I have never understood what it actually looks like as a whole every time i watched the documentaries till i watched this. Its like looking at the whole picture.
The Titanic museum in Belfast might be interested in having these? It's really great work. If they were displayed in a darkened room with spotlights just on the models, proportionately apart as they lie now on the sea bed, in separate glass cases that would be cool to see.
Great idea. They could also paint the debris field on the floor. Maybe even hang a model iceberg from the ceiling at the relative location of the initial impact and a damaged hull (bow down of course) at the point of sinking...
@@FiferSkipper some people might be offended by the idea you're proposing. Btw the actual wreck site is nearly 4km below sea level and if someone decides to make a model of the iceberg taking the correct proportions into consideration, they'd have to place it about 10.7 km above the wreck's model... that's virtually impossible and pointless. (The actual ship was 269m long and the video's title suggests that the model's scale is 1/350 that's makes the model nearly 76 cm long (combined length). You can do the math it you wish to)
@@vivy-kun3510 I understand your point however, the Titanic was an entirely avoidable tragedy. It was not a few religious zealots, that cause the death of well over a thousand people, it was the hubris of a few old white men. If someone is offended, they should be offended by the stupid idiots that thought a long-distance speed test, in the Spring, in the North Atlantic, in fog, with too few lifeboats, in an 'unsinkable' ship with only 11% reserve buoyancy, on her maiden voyage...was a good idea. BTW: the closest to unsinkable a ship can get is, a modern aircraft carrier (although, no one dares to call it unsinkable) and it has over 250% reserve buoyancy. Your 'do the math' comment is really cute... 3.8km / 350 = 10.9m (not 10.7km)
@@FiferSkipper yeeeeeet! My bad😹😹😹lmao. Btw I said it might be offensive to some because it would be the same as making a miniature model of Hiroshima and Nagasaki prior to the attack but with an atomic bomb hovering in the air or like the world trade centre with a plane approaching the buildings, just like the comment above mine pointed out.
This was probably the best walkthrough of the ship I've seen. It's nice being able to see what I'm looking at, with the real footage it's hard to see with all the rusticles covering everything and poor camera quality.
This is like a forensic autopsy of the wreck sir you have great talent and a good eye for detail I mean down to the separation of the expansion joint the remnants of the decks I mean this is museum quality or better I love it it’s good to preserve what she looks like now because in another 100 or so years she’ll be all but gone
She can't and won't be raised either. It's a mass grave, the ship would fall apart like wet paper and I'm pretty sure the site is protected. Best we can do is recover small stuff or build a full scale replica.
the Titanic side propeller shaft placement is not correct. The actual side propeller shaft is at the same level as the center propeller. And in the model the side propeller shaft is placed at a very high level than it actually is..
Yeah, if I recall, they believe the front sunk down a bit more gently, while the back half sort of just spun out wildly into the depths, causing it to just get ripped apart based on the trail of derby found scattered all around the back half. This vid goes into detail about it, but it's a bit hyperactive, cause I guess that's what was selling back then v: ua-cam.com/video/ZDBCmSX6lKM/v-deo.html
In a way it is a testament to the engineering of that ship that she is in such good shape. Even after falling 2.2 miles and smashing into the seafloor, and 100 years beneath the ocean, she is STILL largely intact. Even the stern, as damaged as she is, is still 'standing' It's a shame she didn't sink on one piece, there is a majesty about her wreck that would be amplified if she was more in-tact
@Do0m3rdude1995 yeah with faulty rivets and no double haul that other ships had before her time. There's a reason they went to welding hauls cause it's stronger
@@somegermanguy7 Yes and no (imo.) Obviously it's horrible so many people died, but had the ship not sank its very, very likely she'd have been sold off for scrap eventually. At least beneath the ocean she's left as a kind of marine museum.
Very cool. I knew there mosaic pictures and 3D computer models but didn't realize there was an actual model kits. In any case, this is the best view of the Titanic wreck I've seen, so thanks for sharing.
What amazes me the most is that those massive reciprocating engines stayed fastened to the ship as it took its long violent journey to the ocean floor.
May God have mercy on those poor souls that were lost that day..... The ship is almost unrecognizable if it weren't for the ships bow. It was a truly beautiful masterpiece of craftsmanship and beaty.
Bow did well considering it was a 25.000+ ton object hitting the ocean floor at 21 knots.The stern sadly wasnt lucky.They dont build ships like this anymore.
@@tma4137 Im talking about the design.Im not the type of person "Ohhhh old stuff were much better than new crap" I love modern technology and im pround to say us humans have improved not just ships but everything else.But holy hell do modern Cruise ships look ugly as shit.Overstuffed floating hotels,absolutely hideous.Glad that they are at least much more safer,and many of those safety regulations did come from Titanics disaster.
@@tma4137 But again,give any modern Cruise ship the same damage Titanic took,and i put my head on that it will just capsize in 1 hour and sink.Look at Costa Concordia.
Because: 1. People are stupid. 2. People are envious. 3. People are jealous. Those types of people take satisfaction in brining down those who are better than them. That's it. 236 people can't do this, and so they shit on the one who can.
It's so fascinating that the reciprocating engines are still in place although they've been in the middle of the breakup area and despite all the implosion damage. I've always been wondering what else is left of the machinery within the aft section of the stern, like the turbine engine, electric generators, propellor shafts, steering gear machinery and so on...
An absolutely LOVELY model. I’ve been getting into model building myself as of recent, got an easy 8 and panzer 4 for Christmas. This kind of stuff is just absolutely amazing.
