Texasmark
Supreme Mariner
- Joined
- Dec 20, 2005
- Messages
- 14,780
Well, yes and no. Obviously inferior steel given the technology of today’s steel making.
Bad microstructure.....
https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg...VPUB-C13-17a17f71ae2f9d4316c52e62d4650c9f.pdf
“Conclusion:
Given the knowledge base available to engineers at the time of the ship’s construction, it is the author’s opinion that no apparent metallurgical mistakes were made in the construction of the RMS Titanic.”
"...............apparent metallurgical mistakes were made in the construction of the RMS Titanic.”
Not the story I got. Seems steel of the day used in ship building had a metallurgical/chemical defect that was temperature dependent and cold waters of the N. Atlantic enhanced the detrimental aspects of the steel making it brittle. Just what I read, besides the fact that somebody (besides the designer) insisted that certain bulkheads in the location of the huge rip didn't go all the way to the deck above and thus couldn't be sealed to contain the inrush and all "that rot"!