RMS Titanic "SOS"

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  • Опубликовано: 19 окт 2024

Комментарии • 3,5 тыс.

  • @trainknut
    @trainknut 6 лет назад +22087

    The engineers who kept the engines going, the operator who kept repeating this message over and over until the end, the band who continued to play to calm the rest of the passengers, all those who accepted their fate so others would live, including Captain Edward J Smith, and chief engineer Thomas Andrews, are all true heroes.

    • @CJODell12
      @CJODell12 6 лет назад +445

      Thomas Andrews was the ship's designer, Joseph Bell was the ship's chief engineer.

    • @memesinablenderandyoutuber8364
      @memesinablenderandyoutuber8364 6 лет назад +68

      C.J. O'Dell what did the Morse code say?

    • @NoName-bo6kh
      @NoName-bo6kh 6 лет назад +184

      The Arctic Gamer the band didn’t keep playing when the ship struck the iceburg, one of the survivors even said so.

    • @memesinablenderandyoutuber8364
      @memesinablenderandyoutuber8364 6 лет назад +10

      Soup Soupington they wouldn't anyway.

    • @oliviarose9541
      @oliviarose9541 6 лет назад +209

      ​@@memesinablenderandyoutuber8364 Translation (as good as I can): Its a CQD old man this is Titanic position 41/46N 50/14W
      sinking cannot hear for noise of steam CQD SOS CQD this is Titanic --> CQD (All stations distress)

  • @notkimjong-un3019
    @notkimjong-un3019 2 года назад +8401

    The fact people could turn those beeps into letters so quickly is amazing in itself

    • @accorsitar
      @accorsitar 2 года назад +164

      @@Malo-TheFlyingFrenchman nah....after decades some of us send and receive from our mental blackboard :)

    • @Cobalt985
      @Cobalt985 2 года назад +155

      People can still do that. Yes a lot of CW communication is done by computers now but not all of it.

    • @KuyangEsengVlogs
      @KuyangEsengVlogs 2 года назад +67

      @@Cobalt985 also a lot of Amateur Radio Operators still do CW

    • @AmtrakCitiesSprinter64
      @AmtrakCitiesSprinter64 Год назад +29

      This beeps is messages sent from a telegraph, in this case, the Titanic’s telegraph

    • @aussiesmoko
      @aussiesmoko Год назад +31

      It's not dots and dashes it more rythems of dots and dashes the telegraph operator listens to and sends . He pick up the rhythm of the Morse being sent

  • @artisticdad4932
    @artisticdad4932 2 года назад +2100

    His name was Jack Philips. He had just turned 25 years old. He didn’t leave his post until the radio room was flooding. Lots of comments about the bravery of this man but no mention of his name.

    • @megachristina12ify
      @megachristina12ify 2 года назад +35

      I realized that too and I find that quite interesting

    • @rapatacush3
      @rapatacush3 Год назад +28

      He told the california to shut up after she tried to warn them of the icebergs.

    • @thecaynuck
      @thecaynuck Год назад +17

      He also has received a lot of flak for failing to report the iceberg warnings from other ships ahead to them to the bridge of the ship though. He was focused on a backlog of passenger messages he wanted to transmit.

    • @Ilya.Pirogov
      @Ilya.Pirogov Год назад +16

      @@thecaynuck That's bullshit. All messages marked for the captain have been delivered. Some precautionary measures were taken, but no one was going to slow down. It was normal to drive at maximum speed in such a situation. Everyone did that. You can get acquainted with the interrogations of captains of different ships during the investigation of the Titanic disaster. They would all do the same. No one would slow down. Not far from the Titanic was the ship SS Californian. They stopped and drifted because they were in no hurry and they had no passengers on board.

    • @prezentoappr1171
      @prezentoappr1171 Год назад +1

      ​@@thecaynuckXO, the battery has been sent to the titanic we need to charge the bats for 12 hours before another try - command aka kursk

  • @Leon-zu1wp
    @Leon-zu1wp 3 года назад +8318

    This is like hearing a man's dying words except it is still in his voice.

    • @firemangan2731
      @firemangan2731 3 года назад +220

      True, this is so far the closest we can get to hear the real John Philips speaking. Its creepy and appealing at the same time.

    • @Коммун
      @Коммун 3 года назад +17

      mysterious

    • @user-oc5bc4ol7j
      @user-oc5bc4ol7j 3 года назад +12

      .... . .-.. .-.. ---

    • @omaiwamoushindeiru4633
      @omaiwamoushindeiru4633 3 года назад +70

      i think this is in morse code

    • @1chumley1
      @1chumley1 3 года назад +26

      Except it is a simulation.

  • @AlekWheeler
    @AlekWheeler 8 лет назад +14602

    Also worth remembering the 34 engineers that made sure the power was still running for this signal to be sent as late as 2:17 am. None of them made it but they shall never be forgotten.

    • @zetlandersoaghar7551
      @zetlandersoaghar7551 8 лет назад +196

      +AlekWheeler not correct, power was not required from the engines for the r ad io eqipment. They had large batteries as back up at the rear of the radio shack.

    • @BruceNitroxpro
      @BruceNitroxpro 8 лет назад +174

      +zetlander Soaghar that was such a beautiful and touching way of being an arrogant ass. So what. I knew that... but it didn't have to be repeated after that comment.

    • @toyreviews3214
      @toyreviews3214 7 лет назад +61

      TheRUclipsChannel a ship in 1912 having a battery nope it was in 1912 not like 1950

    • @mrstepstool
      @mrstepstool 7 лет назад +96

      They were called lead acid cells ! 6 volts as in an early car. Or multiples of 2 volt cells. Flashlights used a 'dry cell'. The emergencyset would have had much less power and thus less range.

    • @tedsinclair4556
      @tedsinclair4556 7 лет назад +41

      The power for the continuous spark generator came from the ship's main power supply which was also
      driving the motor. The emergency induction coil set,( which was not used, in this situation)had a bank of batteries next door.

  • @mirvha714
    @mirvha714 Год назад +452

    Interesting fact: CQD (Come Quick Danger) was the accepted distress call during the sinking. People knew of SOS (Save Our Souls as it came to be known in common nomenclature) but it wasn't common, so when the Titanic began transmitting SOS, they receivers knew that their situation was dire and they were trying to emphasize just how bad their situation was.

    • @MultiProfessorn
      @MultiProfessorn Год назад +31

      CQD= seek you distress, the old emergency call was replaced with SOS sent as one morse code (hence it does not really mean save our souls)

    • @halfbakedproductions7887
      @halfbakedproductions7887 10 месяцев назад +24

      Those calls are actually just gibberish letter groupings designed to grab your attention because they are so unusual. Those 'meanings' were ascribed as retrofitted mnenomics.

    • @volvofh_0750
      @volvofh_0750 9 месяцев назад +18

      Yea, these aren't acronyms but, in fact, backronyms. Sos has been chosen as the definitive one because of how stupidly easy and remarkable it is.