Have you ever shown this to - TITANIC: HONOR & GLORY ? Don't know if they will have a wreck, but I know that they've been working on the game for (about) 6-7 years trying to get the TITANIC as accurate as possible. T: H&G is supposed to have both a "game" mode and an "explore" mode. The game developers are trying to get TITANIC as much to 100% accuracy, for us who WILL go exploring... even those areas that were "off limits" to us passengers! 😉
Titanic honor and glory is going to be great for exploring an accurate replica of titanic as it was before it sank, Titanic VR is great for exploring an accurate replica of the wreckage of titanic as it was before people started taking shit from it, check it out it sometime you can find it on steam for a good price. (you don't need VR to play it but it does give you the option)
Robert Aviles There is someone recreating a real Titanic and will be finished around 2022. It’s going to be called Titanic II and the plan is to take it on the same route Titanic was to complete.
@@Candy_Gal What could possibly go wrong? Didn't another ship from the same line bounce back and forth around the world and it's now rotting in Boston? The Britannia or something?
It's deteriorated a lot in 34 years. The Bridge's engine order telegraph switch is gone now too, from what I understand; probably sitting in someone's private collection. Which honestly....I can't say I condemn actions like that. The ship is made of iron and the ocean is eating away at it. Eventually there won't be much left at all of it, stealing from the wreck site is about the only way to preserve that history.
I’ve been lucky enough to travel the world three times and this is one of the most amazing things I have seen :) Excellent job on the model and narration too. Thank you for sharing this with everyone.
@@cjholmes4329 Yes, I'm generally familiar with the work of Ken Marschall CJ, but how he does what HE does is similarly staggering. We would know little of any of this if not for Ballard, Ken Marschall, James Cameron et al, and folks like yourself going to this kind of effort to help the majority of us who don't have the skills and patience. Great work...
Sadly, the wreck has received a substantial amount of minor damages owing to the frequent and numerous visits. Among the many "scientific" patrons, she also receives tourists (or used to) and it's damaged her quite a bit. The bow section has suffered the worst where the subs land on it. Also very sadly, a great number of items have been plundered from the wreck. Everything from a large section of her hull plating - Which now sits in the Titanic Museum in Belfast - Down to cutlery and personal effects such as shoes and pocket watches and jewellery. Somewhere along the way everybody forgot it was a burial site and over 1, 400 dead lie with her. The lack of respect is frankly, disgusting. In general, she looks exactly the same and will continue to do so for a while - Not much changes down at 12,500 feet on the bottom of the ocean, although she is deteriorating naturally.
I'm personally of the opinion that *some* stuff should be brought up. But that's mostly due to the fact that The Titanic is deteriorating at a faster pace than originally thought and alot of stuff will be gone in the next 50+ years. As for the damage that was caused, I certainly do not condone that. James Cameron being one that caused some damage as well, however, the video and pictures he was able to capture will be invaluable to history since once again it is deteriorating at a quick pace. With no pictures, videos, or pieces in museums there would only be testimony keeping the spirit of these people alive. Depending on what you believe(or dont believe for that matter) that is no longer the resting place, and the best way to honor each and every person is to document the ship and the accident so that those lost will be remembered and if any of the evidence gathered makes it so that no one else will die the same way again I believe most would be happy with the site being visited.
The amazing part is that the wreck sits in a canyon between 30 and 90 miles away from and under water mountain known as the Grand Banks of NF with the stern section actually facing the Flemish Cap. Take a look at drain the Titanic.
The accuracy of this is incredible. Also I like the explanation. Helps a lot to understand everything. Excellent work. I can't believe the level of distruction this ship has been through. Since I was a teenager I've seen on internet a lot of ships sinking and a lot of clips with wreks at the bottom of the ocean, but I've never seen one that is split in half by sinking or distroyed like this just by sinking. It's unbelievable.
CJ Holmes-finely detailed work Mr. Holmes. I remember in 1985 and going to the mailbox to get my mail and this was on the cover of my national geographic magazine. R. Ballard really got lucky. He found it in only a couple of days. The few days leftover from searching for a classified item for the US government. Likely a Russian sub.
I agree. With all of latest tech, we haven't figured out how to either see it all or raise more of her. I know some say it's a graveyard and I agree, but sometimes humans need to be humbled and learn lessons. And she unfortunately is a prime example of arrogance.
The stern leveled out when it went under and spun as it fell. In the process it tore the upper decks off and implosions blew the hull apart, it then slammed into the bottom with the water column following it . The impact and water column flattened the stern much more than this model represents but it’s still amazing that anything survived the long fall from the surface.
They've done subsequent investigations, (in 2012 during the 100 year anniversary of the disaster,) led by the Titanic, (and Avatar,) director James Cameron, who gathered ship builders, disaster experts, hydro-dynamic engineers, and a panel of all the leading Titanic, "experts," and by compiling all the most relevant and recent information gathered on all the expeditions. It was not only an effort to see what he got wrong when he was making the movie, but also to compile all the definitive facts people have been able to collect in all the expeditions into one superceding, "final word," on what happened. In the course of the investigation, they were able to recreate the final moments between when the Titanic disappeared below the surface until it got to where we see it had come to rest and they determined that the bow section was falling through the almost 4 kms of ocean so fast (30 to 40 kph) that by the time it came to a sudden stop hitting the bottom, the weight and strength of the wake in the water column that accumulated behind it was significantly strong enough to hydraulically destroy the bridge cabin completely. Just like it was primarily responsible for deforming the entire upper surface deck plating and even blow open all of the latched cabin and stateroom windows and sheer the heads off of the forward hatch cover bolts simultaneously, throwing the 1 meter x 1 meter hatch cover to where it finally came to rest on the ocean floor where it was found almost 600 meters away. (But, don't take MY word for it, it's Googleable information lol look up the information yourself, it was made into a National Geographic documentary that's available on UA-cam.) And, BTW, it's "through," not, "threw." ("Threw," is what someone does with a ball, or what you evidently did with your chance at a basic education.)✌️
Awesome model! I've always tried to find an accurate model of the wreck site but usually just photos or models of the ship before it sank. this is a wonderfully done piece of art and really brings to life the severity of the accident and the sad end to that beautiful ship. RIP all of the people that lost their lives that night.
