Fun fact: a modern cruise ship could survive all these waves if positioned correctly, as they have stronger materials, are self righting, and have bows suited for splitting waves
not true an ocean liner actually has a bow that splits waves is stronger and more stable than a modern cruise ship and handles rough seas much better this is bc ocean liners were built to go from point a to b over the atlantic which means they have to go thru the roughest weather and is there by built stronger than cruise ships
I am a Titanic Expert and other ships, Titanic's Stern had to do the Final Plunge (Slice.) The bow was hit by the iceberg. and it snapped due to the water in the bow, and the people in the stern.
I agree with @@TimeIapseVideos. that was nowhere near accurate. at around 11:50 PM titanic struck a iceberg. in around 15 minutes the boiler rooms are completely flooded. E deck starts to flood around 30-45 minutes in. D deck floods around 50-70 minutes in. At around 1 hour and 20 minutes (80 minutes) to 1 hour and 30 minutes in (90 minutes) the bow goes under. the bridge floods at around 1 hour 50 minutes in. (110 minutes) first smokestack/funnel (what he called a “chimney”) collapsed around 2 hours in, (120 minutes) and the second one collapsed at around 2 hours and 10 minutes. (130 minutes) electricity goes out at around 2:10 AM.. 2 hours 15 minutes. (235 minutes) at around 2 hours 17 minutes, (237 minutes) in, titanic splits. (between the third and second smokestack/funnel) the stern (the back side of the ship) falls to the water. The third and fourth smokestack/funnel collapses because of the split. The bow pulls the stern up due to the double bottom, when the titanic’s stern is pointing into the air, the bow detaches, and goes down. The stern floats for about 3-7 minutes, at around 2 hours, 20 minutes to 2 hours, 24 minutes, (240 minutes to 244 minutes in) the stern starts to go down. around 2 minutes later.. at around 2:24 AM, around 2 hours 26 minutes in, (246 minutes) the stern goes under. The bow hits the ocean floor, (around 2 and a half miles deep) at 30 knots! the stern does the same. so no, that wasn’t accurate at all.
The second wave that you did after the first one wasn’t actually the same size as the titanic in fact it was the same size as the titanic’s hull (not the entire titanic itself just the hull itself)