    • @gabrielcoelho2346
      @gabrielcoelho2346 8 месяцев назад +1

      MGY was Titanic's calling code. Other ships had it too

    • @TopMix123
      @TopMix123 4 месяца назад +4

      ​@@halfbakedproductions7887 SOS was chosen because it is easy to read and remember, in Morse code it looks like ...---...

  • @AlekWheeler
    @AlekWheeler 10 лет назад +10611

    RIP Jack Phillips wireless operator the night the Titanic sank and a hero who stayed at his post right till the end.

    • @benchmaker1442
      @benchmaker1442 7 лет назад +20

      AlekWheeler tis sos its delete

    • @xPURPLExKILLERx
      @xPURPLExKILLERx 7 лет назад +42

      AlekWheeler I had a crush on jack phillips when I was a litle girl.

    • @mako3509
      @mako3509 7 лет назад +64

      AlekWheeler He Got On A Lifeboat But Didnt Make It.

    • @mrstepstool
      @mrstepstool 7 лет назад +180

      Yes ! He was a real hero. Not to mention the dozens of engineers who stayedbelow decks to keep the power going and pump out water to extend the life of the ship ! They knew they would die !

    • @gilbartodepiento7584
      @gilbartodepiento7584 7 лет назад +48

      But some of the important messages about icebergs were not delivered to the bridge by the wireless team before hitting the iceberg.

  • @Helo735
    @Helo735 14 лет назад +5203

    Very sad. I can only imagine what the man receiving this transmission was feeling.

    • @Schimml0rd
      @Schimml0rd 6 лет назад +24

      Aaron S or even the author o.O incredible

    • @frosting5467
      @frosting5467 4 года назад +14

      10 years

    • @zombie-process7025
      @zombie-process7025 4 года назад +120

      Imagine NOT knowing Morse code and watching the operator's face as he heard it.

    • @laurennelson4878
      @laurennelson4878 3 года назад +9

      @Too Soon 😭 rip to everyone and everybody that died on the Titanic 😭

    • @R0DBS2
      @R0DBS2 3 года назад +35

      on the Californian, the person that operated Was sleeping, he was later fired

  • @amushroomfrog76
    @amushroomfrog76 2 года назад +253

    the fact that this actually happened is so unsettling and sad at the same time. this gave me goosebumps

  • @mymedia.fahmiansyah
    @mymedia.fahmiansyah 6 лет назад +2463

    that "1912" voice give me goosebumps

    • @R4in46
      @R4in46 3 года назад +56

      I get those Goosebumps everytime

    • @tioa.p.1058
      @tioa.p.1058 3 года назад +3

      why??

    • @rodney1068
      @rodney1068 3 года назад +22

      Hello/!!! It's a mock up

    • @stingraytype
      @stingraytype 3 года назад +66

      Idk why it comforts me, it kinda makes me thinks that person was still alive when they sent this out/while they were sinking

    • @VI-pp4jo
      @VI-pp4jo 3 года назад +18

      The voice is not real.

  • @Squicx
    @Squicx 3 года назад +4929

    The fact nobody knows where this recreation came from is more unnerving than anything. It's literally a recreation of a dead man's call for help on behalf of the passengers who died that same night. The audio is somewhat accurate for that time and the authentic sounding rotary spark is almost pitch perfect.

    • @Jmeshnry
      @Jmeshnry 3 года назад +47

      Its morse code mate

    • @Squicx
      @Squicx 3 года назад +339

      @@Jmeshnry I meant the video bro. I know what Morse code is

    • @SushanthSD
      @SushanthSD 2 года назад +9

      Hello there Squicx

    • @Squicx
      @Squicx 2 года назад +9

      @@SushanthSD Hey man 👋

    • @levyan4718
      @levyan4718 2 года назад +39

      It's a recreation, take it easy

  • @animegirl8033
    @animegirl8033 2 года назад +207

    RIP to the orchestra, postal clerks, restaurant workers, victualling department, Engineers, deck crew and officers who passed away that night. You worked till the very end.

    • @Catsarefluffy1
      @Catsarefluffy1 Год назад +1

      Stokers and firemen left the chat so just no credit to stoker fred berratt and his workers ok seems fair to me 🙄

  • @G0NZ0STaR
    @G0NZ0STaR 9 лет назад +4137

    She's screaming out: "HELP ME, HELP ME!" But nobody came on time.

    •  6 лет назад +22

      Yeah well I guess disasters don't give out schedule prior to

    • @TheShadowless
      @TheShadowless 6 лет назад +122

      This shits giving me goosebumps holy shit!

    • @guilty_mulburry5903
      @guilty_mulburry5903 5 лет назад +88

      There was a ship in viewing distance, it ignored the SQC and the SOS calls and the distress flares

    • @NeasCZ
      @NeasCZ 4 года назад +162

      @@guilty_mulburry5903 transmission officer of Californian went to sleep at 11:30, Titanic didn't hit the iceberg until 10 minutes later. Also, Californian was on standby until morning due to being surrounded by icebergs. Final investigation from the 90s concluded that Californian coulnd't have done much under the unfortunate circumstances even if the capitain realised what was happening (which in all fairness was serious misjudge on his side when he was finally awoken way later). Saying that Californian "ignored the CQD" is missleading.

    • @maltemaltehansen
      @maltemaltehansen 4 года назад +12

      Thats what she said !!!

  • @rickster100100
    @rickster100100 9 лет назад +1813

    CDQ= All Stations: Distress

    • @rickster100100
      @rickster100100 9 лет назад +13

      +ralaraisnotavailable Thank you for the correction.

    • @robbie8825
      @robbie8825 8 лет назад +43

      +Robert Milton Come Quick: Distress/Disaster

    • @Sam-bn5bb
      @Sam-bn5bb 8 лет назад +26

      It means come quick danger. Just to add sos doesn't actually mean anything.

    • @theproplady
      @theproplady 8 лет назад +23

      I thought it meant Save Our Ship or Save Our Souls.

    • @Sam-bn5bb
      @Sam-bn5bb 8 лет назад +16

      theproplady It was just made as SOS because in morse code it's 3 dots, 3 dashes and 3 dots.

  • @ryanstrawn3387
    @ryanstrawn3387 2 года назад +92

    I can’t stop listening to this over and over again. It is so captivating in a tragic way.

  • @johnzimmerman3021
    @johnzimmerman3021 7 лет назад +1761

    Note that when "SOS" is sent, it is not sent as three separate characters, but as one long one: "di-di-di-dah-dah-dah-di-di-dit". This is correct!

    • @ladyselin35
      @ladyselin35 5 лет назад +32

      ...---... ...---...

    • @A.P.W_822
      @A.P.W_822 4 года назад +37

      John Zimmerman its actually ••• - - - •••= SOS

    • @spongeborgtheford4971
      @spongeborgtheford4971 4 года назад +22

      Anthony Pretty Weasel buddy just reread the comment for Christ sake...