I actually thought about doing this one day.Glad I didn't,there's no way it would have come anywhere near this.Nice job brother!!! Those boilers are impressive!!!
Wow. I built that model. Bout 20 years ago. Still have it. Your work is beautiful. Nice job. It had occurred to me to do that. But you nailed it. The ship has changed a bit since 1985... And so have I. Awsome.
Simplesmente fantástico esse seu modelo!! Sou fascinado por tudo que envolve o titanic, e esse modelo nos dá uma real perspectiva da situação que o titanic ficou após seu naufrágio. Impressionante!
Amazing.....simply amazing. To do a model of an intact ship is one thing, but to build an accurate replica of the wreck? That's on a whole different level entirely. Wish I had known of the eBay sale. I'd have been a player in that. Excellent build!
@@cjholmes4329 I would also like to compliment this! I knew that there was apparently a decent chunk of the middle not attached to either side, but never looked into it. Stumbling upon a model portraying exactly that was a very pleasant surprise! If I may ask, I’m curious how much this sold for?
@@cjholmes4329 .. the Titanic side propeller shaft placement is not correct. The actual side propeller shaft is at the same level as the center propeller. And in the model the side propeller shaft is placed at a very high level than it actually is..
@@WR-NC-ASPL Thanks for your comment, however the wing props are at the correct level. You are correct that the center and wing props were in line horizontally when Titanic was built. However when the ship sank the stern section hit the seabed so hard that the center blade and rudder were buried deeply in the mud while the wing props and supports were bent sharply upward over 20 feet. That's why photographs of the actual wreck show both side screws but no center prop.
@@cjholmes4329 ..Hello,, 1.. The position of the propellers in Titanic wreck has been described in the UA-cam video called "how Titanic's propellers lie to us ... By Zom games". Actually they are using the video of your own model to describe the mistake.. 2.. Starboard propeller - Only 2 blades are visible in the wreck. The third blade and even the Bolts that held third blade are missing. All 3 blades of the starboard propeller are not visible in any original photo of Titanic wreck. In a UA-cam video called It is called "Titanic and her lost starboard propeller blade (archive video) by Aaron1912 record and research", they are saying that they have located the missing third blade of the starboard propeller many kilometres away from the location of the wreck near the exact location of the collision with the iceberg. They are telling that this blade was lost due to collision with the iceberg and the Titanic continued to move forward for about 10 minutes after the collision before stopping. That is the reason why the third blade of the starboard propeller was found many kilometres away from the main wreck of the ship and it was the first part of the Titanic to sink to the ocean 2 hours 40 minutes before the rest of the ship sank to the bottom.
This needs to go to the Smithsonian Institute and they should pay you a handsome amount! What an amazing job you accomplished! I looked at previous pictures and never could see all of the ship until I saw your video. You made an amazing model and thank you!
Zander Skaggs at that depth it’s impossible for corals to grow, the ship is rotting and won’t be anything else than some golf ball sized chunks of metal in some years.
At the very least we were able to find the wreck in the best state possible before it reached that point, allowing us to immortalize it in models and videos. Still, it would have been better if we had the technology at the time to find and observe the wreck as it was mere days after the sinking, before the rot began to take hold.
Boiler room "Number One" ( the half boilers) is in the stern section just forward of the reciprocating engines is missing and are single sided boiler furnaces facing forward only so they are in the debris field.. they where the auxiliary boilers and where never used during Titanic's voyage. The boilers you see .in the bow section is Boiler Room #2, because they are double ended and you can see the aft side where it split on the bow section.. if it where boiler room #1 you wouldn't see the furnace openings since they face forward toward he bow.. you would only be able to see the back side of the aux boilers
I read in a number of books that boiler room number 1 was used to generate steam for heat and light when the ship was in port. They weren't full scotch-marine boilers but nevertheless were used to some degree on the ship.
How is that some people could not like something that they most likely could/would not be able to even draw? Good work bro. To pay attention to most if not all the detail is just amazing!
It imploded. The bow slowly filled with water before breaking away, but the stern was almost completely above water so when it quickly took on water from the massive opening caused by the keel failure, the extreme amount of exponentially building water pressure essentially crushed it like a beer can. Not to mention that unlike the bows descent which was much more graceful and like a descending paper airplane, the stern likely spiraled the entire 2 miles down shearing away the deck and hull plating. The impact on the bottom was much more violent for the stern section as well which is why it looks like a squashed bug, vs the bow which essentially knifed into the bottom, hiding the iceberg damage likely forever in several feet of sediment.
@@ronny150 likely no because of several factors - 1.) disturbing the sediment to that extent would cause a cloud of muddy water that would reduce visibility to zero within sconds and would take quite a while to settle down at that depth 2.) theres no way of knowing what the impact on the bottom did to the bottom half of the bow section, it could be crushed beyond recognition below the mud, 3.) the damage incurred from the iceberg was below the waterline near the anti fouling line. Only the top 1/4 or so of the bow is visible above the sediment. It would be an incredible undertaking to expose the starboard side of the bow to find the spot of impact. Likely needing to displace several hundred tons of sediment to do so and considering our limitations at that depth and pressure, itd be an impossible task, and 4.) With the wreck already falling apart from age and rust, exposing anything hidden under the mud could compromise the integrity of the hull and cause her to collapse entirely.
