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Practically unsinkable
As soon as the waves of the North Atlantic closed over the stern of RMS
Titanic on 15 April 1912, the myths began surrounding her design,
construction and transatlantic voyage. The Titanic disaster today is a
classic tale, a modern folk story, but like all folk stories our
understanding of what really happened has been clouded by the way the
disaster has been recounted over the years.
It was said that the builders and owners of Titanic claimed she was
unsinkable . The claim actually made was that she was practically
unsinkable , close enough, but nevertheless an unfortunate statement and
one which would haunt both builder and owner for years.
Titanic, the largest vessel in the world when she entered service in
1912, was neither the finest nor the most technically advanced of her
day. Size, seldom an indication that something is better, was the only
record she held. The ships that Titanic, and her slightly older sister
Olympic, were designed to compete with were the Cunard liners Lusitania
and Mauretania, which entered service in 1907. Designed and built as
record breakers, both held the coveted Blue Riband for the fastest
Atlantic crossing. They were built principally from lessons learnt from
advances in warship construction, but most importantly both were powered
by steam turbines driving quadruple screws, each fitted with a large
balanced rudder, making them faster than the competition and easier to
manoeuvre. This was a giant leap forward in marine engineering,
comparable to the advances made in 1969 with the introduction of the
Concorde supersonic aircraft.
Titanic and Olympic should best be described as the 747s of their day.
As huge people carriers, travelling at moderate speed, with space for
large cargoes, they posed a great commercial threat to the smaller and
more expensive-to-operate Cunarders.
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