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In article , Robert Casey
writes: Which proves the point: Titanic was not being operated properly for the conditions encountered. Other ships had stopped completely, or were proceeding at greatly reduced speed, because of the ice. The crew got paid...ergo, they were PROFESSIONALS!" So, Master Amateur Mariner, when are you lecturing at the Naval Academy on seamanship? One could sumise that if all the other ships in the area were taking it slow, Titanic should have taken heed and go slow as well. Exactly! In fact, many ships (like Californian) simply stopped for the night. One doesn't have to have knowledge of a field to realize that. I'm sure that the ship's owners would have preferred and understood a late but intact Titanic at the destination. Of course! Maybe the ship was "unsinkable" but I wouldn't want to test that with paying passangers aboard. Boeing doesn't test fly new aircraft with commercial paying passengers. Almost everyone then knew Titanic could sink (the term used was "virtually unsinkable"). What they could not conceive of was that she could sink so fast - less than 3 hours from hitting the berg to hitting the bottom of the ocean. That's why the rules did not specify "lifeboats for all" - they could not imagine a modern ship in the North Atlantic sinking so fast that no other ship would come to her rescue in time. Of course WW1 would show just how fast even modern ships could be made to sink. The comparison with new aircraft isn't as valid, though. Titanic wasn't a new type of ship - Olympic was the first of the class, and had been in service for months before Titanic's voyage. Both ships had undergone sea trials and the crew supposedly knew how to operate the ship safely. 73 de Jim, N2EY |
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