    • @xdbym
      @xdbym 4 года назад +2

      I had a bad laugh with you says😔😂

    • @1staccsire
      @1staccsire 4 года назад +7

      @@A.P.W_822 That's EOE ...---... Is sos

  • @taliats
    @taliats 11 лет назад +3290

    Creepy

    • @aceyspud551
      @aceyspud551 9 лет назад +46

      ***** ...Sinking...

    • @lazerpeabody8062
      @lazerpeabody8062 7 лет назад +28

      also , god have mercy on our souls , if you revers it

    • @princesscadance197
      @princesscadance197 7 лет назад +48

      The one and only Taliats
      For me, it isn't creepy in the sound, moreover, the history of it, this, or something similar, being sent as a large cruise liner started its way to the ocean floor, with hundreds still aboard...

    • @seifeak5301
      @seifeak5301 7 лет назад +14

      Creepy af

    • @greatestever184
      @greatestever184 6 лет назад +5

      The sound isnt quite right but pretty close. It would have been a harsher buzz.

  • @williamsanborn9195
    @williamsanborn9195 2 года назад +113

    Even though I, like literally everyone on RUclips, was never onboard the Titanic, I can still feel the sheer terror of every last keystroke of this transmission.

    • @Coopdog0108
      @Coopdog0108 Год назад +3

      my great great grandmother was aboard the titanic, she survived luckily but rest in peace to those who passed

    • @user-nz3df9hz1m
      @user-nz3df9hz1m Год назад +2

      I was there. It wasn't so bad.

    • @Trains_Adventures_CZ
      @Trains_Adventures_CZ Год назад

      Is it true😉

  • @Airland_combat
    @Airland_combat 3 года назад +1455

    Sad fact, based off how fast Operator Phillips was in sending the message, goes to show that he not only took his job seriously, he was a very skilled wireless operator. Let's face it, that was pretty fast. Even I tried to recreate it, it didn't take, even with the Morse sheet in front of me. R.I.P. Operator Jack Phillips, Marconi Wireless Operator of the R.M.S. Titanic.

    • @SEliteGuitarist99
      @SEliteGuitarist99 2 года назад +16

      clearly he didnt take it seriously enough. the message they sent to the SS California is what cost everyones lifes that night

    • @ipooponurface
      @ipooponurface 2 года назад +43

      @@SEliteGuitarist99 boh ur edgy asf!!!

    • @therealcomputerhobo
      @therealcomputerhobo 2 года назад +60

      @@SEliteGuitarist99 Ok 1. It was sent to multiple ships including the Olympic and the Carpathia and yes, the Californian. & 2. The reason why help did not come in time was because of the nearby ships also being in a ice field along with the Titanic, so they could not respond in time (I think the response time was close to like 4 hours for the California even at full speed), and the Californians wireless operator had retired for the night after the Titanic's operator told him to "shut up", and if I remember correctly that was the only blunder he made that night. And the California could have responded earlier because they saw the distress rockets but shrugged them off as "Company Rockets". So the crew of the California fucked up pretty bad that night, not the Titanic's wireless operator.

    • @andreius3336
      @andreius3336 2 года назад +4

      @@SEliteGuitarist99 the story is different but people like to change it to make it interesting

    • @raw1465
      @raw1465 Год назад

      @@therealcomputerhobo I mean that sounds pretty accurate for California to be fucking things up getting people killed. think its just somethin with the state name. gotta be

  • @KingsOfScaynesHill
    @KingsOfScaynesHill 4 года назад +866

    Imagine being on another ship and getting that message

    • @zero8zero.5one5
      @zero8zero.5one5 3 года назад +46

      I’d be like: “Where’s the location, head to that position asap!”

    • @littlechallengeryamin3002
      @littlechallengeryamin3002 3 года назад +37

      If I received the message I would be paralised and run to the captain and crew telling them the position and telling them to head there

    • @clementwolf4081
      @clementwolf4081 3 года назад +13

      may i suggest you to watch "the navigator" from one step beyond ... ( also please see the irony in me giving you those "coordinates" if i may be so bold)

    • @odysseyguyperson
      @odysseyguyperson 3 года назад +4

      @@zero8zero.5one5 correction: they said the position, 41.46N.

    • @IncandescentFate
      @IncandescentFate 3 года назад +9

      *FULL SPEED AHEAD*

  • @planetzero7571
    @planetzero7571 3 года назад +612

    It’s just horrible to think that one of the most amazing ocean liners of its time is at the bottom of the ocean

    • @doomerius1300
      @doomerius1300 2 года назад +1

      And not for long

    • @mintbrisk5961
      @mintbrisk5961 2 года назад +7

      Amazing Oceon liners? It didn’t even survive one year after it was finished in 1911!!

    • @doomerius1300
      @doomerius1300 2 года назад +3

      @@mintbrisk5961 duuuh. But it's not like it wasn't an amazing ship, or the sinking was ship's fault.

    • @ThrowbackGames_
      @ThrowbackGames_ 2 года назад +1

      @@mintbrisk5961 Titanic sinking could’ve been avoided. It’s able to handle 3-4 sectors being breached.

    • @vladraduandrei5227
      @vladraduandrei5227 Год назад

      @Godot thats just horseshit

  • @seriesg7171
    @seriesg7171 4 года назад +2043

    For those who don’t know what do these sounds really mean;
    Back in old times, they didn’t have phones, so they used telegraph.
    A telegraph can send beeps to a receiver from a large distance (exactly like phones but telegraph only sends beeps)
    . These beeps cannot be understood by humans; so they needed to decode the beeps into letters and thus words for tele-communications to be understood by humans
    Morse Code is a series of beeps organized somehow to indicate each letter. Of course it takes a long time to understand what that person from the distance is trying to say, but that is how RMS Titanic sent the distress calls and requested SOS or CDQ

    • @elefhant2742
      @elefhant2742 3 года назад +55

      i know its weird to get a question about telegraphs one year after this comment but i still have one after reading this. the question is did you just understand the morse code on the spot like a english person understanding spanish or did you write down the dits and dots to decipher later? i know morse code but i cannot understand or send messages this fast.

    • @ottovonbismarck8092
      @ottovonbismarck8092 2 года назад +92

      @@elefhant2742 you start to understand it, its like a language, you can write the whole sentence down while hearing it

    • @devinhobkirk2835
      @devinhobkirk2835 2 года назад +5

      Morse code.

    • @ziqisubliminals
      @ziqisubliminals 2 года назад +5

      It’s morse code

    • @josh256m8
      @josh256m8 2 года назад +3

      Cqd

  • @mochs2127
    @mochs2127 4 года назад +492

    Thank you
    Captin of titanic
    Music band
    Engineers
    Wireless operator.
    R.I.P.
    Also:R.I.P anyone who died that night..

    • @extrachannelyt6528
      @extrachannelyt6528 4 года назад +17

      Crew members who helped with lifeboats

    • @carmenmccallister9338
      @carmenmccallister9338 4 года назад +3

      Don't thank the mf captain he's the reason it sunk "This ship is unsinkable not even God himself could sink this ship" He's the reason many people lost their lives.

    • @terminator6552
      @terminator6552 3 года назад

      @@carmenmccallister9338 True
      Even though Smith was told about the icebergs, he didnt do shit about it.

    • @bludeay987
      @bludeay987 3 года назад +8

      @@terminator6552Dude he did not ignored the iceberg warnings captain smith set titanic course too the south in order to prevent from going into the ice field.

