were around 40,000 people watching her enter the river Lagan. I doubt there were 100,000 people at Southampton either. Also Titanic hit the iceberg on the 14th not the 15th, she sank in the early hours of 15th April. Do people actually research these things?.

  • @snarecat3441
    @snarecat3441 Год назад +4

    This was an amazing undertaking. So we’ll done!
    Thank you!

  • @FazbearEntertainment414
    @FazbearEntertainment414 Год назад +1

    ive seen worse titanic sinking animations

  • @MuslimTv1160
    @MuslimTv1160 Год назад

    তামিম ফিট নন তবুও খেলবো এটা কি পারার খেলা যে আফগানিস্তান ঈদ না করে দুবাইয়ে ১৪ দিন গাম জরিয়েছে তার ফল পেয়েছে টিম আফগানিস্তান আর আমরা বউয়ের সাথে ভাষায় খেলেছি😂

  • @ardavansarraf2973
    @ardavansarraf2973 Год назад

    Video claims April 15th 11:40 PM was the iceberg impact Incorrect it was April 14th. Cmon now lads. She sunk on the 15th yes. Collision was on 14th

  • @BlayneFX
    @BlayneFX Год назад +1

    Hi, Awesome 3D model. Would it be possible to obtain the files of this model?

  • @MrEleman
    @MrEleman Год назад +1

    Give us 3d model plz

  • @tota_trader
    @tota_trader Год назад +2

    Very nicely narrated wiht amazing animation.

  • @MuslimTv1160
    @MuslimTv1160 Год назад

    তামিম ইমোশনাল কথা বলে আবার আবার ডুকে গেলো একটা মেছে রান করতে পারে না তামিমের কারণে আফগান সিরিজ হেরেছে টাইগাররা

  • @dantyler6907
    @dantyler6907 Год назад +1

    Hard to believe the stacks on top just sit on top.
    I would imagine some portion of the diameter goes down to the lowest level to the engines.
    The furthest rear stack, in my understanding, does NOT contain engine smoke/exaust, just there for looks?

  • @plymouthnnf
    @plymouthnnf 4 месяца назад

    what angle do you put the Titanic at when it split? looking at the animations that seems like 30+ angle which is incorrect if you follow James Cameron Titanic "1997" version.

  • @mehmetokay7073
    @mehmetokay7073 Год назад

    " ... to create space for the wealthy to exercise." The collision occurred on 14 April 1912.

  • @HoudalothAli
    @HoudalothAli Год назад +1

    The middle propelar was 3 bladed. There is no picture of it. Allen Gibsons book 'unsinkable titanic' has the photo on the cover. But the picture is of the Olympic. An identical ship.

  • @stephendaniels4048
    @stephendaniels4048 Год назад +1

    It was over 2½ hrs before she snapped in half - not 45 minutes as mentioned at 4:40 - great video though!

  • @random-4281
    @random-4281 2 года назад +18

    3:06 correction: the earlier design for titanic did not contain more lifeboats, in fact it had less as there were only 2 collapsible boats instead of 4.

    • @waverleyjournalise5757
      @waverleyjournalise5757 2 года назад +8

      It wasn't a design per se: Thomas Andrews did originally specify twice the number of lifeboats, but this was discarded in favour of allowing the passengers more deck space. The original idea called for the lifeboats to be stacked across their width, which would take up twice the amount of space and removing the famous 'Atlantic promenades' on the boat deck.

    • @deardiary8292
      @deardiary8292 2 года назад +2

      @@waverleyjournalise5757 there was no need for more boats, titanic by law had enough

    • @jaguar4u2012
      @jaguar4u2012 2 года назад +1

      the early design by Alexander, the original designer of Titanic and Olympic (Thomas Andrews was only his replacement)
      had 68 lifeboats... after Ismay and others rejected the idea that a ship must have enough lifeboats for everyone
      Alexander left the project... and Andrews continued... Andrews was a "Yes-Man" and by being so he sealed his own doom as well

    • @DerpyPossum
      @DerpyPossum 2 года назад

      @@jaguar4u2012 That isn’t exactly true.

    • @jaguar4u2012
      @jaguar4u2012 2 года назад +2

      @@DerpyPossum what tickles you?

  • @erepsekahs
    @erepsekahs Год назад

    I wonder when people will stop having this morbid curiosity in the Titanic? It's a ship that sunk, full of rich people and others after striking an iceberg. There was tremendous loss of life. End of story.

  • @egretfx
    @egretfx Год назад

    its a good thing it sank, otherwise sea travel wouldnt have been safer than it was a century ago.