Wait, that thing that's been hanging from the stern starboard all this time was part of the Boat Deck itself? I always thought it was more shell plate debris, that landed on top of it.
Well, there's the history behind it, the grandeur of its construction, the people who were on it, the sheer size of the ship itself, the legacy it left on maritime policy in general, how it sunk, how many lives were lost, the brevity of its existence, etc.
This is absolutely AMAZING!!! So sad to think something that was so grand and so beautiful was destroyed in 2.5 hours and then deteriorated over 100 years at the bottom of the ocean. This model truly captures all those aspects of the Titanic at once. Very well made and impressive, most impressive!!!
I've heard about the mystery box and always assumed it was one of the cargo holds. Perhaps someone can provide more detail about this mystery box and if it's a part of the Olympic-Titanic swap. I know the cast bronze bridge telemotor bears the yard number 401. Olympic was 400....
Ebay!! this model doesn't belong on ebay, it belongs in a museum! lol If I had the money I would buy it :)
"It belongs in a museum!"
"So do you!"
-Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
*Buys model and throws it into a fireplace*
Okay Indy lol
What is your museum?
How much money do you need for this ?
I guess the 13 dislikes are from people who expected to see a figurine of Rose standing at the prow of the ship.😂
Haha, genuinely made me laugh
Rip stern😢
I was thinking the same thing but with Jack on the bow with his arms spread wide yelling "I'm King of the Undersea World."
Jayden MU Its prow dumbass. Prow means the bow part above water
@Jayden MU You seem like a bigger idiot being a selfish asshole.
what i think i look like: Titanic's Bow
what i really look like: The Stern
xd
What you think you look like: More like the entire ship before it went down
what i think i look like: titanic
what i actually look like: deflated pool floatie
@ROCKSTAR hi rockstar how’s GTA 6 goin?
I have never understood what it actually looks like as a whole every time i watched the documentaries till i watched this. Its like looking at the whole picture.
Emperador Caligula
That’s so awesome, it gets even crazier when you consider the size of his fingers compared to the model itself
The Titanic museum in Belfast DEFINITELY needs one of your models.
Lexi Butman the titanic that I went to was haunted and I was with my family and hopefully I survived that day
In Missouri
Lexi Butman It has a Giant one And I would know Because I live in Belfast and I’m actually going To the Centre soon
Nevermind the museum, I need one of them
So does the one in Halifax.
The Titanic museum in Belfast might be interested in having these? It's really great work. If they were displayed in a darkened room with spotlights just on the models, proportionately apart as they lie now on the sea bed, in separate glass cases that would be cool to see.
Doug Bader excellent idea! Especially having the models displayed proportionately
Great idea. They could also paint the debris field on the floor.
Maybe even hang a model iceberg from the ceiling at the relative location of the initial impact and a damaged hull (bow down of course) at the point of sinking...
@@FiferSkipper some people might be offended by the idea you're proposing.
Btw the actual wreck site is nearly 4km below sea level and if someone decides to make a model of the iceberg taking the correct proportions into consideration, they'd have to place it about 10.7 km above the wreck's model... that's virtually impossible and pointless.
(The actual ship was 269m long and the video's title suggests that the model's scale is 1/350 that's makes the model nearly 76 cm long (combined length). You can do the math it you wish to)
@@vivy-kun3510 I understand your point however, the Titanic was an entirely avoidable tragedy. It was not a few religious zealots, that cause the death of well over a thousand people, it was the hubris of a few old white men. If someone is offended, they should be offended by the stupid idiots that thought a long-distance speed test, in the Spring, in the North Atlantic, in fog, with too few lifeboats, in an 'unsinkable' ship with only 11% reserve buoyancy, on her maiden voyage...was a good idea. BTW: the closest to unsinkable a ship can get is, a modern aircraft carrier (although, no one dares to call it unsinkable) and it has over 250% reserve buoyancy.
Your 'do the math' comment is really cute...
3.8km / 350 = 10.9m (not 10.7km)
@@FiferSkipper yeeeeeet! My bad😹😹😹lmao.
Btw I said it might be offensive to some because it would be the same as making a miniature model of Hiroshima and Nagasaki prior to the attack but with an atomic bomb hovering in the air or like the world trade centre with a plane approaching the buildings, just like the comment above mine pointed out.
This was probably the best walkthrough of the ship I've seen. It's nice being able to see what I'm looking at, with the real footage it's hard to see with all the rusticles covering everything and poor camera quality.
Hwo to make the stern
you need:
Water
Cardboard box
Put the cardboard box in water
1 day later
you see the titanic stern
END
Lol
Haha, later install a bomb under it and see the real accuracy of the wreck.
We need a miniature submersible with a miniature James Cameron.
on a miniature Atlantic ocean
.....on miniature Earth I guess!!🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
On a miniature galaxy
On a miniature youtube comment
...And miniature me
Could stare at this for hours.. Excellent job!
After all these years, Captain Smith's bath tub is still full.
Phoenix Gravin Overflowing.
🤣 Nobody there to pull the drain plug I'm afraid.
so is the swimming baths lol
But not still hot.
The yellow rubber duck has gone missing.
That's incredible. The accuracy and little details are really good.
Your attention to detail is astounding - you have gifted hands!
A 3D printable version of this would be really amazing!
Those would be badass in a huge saltwater fish tank
Pretty sure this was considered at one point in time. They definitely considered raising the Titanic.
@kork krokeman ur right but it would be cool to see the titanic in person!!
@kork krokeman i know but just seeing it would be sick also i have seen a skeleton in a youtube vid before
@kork krokeman there's no skeletons in the titanic. The only thing that's left are shoes.
@kork krokeman it's because is too deep, and fragile. Cant move it without destroying it
You make the best replications of the wreck site I've seen.