    • @terminator6552
      @terminator6552 3 года назад

      @@bludeay987 then how come we hit, that turn still didn't get anything done. Captain E.J Smith also got the Olympic TECHNICALLY in the HMS Hawke incident.

  • @cowfat8547
    @cowfat8547 Год назад +17

    youtube has a sick sense of humor recommending this rn

  • @dawson9507
    @dawson9507 3 года назад +447

    God bless Titanic crew members, they managed to save hundreds and call for a rescue.

    • @mrchode3641
      @mrchode3641 3 года назад +9

      @@classicalhollywood3254 god isn't real

    • @Dowux
      @Dowux 3 года назад +4

      @@mrchode3641 your mom too

    • @mrchode3641
      @mrchode3641 3 года назад +2

      @@classicalhollywood3254 Because there's literally no proof, that's how.

    • @tolgagulec8026
      @tolgagulec8026 3 года назад +1

      Binlerce kişiyide kayıp ettiler titaniğin suya indirilmesi çok yanlış bir şeydi tam bir trejedi

    • @mrchode3641
      @mrchode3641 3 года назад +4

      @@classicalhollywood3254 The Bible isn't proof. About as much proof as Harry Potter. You're wrong and I'm right

  • @BLEARMANATEE86
    @BLEARMANATEE86 3 года назад +243

    i got extreme chills. this makes me sad. i wish they survived

    • @nohaichou
      @nohaichou 3 года назад +2

      me too :(

    • @gunnarthefeisty
      @gunnarthefeisty 2 года назад +1

      One did

    • @Odin59320
      @Odin59320 2 года назад +1

      its great that Harold survived so he could go on and tell the story of one of the most important heroes of that night

    • @gunnarthefeisty
      @gunnarthefeisty 2 года назад

      @Davity_Gaming yeah, talking about the radio operators

  • @AmidaeusQV
    @AmidaeusQV Год назад +12

    You are on a ship, in the middle of the atlantic ocean, in the darkness of the night, tired and you hear this... creepy

  • @AF2Zradio
    @AF2Zradio  16 лет назад +573

    There were two operators, one of whom survived the sinking. As I understand it, one op may have been sending the distress while the other was adjusting the spark for maximum output under conditions of failing power. 73, Drew

    • @sansundertale5274
      @sansundertale5274 2 года назад +5

      w

    • @mr.griffin5726
      @mr.griffin5726 2 года назад +2

      Who's Drew?

    • @whentheroach9964
      @whentheroach9964 2 года назад +1

      Harold Bride survived while Jack Phillips died ( the two operators on the Titanic)

    • @Makkis
      @Makkis 2 года назад

      @@mr.griffin5726 his source

    • @Seniken
      @Seniken 2 года назад +1

      @@patriotsforactionforukrain5322 ???? how is that related to the comment

  • @gabrielfranciscorp
    @gabrielfranciscorp Год назад +56

    Now a submarine down there faces a similar fate.

    • @01iverQueen
      @01iverQueen Год назад +5

      And name as well

    • @dirtyshinobii
      @dirtyshinobii Год назад +13

      111 years later the titanic is still claiming lives. We need to leave that gravesite alone

  • @sbarr10
    @sbarr10 2 года назад +196

    I remember reading once that the Titanic telegraph operators had a huge backlog of telegrams to send to Cape Race, Newfoundland. The SS Californian was relatively close to the Titanic and had stopped in an iceberg field out of caution. It tried warning other ships in the area of icebergs and interfered in Titanic's communications. The harried Titanic operators told the Californian operators to "shut up." The Californian operator then turned off his telegraph equipment, so the Californian did not receive a telegraphed SOS from Titanic. The crew of the Californian did observe the Titanic a few miles away and weren't sure of its status but did not bother trying to telegraph to find out.

    • @bsrcharlotte2129
      @bsrcharlotte2129 2 года назад +20

      olympic told everyone to shut up. Californian operators were asleep until half way through. Titanic op called the frankfurt op something along the lines of an idiot when frank kept asking "whats the matter" after having recvd titanic's cqd in the beginning

    • @dreaming_cthulhu
      @dreaming_cthulhu 2 года назад +51

      Jack Phillips, the Titanic’s operator, probably realized that his earlier reply of “shut up” to the Californian who was warning of ice in the area, might’ve led to the Californian switching off its transmitter and not coming to help. Phillips stayed at his post transmitting CQD SOS until the last minute trying to make up for his mistake.

    • @lisasimpsonisanaddict
      @lisasimpsonisanaddict 2 года назад +3

      @@dreaming_cthulhu plus there were fireworks too

    • @legitify8
      @legitify8 2 года назад +4

      karma

    • @allanmcelroy9840
      @allanmcelroy9840 2 года назад +13

      A rude fact: if they were not so focused on making money and treating first class like gods/super stars then mabey they could have received help sooner....

  • @samschannel531
    @samschannel531 3 года назад +91

    Imagine being at a repeater station or somewhere else where you received this and your horror slowing building as you translated it

    • @storyofcory
      @storyofcory 3 года назад +14

      I was just thinking that it must've been hell for any ship that heard it but couldn't get to that area fast enough. Then I realized that any ships that could probably receive the message would have had to have been fairly close in the first place back in those days.

    • @memes_man52
      @memes_man52 2 года назад +1

      @@storyofcory nah, Olympic heard it and that ship was 400 miles away

    • @tritanhuynh
      @tritanhuynh 2 года назад +1

      And imagine you weren’t able to help, sending this same message to someone else

  • @ninja-lo5er
    @ninja-lo5er 6 лет назад +451

    Me trying to feed my brain any information 5 minutes before the exams...

  • @ballpython9692
    @ballpython9692 2 года назад +205

    I'm going to be honest, I don't understand Morse code, but knowing the context is honestly very heart wrenching. This video makes me feel awful for the people who lost their lives. I hope they all are resting peacefully.

    • @Montagues_plush_universe
      @Montagues_plush_universe Год назад +1

      I do understand Morse code I’m a wireless operator

    • @ballpython9692
      @ballpython9692 Год назад

      @@Montagues_plush_universe That’s amazing! Is there a difference between clicks and beeps? Or are they the same?

    • @Capecodham
      @Capecodham Год назад

      You are not usually honest?

    • @ballpython9692
      @ballpython9692 Год назад

      @@Capecodham Ah this was most likely a grammatical mistake on my behalf.

    • @sevengreen5494
      @sevengreen5494 10 месяцев назад

      When you say you don’t understand Morse code, we believe you.

  • @W5KVV
    @W5KVV 9 лет назад +1007

    I'd love to see someone pounding brass that fast. Not that I'm saying it isn't possible, just the fact that I'd love to see it. That's a lot of work.

    • @EGCblackknight
      @EGCblackknight 9 лет назад +68

      papabugs71 There's a good video of an old German opperator going through some practice sheets at about 45 or 50 wpm with a straight key, somewhere on youtube. try searching high speed telegraphy straight key, it might come up

    • @AF2Zradio
      @AF2Zradio  9 лет назад +157

      50 wpm on straight key? He must have the twitch reflexes of Buddy Rich. He should have been a drummer instead of a telegrapher...