  • @grantpilcher8402
    @grantpilcher8402 Год назад +1

    1,496 people lost their lives that night the last man to die that night was named William Hoyt who was pulled from the water but died from the cold water

  • @Fishycheese99
    @Fishycheese99 Год назад

    The sinking is pretty inaccurate. It may be from the ‘97 movie, but she split just in front of the 3rd funnel and at a lower angle than is shown.

  • @charlottetaylor4988
    @charlottetaylor4988 Год назад

    just google the Queen Mary long beach... "she is actually bigger" than the Titanic yet smaller than our conventional cruise ships" on Queen Marys website they give the detailed specs. Titanic is bigger in our minds then it was in real life. "cheers"

  • @alaskaaksala123
    @alaskaaksala123 Год назад

    Talk about missing the forest for the trees… “uh, sorry to,rain on your parade, but…”…. What a moroon….

  • @johnsmith-rs2vk
    @johnsmith-rs2vk Год назад +2

    Building this ship , now that was GRAFT !

  • @timothyreed8417
    @timothyreed8417 Год назад +1

    Binoculars were never issued to the lookouts…

    • @DerpyPossum
      @DerpyPossum Год назад +1

      And they wouldn’t have helped either, given the circumstances of the night’s atmosphere. Besides, they had dozens of other binoculars throughout the ship.

  • @BismartanicSFM
    @BismartanicSFM 2 года назад +4

    And this model was use to make a terrible movie of “Titanic 666”

    • @DerpyPossum
      @DerpyPossum 2 года назад +4

      Which i still refuse to watch.

    • @theKev8347
      @theKev8347 Год назад

      I don't know why they make a movie like that, they would have invented a ship like the poseidon or something like that, and from there do what they want.

    • @drmanasdatta123
      @drmanasdatta123 Год назад

      ​@@DerpyPossumm😊😅🎉mljk 0:18

    • @drmanasdatta123
      @drmanasdatta123 Год назад

      ​@@DerpyPossum😅tlko😮 1:22 lo ll llo 1:25 l 1:25 l

  • @mithramusic5909
    @mithramusic5909 Год назад

    4:38 didn't agree snap in half over two hours into the sinking, not 45 minutes? Or am I misunderstanding

  • @dblackout1107
    @dblackout1107 Год назад +1

    Outstanding assembly animation. This is such a clear way to understand how building a behemoth like that even is started.

  • @giggling_boatswain
    @giggling_boatswain Год назад

    Why are imperial measurements still used? I don’t understand the length or weight figures given in the video at all.

  • @BlackKnight-th8ml
    @BlackKnight-th8ml Год назад +1

    In 3:16 thats not true titanic had enough lifeboats because the lifeboats of that time had an other purpose not to safe people but to transport people to a rescue ship

  • @jimmykreutz6087
    @jimmykreutz6087 Год назад

    Apparently you mean 30'W×6'L ....🧐😜

  • @drummist1000
    @drummist1000 Год назад

    Why is this all over you tube and in the news again? Because of that sub? What are we being distracted from this time?

  • @besidethewoods
    @besidethewoods 2 года назад +9

    Great video. Really enjoyed the video. Keep up the great content!

  • @anhtuannguyen4039
    @anhtuannguyen4039 Год назад

    Nam Mô A Di Đà Phật.
    Nam Mô A Di Đà Phật.
    Nam Mô A Di Đà Phật.

  • @JokerScribe
    @JokerScribe Год назад +1

    In fairness it would have been very difficult to have seen ice with binoculars during the night time in pitch black.

    • @221b-l3t
      @221b-l3t Год назад

      Plus they did have them aboard. Just no one knew who had the key to the cabinet. A different crew sailed her to Southampton than the main crew for the voyage. The captain went on to Olympic they gave him Titanic to fet familiarised with an Olympic class. Smith had previously commanded Olympic so he was already familiar with the ship.

    • @gokulgopan4397
      @gokulgopan4397 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@221b-l3tthere were 5 other pairs of binoculars available onboard. Lightoller's testimony. He said if it was deemed necessary they would've issued it to the lookouts.

  • @enzomolinari9141
    @enzomolinari9141 Год назад

    Now do a video on the submersible Titan using the ceo's original detailed plans he scribbled on a cocktail napkin

  • @williamcrane8236
    @williamcrane8236 Год назад

    She's a twinkee compared to the modern cruise ship.

  • @皮一下很开心-f9t
    @皮一下很开心-f9t 2 года назад +9

    So realistic! How you get it? I want one!!! 😊

  • @rohossobanglatv4264
    @rohossobanglatv4264 Год назад

    Titanic 3D Model Very Instersting Video . Good Job

  • @computerjantje
    @computerjantje Год назад

    you talk english and use feet instead of meters? I thought only americans still used the inches feet system?