Thanks bro! I don't have the energy to make another big scale model like yours so I'm sticking with the smaller scale for now
At 1/350 scale this model is TINY compared to yours, 1/2 the length and 1/8 the volume...
Raise the Thai 10 Nic
Raise the Titanic
How did the Titanic sink what the
This is like a forensic autopsy of the wreck sir you have great talent and a good eye for detail I mean down to the separation of the expansion joint the remnants of the decks I mean this is museum quality or better I love it it’s good to preserve what she looks like now because in another 100 or so years she’ll be all but gone
Less than 100 years. At the current rate, Titanic will be gone within 20 to 30 years
She can't and won't be raised either. It's a mass grave, the ship would fall apart like wet paper and I'm pretty sure the site is protected. Best we can do is recover small stuff or build a full scale replica.
She’ll just be a piece of metal in a museum
Shagrat, good news! We are building a replica
In another 100 years the engines will still be standing tall ^^
Thank you for sharing. I have kept up with Titanic for many of my 75 yrs.
I'm honored! My interest began when I first read "A Night to Remember" in the mid 1960s
this is brilliant in so many ways. Tons of research, insane levels of craftsmanship! I can't express my admiration. Incredible.
Thanks so very much for your encouraging words!
the Titanic side propeller shaft placement is not correct. The actual side propeller shaft is at the same level as the center propeller. And in the model the side propeller shaft is placed at a very high level than it actually is..
The stern section looks like a ripped up wet paper cardboard box.
It really is like that,you cant blame the dude.
@@ajsnagratin6504 oh no, I wasn't blaming him I was just making a statement.
@@treystephens4490 i didn't say you were,sorry if it sounded like that
@@ajsnagratin6504 that's alright no problem. ⛵
Yeah, if I recall, they believe the front sunk down a bit more gently, while the back half sort of just spun out wildly into the depths, causing it to just get ripped apart based on the trail of derby found scattered all around the back half.
This vid goes into detail about it, but it's a bit hyperactive, cause I guess that's what was selling back then v:
ua-cam.com/video/ZDBCmSX6lKM/v-deo.html
Omg I’m a very big Titanic historian. This is absolutely incredible!!!!! Fabulous job!!!! How on earth did you do this????
Aren't the bow and stern facing the same direction tho? Like the poop deck is facing the same direction as the tip of bow?
Micah Rutland the bow and stern are facing opposite directions on the sea floor
In a way it is a testament to the engineering of that ship that she is in such good shape. Even after falling 2.2 miles and smashing into the seafloor, and 100 years beneath the ocean, she is STILL largely intact. Even the stern, as damaged as she is, is still 'standing'
It's a shame she didn't sink on one piece, there is a majesty about her wreck that would be amplified if she was more in-tact
@Do0m3rdude1995 yeah with faulty rivets and no double haul that other ships had before her time. There's a reason they went to welding hauls cause it's stronger
Yep they cut every corner
its a shame she sank at all!
@@somegermanguy7 Yes and no (imo.) Obviously it's horrible so many people died, but had the ship not sank its very, very likely she'd have been sold off for scrap eventually. At least beneath the ocean she's left as a kind of marine museum.
@@keighlancoe5933 I know what you mean; it was mostly a joke though.
This was nice to see. You can never tell with the closeup real footage what you're really looking at.
Outstanding modeling skills are on display in this model. Extremely well done. I am pretty sure the stern imploded on its descent to the bottom.
Thanks so much for your kind words and yes I agree about the descent implosion.
500 dollars is not bad. work of art right there you can't find anything like this.
*laughs in broke*
It just save me thousand of $ not having to go down and see it .
Especially considering the wreck has deteriorated much more since it was discovered.
You made this, I'm speechless, amazing.
The detail in both half's of the ship is absolutely amazing!!!
Thanks!
Very cool. I knew there mosaic pictures and 3D computer models but didn't realize there was an actual model kits. In any case, this is the best view of the Titanic wreck I've seen, so thanks for sharing.
Thanks for the kind words! Glad to share
The difference between the bow and the stern never ceases to amaze me. This is exquisite work!
Wow! You are so talented. This is amazing.
It may be a model, but it's clearer then those clouded undersea videos. And pretty much what Titanic really looks like.
Thanks for the encouraging words!
what a labor of love! Excellent replication!
Thank you so much for your kind comments!
What amazes me the most is that those massive reciprocating engines stayed fastened to the ship as it took its long violent journey to the ocean floor.
May God have mercy on those poor souls that were lost that day..... The ship is almost unrecognizable if it weren't for the ships bow. It was a truly beautiful masterpiece of craftsmanship and beaty.
Bow did well considering it was a 25.000+ ton object hitting the ocean floor at 21 knots.The stern sadly wasnt lucky.They dont build ships like this anymore.
AJS NAGRATIN yeah hopefully built better and won’t sink!!
@@tma4137 Im talking about the design.Im not the type of person "Ohhhh old stuff were much better than new crap" I love modern technology and im pround to say us humans have improved not just ships but everything else.But holy hell do modern Cruise ships look ugly as shit.Overstuffed floating hotels,absolutely hideous.Glad that they are at least much more safer,and many of those safety regulations did come from Titanics disaster.
@@tma4137 But again,give any modern Cruise ship the same damage Titanic took,and i put my head on that it will just capsize in 1 hour and sink.Look at Costa Concordia.
Costa Concordia ran around, though. No ship, no matter how well designed, could survive that kind of impact for longer than a few minutes.
HOW can this video have 236 dislikes...HOW???? Superbly done. A true masterpiece!
HOW can dislikes on a UA-cam video have any relevance at all.. HOW????