    • @abwo47
      @abwo47 9 лет назад +29

      EGCblackknight Well 40 or 50 wpm is indeed a bit too much for handkeying. I know that piece of footage and calculated (based on the length of the film and the number of 5 letter words he signalled) that he managed to brasspound with about 36 wpm, which is mighty fast, I can asure you. I have to use my paddle to achieve that....PA5ABW former r/o dutch merchant navy

    • @mdtasin3899
      @mdtasin3899 7 лет назад +1

      AF2Z yep lol

    • @abwo47
      @abwo47 7 лет назад +19

      It's about 26/27 wpm I think, not that fast for skilled operators but......much too fast for distress traffic where accuracy is much more important than speed

  • @jimgieber3652
    @jimgieber3652 7 лет назад +367

    I would say about 26 to 28 wpm. I was a sparker in the Navy. Back when Morse was still being used.

    • @synthwavecat96
      @synthwavecat96 3 года назад +21

      Damn, three years old comment. Would have loved to know what vessel you served on or at least the type.

    • @KURTX-rd6ov
      @KURTX-rd6ov 3 года назад +3

      @@synthwavecat96 yahahh

    • @terminator6552
      @terminator6552 3 года назад +9

      If we could ask, what was the ship you were an operator on?
      Credit to Scout 629 for asking it first

    • @juanmanuelc6644
      @juanmanuelc6644 3 года назад

      What year?

    • @vibrantgleam
      @vibrantgleam 3 года назад

      Is Morse easy to learn?

  • @robinstewart6510
    @robinstewart6510 3 года назад +106

    The radio operator (Jack Phillips) on the Titanic initially sent the old "CQD," which is why ships listening for the proper "SOS" didn't react. Only later did he start alternating between the two. By the way, the call "CQD" translates to "CQ" (general call to any station) followed by "D" for "distress."

    • @mrloaf6229
      @mrloaf6229 2 года назад +3

      I don’t want to wear that life jacket, It just slows me down.

    • @robinstewart6510
      @robinstewart6510 2 года назад +4

      @@mrloaf6229 .. Lol. Actually, as an avid boater, I hate wearing life jackets too. They're awkward and do slow everyday activities down. However, in compliance with Coast Guard rules, life jackets are mounted on my boat within arms reach with quick release velcro in case of an emergency. I can get one on me in seconds.

    • @ChrisCooper312
      @ChrisCooper312 2 года назад +11

      Just to clarify, CQD was still the standard call at the time. SOS was the new call but hadn't been adopted. It was the the "proper" call. The only ship that didn't react was Californian, but that wasn't because they were listening for SOS, it's because they were not listening at all since their radio operator had shut down and gone to bed. One of the officers did turn on the wireless set at one point and heard Titanic's distress call, but he didn't understand it and assumed it was just regular chatter, so turned it off and left. It's unlikely that he would have known SOS, since at the time it wasn't the well known distress call it became afterwards, plus he didn't know how to properly set up the receiver so he wasn't getting anything like a clear signal to the headset.

    • @robinstewart6510
      @robinstewart6510 2 года назад +6

      @@ChrisCooper312 .. Actually, "SOS" had been officially adopted at that point, but not all radio operators were up to speed on it yet, nor were all countries yet in compliance. Afterwards, "SOS" was adopted worldwide for all radio operators at sea. By the way, we don't know whether those other ships responded to his "CQD" or his "SOS." Luckily, he eventually sent both.

    • @silverianne8
      @silverianne8 2 года назад

      @@robinstewart6510 so like, when he started alternating between CQD & SOS, it was too late huh

  • @lucah1824
    @lucah1824 3 года назад +26

    This is haunting. This morse code transcript from Titanic is as eerie as listening to the cockpit voice recorder from a plane crash.

  • @emily5968
    @emily5968 Год назад +43

    I know Morse code, but this is so fast that literally nothing is happening in my brain while listening to it.

    • @tom3and3jerry5
      @tom3and3jerry5 Год назад

      It's impressive,how long did you take to learn it?

    • @F6347_VR
      @F6347_VR 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@tom3and3jerry5 , i learned it too,
      Learned it translating this phrase to morse from memory:
      The quick brown fox jumps over the laze dog
      Took me 3 days repeating that phrase over and over in morse code to get it done :)

    • @tom3and3jerry5
      @tom3and3jerry5 11 месяцев назад

      @@F6347_VR Can you read any words in Morse code or just the commands

    • @F6347_VR
      @F6347_VR 11 месяцев назад

      @@tom3and3jerry5 read, and write
      yeah, the whole alphabet.

    • @lucastattouf
      @lucastattouf 11 месяцев назад

      Use speed 0.25

  • @laura-ni8ym
    @laura-ni8ym 2 года назад +10

    That fact that you can still hear a "panicked voice" in the brass telegraph is so horrifyingly sad

  • @clamclam9686
    @clamclam9686 3 года назад +40

    The way it just ended in static felt like the equivalent of a lifeline flattening...

  • @stoicraccoon2996
    @stoicraccoon2996 2 года назад +34

    It's sad to know that 1500 were killed but the people who weren't were saved because of this Morse code call for help
    And to the engineers who kept the engines on you will never be forgotten

  • @celdo84
    @celdo84 3 года назад +21

    The call of somebody in distress, facing death.

  • @ayaankilar146
    @ayaankilar146 3 года назад +64

    Whenever I think life is shit, I remember the people in RMS Titanic!

    • @oskrr_2283
      @oskrr_2283 3 года назад

      Ms Estionia is quite bad as it's new i think over 800 people died

    • @officiallylazlo
      @officiallylazlo 3 года назад

      Pretty sure that the rms titanic isnt the real ship. the titanic was the real one. rms probably was a different ship.

    • @Alsexaren
      @Alsexaren 3 года назад

      @@officiallylazlo are you dumb rms meant british passanger ship the ship`s name was the RMS titanic

    • @deadly5881
      @deadly5881 3 года назад

      @@Alsexaren both equally as dumb rms stood for Royal Mail steamer

    • @yowtfputthemaskbackon9202
      @yowtfputthemaskbackon9202 2 года назад +1

      @@oskrr_2283 there is probably an extensive list that you could also mention next to the estonia
      the gustloff
      the armenia
      the goya
      the lusitania
      the atlantic
      the Toyama Maru
      and probably a dozen others