  • @moynul313
    @moynul313 Год назад +4

    Now imagine if they had those 32 other life boats.

    • @volpeverde6441
      @volpeverde6441 Год назад +4

      didn't need them....
      it was unsinkable....

    • @3maticod
      @3maticod Год назад +2

      I don't imagine it would have made a huge difference, there was a huge lack of communication between the officers onboard and a frenzy among the passengers. Not to mention many of the lifeboats were not launched at full capacity. The Titanic had as many lifeboats as were required by law at the time, not that it makes the lack of them correct.

    • @timothyphipps7883
      @timothyphipps7883 Год назад +4

      Or a simple pair of binoculars

    • @volpeverde6441
      @volpeverde6441 Год назад +3

      @@timothyphipps7883
      a ship that size and only one pair of binoculars....
      fucking hell - I have THREE pairs and 2 telescopes for my own uses....

    • @skab123
      @skab123 Год назад +2

      The number of boats was enough for emergency, but the number of passengers should have been 4 times less than were on board, simply because a ship isn't planet Earth, which you may overpopulate (overload) as much as you like.

  • @burtpanzer
    @burtpanzer Год назад

    Lifeboats were not removed so rich people could exercise.

  • @devinchan7531
    @devinchan7531 Год назад +1

    Not woter - water

  • @ajgreen868
    @ajgreen868 Год назад

    Your video has it splitting in the wrong area.

  • @kausarjaved7418
    @kausarjaved7418 Год назад

    Good one....but still need to find many solutions

  • @Harmuthkuthanapalithi
    @Harmuthkuthanapalithi Год назад

    Titanic today is small compared to dodgy pipi

  • @philipcoriolis6614
    @philipcoriolis6614 Год назад +1

    Faulty cheap iron rivets if my memory serves me well...

    • @gokulgopan4397
      @gokulgopan4397 Год назад

      They used standard materials. They used steel rivets midships because hydraulic riveting machines could get into those places. The narrow spaces of bow and Stern curves limits the machine. So it had to put in manually. For that, wrought iron rivets had to be used. Metallurgy wasn't advanced as now. They didn't know the properties of having slag in it. It was the slag content that made it brittle.

  • @RobertPaskulovich-fz1th
    @RobertPaskulovich-fz1th Год назад

    The 4th smokestack on Titanic was fake.

  • @Yrf.flip3976
    @Yrf.flip3976 Год назад

    Dunyawi resion hee hoty hy par ager bra bol bola na hota to is halat me bhi manzil ko zarur pohachta

  • @garfstiglz3981
    @garfstiglz3981 Год назад

    So it’s CGI not a 3D model then?

  • @Arca84
    @Arca84 Год назад +1

    Can we get this model?❤

  • @KneeCapHill
    @KneeCapHill Год назад +1

    Crazy how one of the most historically famous shipwreck happened over one of the most hard to reach points in the ocean. Weirdly coincidental

    • @gruznik2119
      @gruznik2119 Год назад

      It was more dangerous to reach because it was a well known spot for icebergs and Titanic sank for the same reason. Not a coincidence so much as a disregard for warnings.

    • @KneeCapHill
      @KneeCapHill Год назад

      @@gruznik2119 it's still dangerous to this day to actually reach the wreck because of depth and a specific pattern of alternating currents at the bottom

  • @seanmahabir5491
    @seanmahabir5491 Год назад

    Was not ready 4 dat size of ship in dat times

  • @monsignore11
    @monsignore11 Год назад +1

    there was N O iceberg !

  • @aakashjadham7271
    @aakashjadham7271 Год назад +2

    Super.....❤❤❤

  • @solitaire5142
    @solitaire5142 Год назад

    Add 5 more souls to that total. RIP.

  • @8539-v1j
    @8539-v1j Год назад

    The closer to the rear the smother the ride

  • @desantotony77
    @desantotony77 8 месяцев назад

    Where do l get this 3D file?!😢

  • @osaobomhenefoghe8967
    @osaobomhenefoghe8967 Год назад

    Wait, was it her first voyage?

  • @cats2927
    @cats2927 2 года назад +6

    The model looks funky like a stylized Titanic but not just regular Titanic

    • @shaynewheeler9249
      @shaynewheeler9249 2 года назад

      Titanic wooden pineapple titanic museum in Orlando Florida jen

    • @221b-l3t
      @221b-l3t Год назад

      It's because Titanic in the movie is 10% shorter and her funnels are less tall so to people used to the movie the actual Titanic looks too long and the funnels seem huge or thinner..

  • @SomeMaxiboy
    @SomeMaxiboy Год назад

    what is that song used throughout this video?