It's be cos it's obvious that the upl9ader did not scratch built and kitbash this model. They came in the mail in order as is.
@@The_Deaf_Aussie "It's be cos"?
Really?
Fix your grammar and your statement might carry some weight.
Because:
1. People are stupid.
2. People are envious.
3. People are jealous.
Those types of people take satisfaction in brining down those who are better than them.
That's it.
236 people can't do this, and so they shit on the one who can.
@@The_Deaf_AussieYou’re one of those people that thinks everything magically exists but no one made it, aren’t you?
This is a Pure masterpiece!
It's so fascinating that the reciprocating engines are still in place although they've been in the middle of the breakup area and despite all the implosion damage. I've always been wondering what else is left of the machinery within the aft section of the stern, like the turbine engine, electric generators, propellor shafts, steering gear machinery and so on...
Amazing scale model of the Titanic wreck, superbly done!
‘Propellers still visible’
Middle propeller: am I a joke to you (it’s buried under the mud)
`The beauty of ugliness`... Awesome work! Subbed.
Awesome model. Would love to have it. Would be a great conversation piece.
An absolutely LOVELY model. I’ve been getting into model building myself as of recent, got an easy 8 and panzer 4 for Christmas. This kind of stuff is just absolutely amazing.
Amazing models with incredible detail
Have you ever shown this to - TITANIC: HONOR & GLORY ? Don't know if they will have a wreck, but I know that they've been working on the game for (about) 6-7 years trying to get the TITANIC as accurate as possible. T: H&G is supposed to have both a "game" mode and an "explore" mode. The game developers are trying to get TITANIC as much to 100% accuracy, for us who WILL go exploring... even those areas that were "off limits" to us passengers! 😉
Titanic honor and glory is going to be great for exploring an accurate replica of titanic as it was before it sank, Titanic VR is great for exploring an accurate replica of the wreckage of titanic as it was before people started taking shit from it, check it out it sometime you can find it on steam for a good price. (you don't need VR to play it but it does give you the option)
Robert Aviles There is someone recreating a real Titanic and will be finished around 2022. It’s going to be called Titanic II and the plan is to take it on the same route Titanic was to complete.
@@Candy_Gal What could possibly go wrong? Didn't another ship from the same line bounce back and forth around the world and it's now rotting in Boston? The Britannia or something?
Feint Hahahah, yep....I won’t be sailing on that one or the next! 😂
@@Candy_Gal holy shit you still believe that crap?? Lol
11:09 really got me ... i am speechless
It's deteriorated a lot in 34 years. The Bridge's engine order telegraph switch is gone now too, from what I understand; probably sitting in someone's private collection. Which honestly....I can't say I condemn actions like that. The ship is made of iron and the ocean is eating away at it. Eventually there won't be much left at all of it, stealing from the wreck site is about the only way to preserve that history.
I’ve been lucky enough to travel the world three times and this is one of the most amazing things I have seen :) Excellent job on the model and narration too. Thank you for sharing this with everyone.
Thanks so much! You really made my day with those kind words!
@@cjholmes4329 you’re video made my day and I can’t wait to show my nephew who loves Titanic :)
@@Justicesfor awesome, thanks again!
I'm staggered how this model covers the detail of a wreck sat in the dark 2 1/2 miles down....
Thanks! I based the details and much of my inspiration from Ken Marschall's magnificent paintings of the wreck.
@@cjholmes4329 Yes, I'm generally familiar with the work of Ken Marschall CJ, but how he does what HE does is similarly staggering. We would know little of any of this if not for Ballard, Ken Marschall, James Cameron et al, and folks like yourself going to this kind of effort to help the majority of us who don't have the skills and patience. Great work...
Thanks again, I'm really honored.
Damn you, iceberg, DAMN YOU!!
Iceberg- not my fault, I was minding my own business and got hit.
@Clare Panniers Not sure Titanic saw it that way. :(
Captain Smiths fault.
Are there any pictures of Titanic’s current state taken in 2019?
Sadly, the wreck has received a substantial amount of minor damages owing to the frequent and numerous visits. Among the many "scientific" patrons, she also receives tourists (or used to) and it's damaged her quite a bit. The bow section has suffered the worst where the subs land on it. Also very sadly, a great number of items have been plundered from the wreck. Everything from a large section of her hull plating - Which now sits in the Titanic Museum in Belfast - Down to cutlery and personal effects such as shoes and pocket watches and jewellery. Somewhere along the way everybody forgot it was a burial site and over 1, 400 dead lie with her. The lack of respect is frankly, disgusting.
In general, she looks exactly the same and will continue to do so for a while - Not much changes down at 12,500 feet on the bottom of the ocean, although she is deteriorating naturally.
Robert Ballard says it: ua-cam.com/video/yGtVu3mIasA/v-deo.html
I'm personally of the opinion that *some* stuff should be brought up. But that's mostly due to the fact that The Titanic is deteriorating at a faster pace than originally thought and alot of stuff will be gone in the next 50+ years. As for the damage that was caused, I certainly do not condone that. James Cameron being one that caused some damage as well, however, the video and pictures he was able to capture will be invaluable to history since once again it is deteriorating at a quick pace. With no pictures, videos, or pieces in museums there would only be testimony keeping the spirit of these people alive. Depending on what you believe(or dont believe for that matter) that is no longer the resting place, and the best way to honor each and every person is to document the ship and the accident so that those lost will be remembered and if any of the evidence gathered makes it so that no one else will die the same way again I believe most would be happy with the site being visited.
@@xxka0tikkxx Titanic will be gone in 20 years..
@@xxka0tikkxx Also, fun fact is that propellers won't be gone cause they were made from Bronze.