  • @rhyusbrand8311
    @rhyusbrand8311 Год назад +11

    A (mostly) accurate timeline of what happened that night:
    April 14 1912.
    11:39 PM- Iceberg is Spotted by lookouts Frederick Fleet & Reginald Lee.
    11:40 PM- Iceberg Hits, creating small slits in the hull from the Forepeak Tank, up to the Coal Bunker in Boiler Room 5 (the 2nd frontmost boiler room).
    April 15 1912.
    ~12:15 AM- Senior Wireless Operator Jack Philip’s messages are received by multiple radio stations onboard ships or Cape Race.
    ~1:00 AM- Most Lifeboats have left the ship.
    2:06 AM- Wireless Room Abandoned hastily, Last message: “CQD SOS CQD SOS this is”
    ~2:08 AM- Area where the band was playing submerges.
    ~2:10 AM- Final Plunge Begins.
    ~2:17 AM- Titanic’s last message _Received_ by other ships (signal range was low, so the message was weaker and could barely be received.
    ~2:18 AM- Titanic Breaks from the bottom-up (go watch Titanic Animation’s analysis on the break up, it agrees with physics) into the Bow, Forward Tower, Aft Tower, and Stern. Emergency lights may have remained on in the stern, but not for more than a minute, obscuring the ship in *TOTAL* darkness.
    ~2:20 AM- Titanic goes under, taking with her around ~1,400 lives, ~100 more die in the water of hypothermia.
    ~2:22 - 2:40- few Lifeboats return to the site (3, I think. Correct me if I’m wrong), Lowe distributes his passengers between a chain of 4 lifeboats connected by ropes.
    ~3:00 RMS Carpathia arrives at the site.
    ~4:00 SS Californian Arrives at the site, soon followed by the Mount Temple, Birma, Frankfurt, and some others (I forgot).
    April 18 1912.
    Carpathia Arrives in New York with 705 Survivors.
    (I know the comment section will explode, so to *try* to prevent that; THIS IS A LITERAL TIMELINE NOT AN ARGUMENT)

  • @hotwax9376
    @hotwax9376 7 лет назад +130

    IIRC, legend has it that the radio operator stayed at his position and went down with the ship.

    • @1987AnimeBoy
      @1987AnimeBoy 7 лет назад +33

      No, the two operators finally abandoned the wireless room shortly before the final plunge. The senior operator perished, while the junior operator survived.

    • @mrstepstool
      @mrstepstool 7 лет назад +19

      Harold Bride, the second op became a Ham operator later and operated as a Ham until he died in 1956. After the Titanic though, he served on other ships. I would have like to have been around to work him on the air. That would have been Cool !

    • @CJODell12
      @CJODell12 3 года назад +3

      @@1987AnimeBoy The final message was sent out at 2:10 am (Captain Smith had actually released them at around 1:57 am) and was cut out as the wireless room lost power. Phillips and Bride then abandoned the wireless room, with Bride heading forward to help get Collapsible B off the officers quarters roof and Phillips heading aft towards the stern .
      By that time, A deck was awash on the port side; the ship was listing 7 degrees to port and 8 degrees forward by that point according to Titanic Animations' real time sinking video (ruclips.net/video/PGKpT1oGAnQ/видео.html).

    • @firemangan2731
      @firemangan2731 3 года назад +2

      Thats a myth created by the German film of Titanic in 1943. Bride testified that he and Philips went on the run as the water have reached the wireless room. The last time Philips was seen was on the boat deck by Bride but Lightholler said he, allegedly, saw Philips on Collapsible B whom then died from the cold. Bride was also on the same boat but never mentioned Philips being on it.

    • @hotwax9376
      @hotwax9376 3 года назад

      @@firemangan2731 Good to know, but that's why I said "legend has it." I didn't know for sure whether or not it was true.

  • @Fleet1912
    @Fleet1912 13 лет назад +19

    thanks for posting..it's like bringing Titanic's voice back to life....

  • @vickaps
    @vickaps Год назад +5

    I can only imagine the shock on the radio operators faces when the captain came in and said the ship was sinking.

  • @dieselheart001
    @dieselheart001 13 лет назад +18

    This does sound like rotary spark gap. The pacing is fast- that is a characteristic of a "spark gap fist". Even if it isn't original, ie: the "actual" distress call; it is a really good example of what a then-nearly 100 year old form of communication sent over early radio transmission capabilities might have sounded like. Thanks for posting this, and 73!!

  • @seedymac
    @seedymac 17 лет назад +43

    This is amazing, I can only imagine the anguish of the radio operator.
    Regards KN1W

    • @Anan-mr2fz
      @Anan-mr2fz 2 года назад +1

      Yeah

    • @GolDi454
      @GolDi454 Год назад +2

      Omg, you texted this comment 15 years ago.

  • @jimpenny8771
    @jimpenny8771 2 года назад +47

    It's reasonably authentic and reflects what might have been received by a station in the immediate vicinity. The spark transmitter was driven by 15kHz AC, which resulted in a slightly musical tone. At greater distances, it would have been received with a slight "ghostly" echo, based on my own experience with the 630 metre band. That echo, due to multipath distortion, would have smoothed out the rough sound to some extent. The cw speed is a bit fast. One thing to remember is that the receiver bandwidth or selectivity would have been enormous compared to modern receivers. You could add some static too for authenticity.

    • @nutsackmania
      @nutsackmania 2 года назад

      Omg multipath on 630 meters!!

    • @Lucas-ix5td
      @Lucas-ix5td 9 месяцев назад +2

      I understood some of those words

  • @hectorsproductions2018
    @hectorsproductions2018 4 года назад +20

    On the night the Titanic struck the iceberg, Jack Phillips received a message from the Mesaba (a near by ship from the Titanic) warning them about the icebergs ahead of the Titanic, but Phillips did not pass the message to the Captain because it wasn’t marked as “urgent“.

  • @muhtesemsiyanur
    @muhtesemsiyanur 5 лет назад +21

    "It's a CQD old man...
    This is Titanic."

  • @lewis9s
    @lewis9s 3 года назад +9

    This is really haunting.

  • @r.m.scarlos5018
    @r.m.scarlos5018 3 года назад +64

    Rest in peace Titanic we will miss you😭😭

    • @officiallylazlo
      @officiallylazlo 3 года назад +8

      why are you saying Rest In Peace to the ship? you should be saying that to the thousands of people who died on that ship.

    • @thunderanimations7320
      @thunderanimations7320 3 года назад +3

      @@officiallylazlo The OP's name and profile pic is of the sister ship of the titanic
      Kinda just roleplaying

    • @blacknonbinarydisabledlesbian
      @blacknonbinarydisabledlesbian 3 года назад +4

      @@thunderanimations7320 inappropriate especially for a tragedy that still hurts a century later.

    • @thunderanimations7320
      @thunderanimations7320 3 года назад

      @@blacknonbinarydisabledlesbian Don't look at me

    • @blacknonbinarydisabledlesbian
      @blacknonbinarydisabledlesbian 3 года назад

      @@thunderanimations7320 why? Cant handle my finesse like a lioness?

  • @liamrobert12
    @liamrobert12 8 лет назад +54

    I think the Telegrapher Is Philips.. He did sadly die

  • @aanya8386
    @aanya8386 2 года назад +2

    it's 1:30am and i watched 12 seconds into this and couldn't watch any more because it just scared me so much.

  • @AF2Zradio
    @AF2Zradio  15 лет назад +31

    No, it is a simulation of the actual logged distress transmission. It is technically interesting in that it supposedly sounds like the spark gap transmitter technology that would have been in use at that time. Also, the speed of the transmission is very fast for manual straight-key Morse Code. Note the dash-to-dot ratio is about 2:1, not the standard 3:1.

