Because of how the bow broke it back when it hit the sea floor and she folded the other way is why the bow can now never be raised in one solid piece. If we had the tech tools and manpower to go down there for it the bow would break into atleast 3 or 4 new segments
It is estimated she hit the floor at some 45 miles per hour. That's roughly double what her actually top speed was. Can you imagine the sound she made? 🙀😭💀
@@slyguythreeonetwonine3172Well if anyone manage to survive inside it, assuming a air bubble didn't pop by miracle, the shock would get them for good 😅. I wonder if the shock was audible from the surface...
You guys like to imagine terrible things. The sheer thought of the darkness of the ocean at that depth sends shivers down my spine. And yes I know it happened at night but still it's too frightening to even try to imagine
@@loicnasser1826you really think there could've been a person stuck in an air-bubble dropping to the bottom of the ocean with the ship, conscious?
I just love the crows nest on the bow as it is sinking to the bottom of the ocean just how it snaps back. It’s pretty cool and I like how that animation was handled.
Amazing video. Yet, knowing people were still alive inside the stern up to about 500 ft below the surface is just bone chilling. Knowing they succummed to the implosion is heart breaking. RIP to all those who perished that night and since.
There’s a theory that A lot of big Air pockets were in the stern as it went down. Those air pockets imploded, which had a lot to do with the stern ripping apart as it went down because the implosion caused the structural integrity to weaken…
@@PixelGxming, an implosion caused by an extreme pressure difference. Ironically, the similar event that caused the Titan submersible to implode last year when it went on it's final voyage to visit the Titanic's remains. Imagine compressing a pocket of air to roughly 200 times it's original density, bearing in mind that stamping on a water bottle full of air doesn't even achieve 0.4% of that amount of pressure. Now imagine exposing that extremely pressurised pocket of air to the ambient pressure around you, the result will be similar to an explosion. That "bang" you heard is the inverse event, an implosion. When a pocket of low pressure air is suddenly exposed to a high pressure environment. Rather than air rushing out, the water rushes in and displaces the air which then goes to the surface.
The ship wasn't at 45 degrees angle when it broke but probably more around 20 degrees according to some physic simulations and it makes sense cause imagine the pressure applied on the boat at this angle it wouldn't resist
the only way that the 1995 one may be correct is the water density depending how much the water weighed making to be a 45 degree angle so it goes towering, and the north Atlantic is one of the densest ocean in the world so the 1995 may not be so obsolete
They should brought the whole ship and bring them to the museum. They should have a memorial site for those who lost their lives on the worst day of there lives of April 14-15 1912.
For me: Iceburg strike: 1995 Sinking/splitting: 2012 How the bow ended up at the bottom: 1995 How the stern imploded (possibly): 1995 If they combined everything here it would have probably bin a accurate sinking for me
It's a tradition that order to turn right to starboard means turn left to port. It's based on a boat tiller where moving it to the right will turn the boat left.
Titanic hit on the Starboard side (right), due to them saying hard a Starboard, they had to turn the ship to the left (port) otherwise they're more likely to get the worst sinking if she hit the port side
To be honest, the 1995 - 1997 theory has an high angle. Including Cameron’s new theory I guess. Edit: Dang bro the debris of the stern moving is smooth idk why
I remember reading somewhere that the survivors on the life boats actually heard the ship crash on the ocean floor. I cannot even imagine what that would have sounded like.
Las 2 simulaciónes son impactantes por la forma con el RMS TITANIC COMIENZA HUNDIRSE POR LA PROA SE ELEVA POSTERIORMENTE SE PARTE EN 2 Y FINALMENTE SE HUNDE POR COMPLETO 😢 QUE EN PAZ DESCANSE LAS 1500 PERSONAS QUE MURIERON EN AQUELLA NOCHE GÉLIDA Y TRAGICA DEL 14 Y LA MADRUGADA DEL 15 DE ABRIL DE EL AÑO 1912 HACE 112 AÑOS 😢
Именно нос Титаника останется закопаным и удар об айсберг ни кто не видел даже если Титаник развалиться то нос накроет морским. Песком и метал останется там
All of the single-break theories are wrong. There were two breaks, spaced many seconds apart---so separated that some people thought that they were minutes apart. Besides the two breaks, there were four plunges spoken of in the testimonies. The order was: the 1st plunge, the 1st break, the 2nd plunge (the Big Plunge), the 2nd/final break, the bow's separate plunge, the stern floating freely and then tipping up, and then the stern's final plunge. One survivor, Dillon, who was on the stern, spoke of all three stern plunges (although in one similar testimony, he guessed at a 4th, by adding a myth that was circulating at the time). His words: "There were about fifteen of us [at his location on the stern] when she took the first plunge. After the second there were only five of us left." This same man, a little later: "We made the sign of the cross" and "I went down with the ship…" There were multiple breaks and plunges spoken of, and that's why everyone has such a hard time piecing together the puzzle.
Você já checou to brincando minha cara de vocês ilha últimito função do mesmo jeito que eu falei vai lá no músicas e pesquisa todos os parte do corpo fervendo verdadeiros do titanic que se vai ver
Don’t know if this is a joke but yes, the “Titanic” is a legitimate ship in 1912 that was set sail on it’s first voyage from Southampton, England, to New York. It never made it because of the iceberg.
Такое даже смотреть не буду! Это всё равно что ребят из"Бригады" воскресить и снять такое продолжение. Кстати,"Бригада. Наследник" даже досмотреть не смогла. Фильм воспринимается лишь раз от начала и до конца!