Thanks for posting this, that's fantastic what you have built, as we now know the titanic is dissolving year by year, great job!!
The amazing part is that the wreck sits in a canyon between 30 and 90 miles away from and under water mountain known as the Grand Banks of NF with the stern section actually facing the Flemish Cap. Take a look at drain the Titanic.
just wow!! what a work. so much time needed for. great!
Thanks so much!
The accuracy of this is incredible. Also I like the explanation. Helps a lot to understand everything. Excellent work. I can't believe the level of distruction this ship has been through. Since I was a teenager I've seen on internet a lot of ships sinking and a lot of clips with wreks at the bottom of the ocean, but I've never seen one that is split in half by sinking or distroyed like this just by sinking. It's unbelievable.
Splitting isn't too uncommon. The Yamato comes to mind. I think it even crazier to see wrecks like Lusitania that almost curls in on herself.
CJ Holmes-finely detailed work Mr. Holmes. I remember in 1985 and going to the mailbox to get my mail and this was on the cover of my national geographic magazine. R. Ballard really got lucky. He found it in only a couple of days. The few days leftover from searching for a classified item for the US government. Likely a Russian sub.
He was looking for the USN Scorpion and the Thresher
It’s sad to know that with the tech we have right now, we’ll never be able to see all of titanic
I agree. With all of latest tech, we haven't figured out how to either see it all or raise more of her. I know some say it's a graveyard and I agree, but sometimes humans need to be humbled and learn lessons. And she unfortunately is a prime example of arrogance.
@@thub7637 the Titanic was definitely a story of hubris
T Hub they should look more inside the stern , it has many open spaces for a camera to see
You should make a video of how you made it, personally I’d love to get back into ship model kits again :)
It’s Amazing that She fell and rested Perfectly upright
Fluid dynamics. She cut water cleanly until her last movement
The stern leveled out when it went under and spun as it fell. In the process it tore the upper decks off and implosions blew the hull apart, it then slammed into the bottom with the water column following it . The impact and water column flattened the stern much more than this model represents but it’s still amazing that anything survived the long fall from the surface.
I think the foward mast destroyed the bridge as well.. just from the forward motion of the ship plowing threw the water..
They've done subsequent investigations, (in 2012 during the 100 year anniversary of the disaster,) led by the Titanic, (and Avatar,) director James Cameron, who gathered ship builders, disaster experts, hydro-dynamic engineers, and a panel of all the leading Titanic, "experts," and by compiling all the most relevant and recent information gathered on all the expeditions.
It was not only an effort to see what he got wrong when he was making the movie, but also to compile all the definitive facts people have been able to collect in all the expeditions into one superceding, "final word," on what happened.
In the course of the investigation, they were able to recreate the final moments between when the Titanic disappeared below the surface until it got to where we see it had come to rest and they determined that the bow section was falling through the almost 4 kms of ocean so fast (30 to 40 kph) that by the time it came to a sudden stop hitting the bottom, the weight and strength of the wake in the water column that accumulated behind it was significantly strong enough to hydraulically destroy the bridge cabin completely.
Just like it was primarily responsible for deforming the entire upper surface deck plating and even blow open all of the latched cabin and stateroom windows and sheer the heads off of the forward hatch cover bolts simultaneously, throwing the 1 meter x 1 meter hatch cover to where it finally came to rest on the ocean floor where it was found almost 600 meters away.
(But, don't take MY word for it, it's Googleable information lol look up the information yourself, it was made into a National Geographic documentary that's available on UA-cam.)
And, BTW, it's "through," not, "threw."
("Threw," is what someone does with a ball, or what you evidently did with your chance at a basic education.)✌️
@@WitchettyMan lol
Awesome model! I've always tried to find an accurate model of the wreck site but usually just photos or models of the ship before it sank. this is a wonderfully done piece of art and really brings to life the severity of the accident and the sad end to that beautiful ship. RIP all of the people that lost their lives that night.
It has been confirmed that a propeller blade dropped on the side that struck the ice berg👍
I don’t know about the people that dislike the video but, HOLY CRAP! THAT LOOKS AMAZING!!!!
WOW! Very accurate model. Can you make another model of titanic's sister ship, rms olympic wreck?
This is both incredibly haunting and beautiful. Thank you for putting this together and showing everyone!
I actually thought about doing this one day.Glad I didn't,there's no way it would have come anywhere near this.Nice job brother!!! Those boilers are impressive!!!
Wow. I built that model. Bout 20 years ago. Still have it. Your work is beautiful. Nice job. It had occurred to me to do that. But you nailed it. The ship has changed a bit since 1985... And so have I. Awsome.
This is so cool! Awesome to get this kind of accurate look at the wreckage
Thanks so much!
Simplesmente fantástico esse seu modelo!! Sou fascinado por tudo que envolve o titanic, e esse modelo nos dá uma real perspectiva da situação que o titanic ficou após seu naufrágio. Impressionante!
Amazing.....simply amazing. To do a model of an intact ship is one thing, but to build an accurate replica of the wreck? That's on a whole different level entirely. Wish I had known of the eBay sale. I'd have been a player in that. Excellent build!
Wow don’t need to spend 250k to see it 🤣
I love that you put the models together to show how much of the midsection is gone. Never did I thought about that till you mentioned it. Great work!
Thanks for your kind comments! For my next version I think I'll add the debris field in a compacted form.
@@cjholmes4329 I would also like to compliment this! I knew that there was apparently a decent chunk of the middle not attached to either side, but never looked into it. Stumbling upon a model portraying exactly that was a very pleasant surprise!
If I may ask, I’m curious how much this sold for?
@@cjholmes4329 .. the Titanic side propeller shaft placement is not correct. The actual side propeller shaft is at the same level as the center propeller. And in the model the side propeller shaft is placed at a very high level than it actually is..