  • @theskullemoji
    @theskullemoji Год назад +4

    Actual morse code:
    "MICHEAL DONT LEAVE ME HERE"
    "MICHEAL."
    "MICHEAAAALLLL"

  • @amarbalram5776
    @amarbalram5776 2 года назад +3

    That 1912 voice is very creepy to hear... Imagine being on another ship and listening to this... 😱😱😱

  • @punishedexistence
    @punishedexistence 12 лет назад +7

    Man that guy certainly had his balls in a vise grip...a hundred years later and I still feel for those poor souls who just wanted a better life or just a vacation. In any sense, I LOOOVVE that spark gap sound, you really aren't gonna hear that on the airwaves anymore. God rest their souls and thanks for uploading.

    • @radiotruck8135
      @radiotruck8135 Год назад

      Yes, once a month, Spark gap from 2 Museums makes contact
      except I may have heard for calls to shut it down.
      from England to Italy ? I have notes somewhere. 5 min.

  • @energyteam7235
    @energyteam7235 3 года назад +8

    It's hard to image how much hopelessness were accompanying that sinking ship to the end, how much fear was in the eyes of every people who was there when they realize that death is coming for them in any seconds in this sinking freezing hell, even females and kids were on boats it doesn't mean that there couldn't be any females or children on that ship, just that moment when everything what you have is hope that something would just appear and save your life but nothing happen... I hear in this sounds despair and fear what nobody Heared when it was needed a most... Respect to orchestra that was playing when it was sinking and rest in peace everyone who is lying on the ground of the sea...

  • @Brfxxccxxmnpcccclllmmnprxvclmc
    @Brfxxccxxmnpcccclllmmnprxvclmc Год назад +5

    The titanic: SOS CQD help
    SS Californian: eh they might be practicing swimming or a sinking drill

    • @Epic_carpet
      @Epic_carpet Год назад +2

      they didnt reply bcs titanics wireless operators told them to shut up.they came to look for survivors a ffew hours lator

    • @Brfxxccxxmnpcccclllmmnprxvclmc
      @Brfxxccxxmnpcccclllmmnprxvclmc Год назад

      @@Epic_carpet I was talking about around the iceberg impact

  • @mrsanman2006
    @mrsanman2006 13 лет назад +11

    I'm not sure how accurate this is but on a website I found these were the meanings of the codes:
    DE - "This is"
    MGY - "Titanic"
    CQD - "Calling all vessels"
    SOS - "Save Our Souls"
    So the entire message reads - "This is Titanic, calling all ships, save our souls, calling all ships..."

    • @Thesillyboykisser
      @Thesillyboykisser 2 года назад +2

      CQD means come quick disaster

    • @wiktoreriksson4566
      @wiktoreriksson4566 Год назад

      @@Thesillyboykisser CQ originated from "C'est qui?" but is now for "Seek you" ("CeeQ"). D means distress.
      And SOS does NOT mean "Save our Souls". It is just an ensign used in Morse to call for help.

    • @-cosmicdoggo-
      @-cosmicdoggo- Год назад

      Dude SOS doesn’t mean anything it’s just a distress call

  • @FSCFilms
    @FSCFilms 6 лет назад +15

    This day 105 years ago, the Titanic set sail for her maiden voyage. ~Fennett

  • @bm142_m
    @bm142_m 11 дней назад

    The single video that changed my entire personality back in 2020

  • @randophanto3153
    @randophanto3153 Год назад +14

    Bone chilling... I remember hearing this in the Titanic museum in Belfast when my family went there, loved who the place went from "This is how amazing the Titanic was!" to creepy morse code leading to devices that let you see every person who was on the Titanic, their race, where they were from and the scary part : If they made it out. Fun fact : There was only one Japanese man on the whole Titanic and he lived to tell the tale!

    • @trg78lji43r
      @trg78lji43r Год назад +6

      And that Japanese man was bashed in Japan for being a coward to jump into the life boat.

    • @inversion66
      @inversion66 27 дней назад

      @@trg78lji43r The Japanese Titanic survivor, Masabumi Hosono, has a well known grandson. Haruomi Hosono first began working as a professional musician in the late 1960s. He's best known as one of the members of the pioneering Japanese technopop group Yellow Magic Orchestra.

  • @gretagutierrez-colomer954
    @gretagutierrez-colomer954 3 года назад +6

    Felicidades, has encontrado un comentario español!

  • @sophiaisabelle01
    @sophiaisabelle01 2 месяца назад +1

    This is fascinating to see. We look forward to see more content like this.

  • @wmpetroff2307
    @wmpetroff2307 4 года назад +6

    I could just feel the horrifying urgency behind the code. May they rest in peace.

  • @galoon
    @galoon 11 лет назад +5

    In 1912, radio sets used a rotary spark gap, which gave a buzzing sound when you tapped the key. Later sets gave a beeping noise.

  • @RowanCasey17
    @RowanCasey17 9 месяцев назад +1

    Im from this little place in Nova Scotia, Canada called Canso. We used to have this old cable building (the foundation is still there but the building isnt) and that cable building was the first place to get the signals that the Titanic was sending out. I just think thats awesome

    • @ReapersKid07
      @ReapersKid07 7 месяцев назад

      Sorta unrelated but I saw Nova Scotia and snapped my head back to my phone thinking "isn't that where Mont Blanc exploded"

  • @ryanestevez3694
    @ryanestevez3694 11 месяцев назад +4

    WE MAKING IT OUT THE NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN WITH THIS ONE 🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🗣🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥

  • @nathanschmidt4889
    @nathanschmidt4889 3 года назад +4

    This is in essence equal to listening to the black box of Titanic. Very humbling indeed. Oh how incredibly powerful it would be to hear a perfect recording of that night's events start to finish

  • @tommyboyz6291
    @tommyboyz6291 2 года назад +2

    POV: You're on the Carpathia hearing this confused and shock.

  • @habib.bhatti
    @habib.bhatti 3 года назад +4

    Man why am I crying right now, don’t think I’ve ever cried this hard at a radio 📻 transmission

  • @kimmysalvadore3412
    @kimmysalvadore3412 3 года назад +12

    Nobody:
    The sound of the motorbike outside the house at 3 AM:

    • @SirPlartinumLongbottom
      @SirPlartinumLongbottom 3 года назад +6

      Really? This is disrespect, and I’m going to tell you this story so you can understand how much these men endangered themselves for the passengers. RMS Titanic Marconi Telegram Operators Harold Bride and Jack Philips stayed at their posts after being dismissed by Captain Edward J. Smith, until power cut out at 2:11 am, while trying to escape, Jack Philips died due to hypothermia after being trapped by a lifeboat that fell on him, after escaping and being pulled up onto a life boat, later being taken to a life boat, where he died. Harold Bride escaped with no major injuries. If not for them, even the fate of those on the lifeboats would’ve been uncertain. R.I.P, and fly high.

    • @SirPlartinumLongbottom
      @SirPlartinumLongbottom 3 года назад

      @Matt Missett so if it just happened now it wouldn’t fucking matter? Fuck you.

    • @SirPlartinumLongbottom
      @SirPlartinumLongbottom 3 года назад +1

      @Matt Missett yeah, but they had lives ahead of them. Cut short by tragedy. It’s just not funny to joke about an SOS.

  • @Sultan1.Garfield
    @Sultan1.Garfield 2 месяца назад +2

    Imagine Working As An Operator In SS Californian And You Hear These From The Ship You Sent Iceberg Warnings Earlier

  • @indridcold8433
    @indridcold8433 2 года назад +4

    I made a spark gap transmitter when I was a child, to transmit to my cousin about seven kilometres away. But not just my cousin was receiving my telegraphy. All the analogue televisions, early cordless phones, radios, could hear it as well. When my father found out, I got in big trouble. I had to apologise to all the neighbours, and mow their lawns for the summer, for free. My cousin, which I made an identical transmitter for him, did not get in trouble because he told my father and his father that I forced him to do it. It was not bad enough that I got in trouble for all interference, my father got me in bigger trouble because I stole the riding mower battery and motorcycle battery, two ignition coils from abandoned cars in a property that was abandoned, and found an old Lionell telegraphy key in the abandoned property that I entered to find. I made my cousin something very similar for his key out of junk. Today, I still have the ancient, World War II J-47 telegraphy key, and the memories. My dad did get me a CB radio at the end of the summer, and I made an antenna for it. Today, the old CB radio is in my vehicle. I have had it in all my vehicles. It is just now starting to fail. But nobody uses CB anymore. It may be time to lay it to rest as a keep sake. Now, where to I find internal panels for a 1997 Jeep Wrangler? When I bought the Jeep new, parts abounded. Today, a vehicle that old is hard to find any interior panels for it. Ah, good times.

    • @jackx4311
      @jackx4311 2 года назад +1

      Re. spark gap transmitters; yep, the only reason they could be used successfully was that, that far back, there were so few radio stations working. Even by the 1920s, their hugely wide band signals would have caused chaos. But I'm pleased that yourstory had a happy ending!
      PS - and your cousin was a rat!

  • @kraftwerklover69
    @kraftwerklover69 2 года назад +7

    Friday night funkin players: YO THIS IS FIRE!!! 🔥🔥

  • @recsetv
    @recsetv 9 месяцев назад +1

    The speed at which Morse code was typed gave a sense of the feelings of the person staying in the radio room at the time.
    I feel it...

  • @LSZH_aviation
    @LSZH_aviation Год назад +9

    And now 5 more deaths 😰 (Submarine)

  • @theastronomer7
    @theastronomer7 Год назад +5

    Fire beat bro 🔥

  • @nicoelevadoados
    @nicoelevadoados 2 года назад +1

    the "SINKING.." part is genuinely unnerving

  • @Iconic_maya9
    @Iconic_maya9 2 года назад +11

    This is undoubtedly the most scary SOS call i ever heard.. gosh i have chills

  • @KingzzzYT
    @KingzzzYT Год назад +3

    Me when my Pringles can full of billionaires disconnects my Xbox controller

  • @Creative_YT
    @Creative_YT Год назад +3

    Yooooooooooo dis fire fr fr 🔥🔥🔥

  • @shawnndixon5254
    @shawnndixon5254 11 месяцев назад +1

    that guy could have tried to save his own life but decided to get that message out, what a fucking mad lad and a hero.

  • @michelleobamagaming5937
    @michelleobamagaming5937 2 года назад +10

    For those who are a bit confused about the machine, it made noises to radios, and some noises made letters. These letters where then printed on paper to give a message that you could actually understand, and read.

  • @imjusttoodissgusted5620
    @imjusttoodissgusted5620 8 лет назад +59

    Ya know, terror can make you move quite briskly, all that adrenalin. Hyper reflexes, of course this isn't a recording. Of titanic. It's a simulation. But they would have gotten. The best aviable. To make the recording.

    • @Misha-lu5ji
      @Misha-lu5ji 6 лет назад +1

      Imjusttoo Dissgusted wut

    • @TheErilaz
      @TheErilaz 3 года назад

      The Morse operators was and is on top on their game. I am sure they sent the absolutely best with the equipment they had at that time. It is muscle memory involved, and Morse operators is trained to hold a steady rythm.

  • @xE92vD
    @xE92vD 2 года назад +1

    Why is this in my recommendations after 13 years

  • @molasjustine8742
    @molasjustine8742 6 лет назад +32

    this hurts 😢💔

    • @mesbah856
      @mesbah856 3 года назад +1

      *I love you*

    • @officiallylazlo
      @officiallylazlo 3 года назад +1

      @@mesbah856 really bro. It’s not the time to simp.

  • @johnbenjiebarnuevo1489
    @johnbenjiebarnuevo1489 Год назад +2

    Rest in paradise for all victims who died in this tragedy😢❤❤

  • @skeletoncigscry1ng857
    @skeletoncigscry1ng857 2 года назад +2

    Imagine, being on a massive ship. And seeing the water rushing onto and into the bow, screaming and shouting everywhere, falling, jumping, and even dying. The ship starting to sink faster each hour, the fear is everywhere.

  • @force75
    @force75 2 года назад +3

    That sound was terrifying. It was scary.

  • @jamesishere98765
    @jamesishere98765 4 года назад +8

    Wow. The audio, the signal visuals, and the really dark comment stories I'm seeing are so haunting... I don't think I'll be sleeping tonight.

  • @sillyman2013
    @sillyman2013 2 года назад +1

    The way it goes so fast and the tone goes up and down frantically shows how distressed they were.

  • @wojciechpajdzik9844
    @wojciechpajdzik9844 3 года назад +8

    Gdybym usłyszał coś takiego w moim radio, pomyślałbym sobie. Masz Ci los, głośnik mi się zespół ;D

  • @robloxgame6001
    @robloxgame6001 3 года назад +7

    Даже страшно стало. Как же жалко, кто погиб на Титанике. Я чувствую, они молились о помощи, но никто не ответил.

    • @ыыыыыы-у8в
      @ыыыыыы-у8в 3 года назад +2

      Я уверен, кто-нибудь слышало ...

    • @tritanhuynh
      @tritanhuynh 2 года назад +1

      @@ыыыыыы-у8в
      Yes, carpathia did.

    • @HM2SGT
      @HM2SGT 2 года назад

      Sometimes God calms the storm, sometimes God calms the child

    • @danek_hren
      @danek_hren Год назад

      @@ыыыыыы-у8в слышала "Калифорния", но не хотела отвечать, т.к. им нагрубили (попросили заткнуться). Есть теория, что сообщение о затычке было от олимпика, и пошло всем. Крч это первая версия дискорда, начался срач с "идиотами".

  • @mauhi7721
    @mauhi7721 8 месяцев назад

    My respect to those people who died in this tragedy. Thank you for posting this video.👍

  • @gooberclown
    @gooberclown 2 года назад +6

    Everytime I hear the distress call from the Titanic (in the movies) I can copy it in my head, since I've been around Morse code all my life. I taught myself to send and receive Morse code when I was twelve years old and then used it in the Army for years. Once you learn it, code becomes like a second language.