@@WR-NC-ASPL Thanks for your comment, however the wing props are at the correct level. You are correct that the center and wing props were in line horizontally when Titanic was built. However when the ship sank the stern section hit the seabed so hard that the center blade and rudder were buried deeply in the mud while the wing props and supports were bent sharply upward over 20 feet. That's why photographs of the actual wreck show both side screws but no center prop.
@@cjholmes4329 ..Hello,, 1.. The position of the propellers in Titanic wreck has been described in the UA-cam video called "how Titanic's propellers lie to us ... By Zom games". Actually they are using the video of your own model to describe the mistake..
2.. Starboard propeller - Only 2 blades are visible in the wreck. The third blade and even the Bolts that held third blade are missing. All 3 blades of the starboard propeller are not visible in any original photo of Titanic wreck. In a UA-cam video called It is called "Titanic and her lost starboard propeller blade (archive video) by Aaron1912 record and research", they are saying that they have located the missing third blade of the starboard propeller many kilometres away from the location of the wreck near the exact location of the collision with the iceberg. They are telling that this blade was lost due to collision with the iceberg and the Titanic continued to move forward for about 10 minutes after the collision before stopping. That is the reason why the third blade of the starboard propeller was found many kilometres away from the main wreck of the ship and it was the first part of the Titanic to sink to the ocean 2 hours 40 minutes before the rest of the ship sank to the bottom.
Did anyone else get scared when his giant finger pointed at the model? 😂
The attention to detail is incredible. The fact that there's even a tiny Captain Smith's bathtub is amazing.
"Looks like somebody left the water running."
Did you make a video of you making the model?
Unbelievable detail for such a small model.
Amazing craftmanship, Well done sir!
That my good man, it stunning.
"g-string wonder here" videos two years old but im subbing just for that
Now I can say been there done that!
Nice work!
Amazing work! thank you for the description as well.
My pleasure, thanks!
Wow! Hats off to you sir for a remarkable job. Everything about this build is stunning. I wish I had half your skills and patience.
Abso bloody lutely magnificent! Kudos Sir 😀
This needs to go to the Smithsonian Institute and they should pay you a handsome amount! What an amazing job you accomplished! I looked at previous pictures and never could see all of the ship until I saw your video. You made an amazing model and thank you!
That is pure perfection man, congrats!!!!
Thank you so much!
That's what I call a model. Fantastic!
Thank you so much! I'm just about to make a series of "how I made it" videos.
You did a fantastic job, really well researched and modelled.
Sad to know that this ship will be gone around 2030.. it’s because of metal eating bacteria
edit: on phone
it technecally won't be gone. it will be an artificial reef
Zander Skaggs at that depth it’s impossible for corals to grow, the ship is rotting and won’t be anything else than some golf ball sized chunks of metal in some years.
At the very least we were able to find the wreck in the best state possible before it reached that point, allowing us to immortalize it in models and videos.
Still, it would have been better if we had the technology at the time to find and observe the wreck as it was mere days after the sinking, before the rot began to take hold.
Red Centurion yep
the stern is already almost gone save for the engines and props
Boiler room "Number One" ( the half boilers) is in the stern section just forward of the reciprocating engines is missing and are single sided boiler furnaces facing forward only so they are in the debris field.. they where the auxiliary boilers and where never used during Titanic's voyage. The boilers you see .in the bow section is Boiler Room #2, because they are double ended and you can see the aft side where it split on the bow section.. if it where boiler room #1 you wouldn't see the furnace openings since they face forward toward he bow.. you would only be able to see the back side of the aux boilers
I read in a number of books that boiler room number 1 was used to generate steam for heat and light when the ship was in port. They weren't full scotch-marine boilers but nevertheless were used to some degree on the ship.
i heard somewhere that boiler room one was only used during the sinking to generate power. why the others flooded. i dont know how true that was
Unbelievable detail. Awesome.
Thanks so much for those kind words!
*ALL THE FISH IN THE ATLANTIC:* _"When are you DAMN humans gonna get your CRAP the HELL out of our home?!"_
How is that some people could not like something that they most likely could/would not be able to even draw? Good work bro. To pay attention to most if not all the detail is just amazing!
The stern must’ve had a hell of a rough time, coming down
It imploded. The bow slowly filled with water before breaking away, but the stern was almost completely above water so when it quickly took on water from the massive opening caused by the keel failure, the extreme amount of exponentially building water pressure essentially crushed it like a beer can. Not to mention that unlike the bows descent which was much more graceful and like a descending paper airplane, the stern likely spiraled the entire 2 miles down shearing away the deck and hull plating. The impact on the bottom was much more violent for the stern section as well which is why it looks like a squashed bug, vs the bow which essentially knifed into the bottom, hiding the iceberg damage likely forever in several feet of sediment.
Ye it fell almost on its side and broke its back. That must have hurt 😢
@@halloweenjunkie6000 would it be possible to remove the mud round the side of the bow to reveal the iceberg damage?
@@ronny150 likely no because of several factors - 1.) disturbing the sediment to that extent would cause a cloud of muddy water that would reduce visibility to zero within sconds and would take quite a while to settle down at that depth 2.) theres no way of knowing what the impact on the bottom did to the bottom half of the bow section, it could be crushed beyond recognition below the mud, 3.) the damage incurred from the iceberg was below the waterline near the anti fouling line. Only the top 1/4 or so of the bow is visible above the sediment. It would be an incredible undertaking to expose the starboard side of the bow to find the spot of impact. Likely needing to displace several hundred tons of sediment to do so and considering our limitations at that depth and pressure, itd be an impossible task, and 4.) With the wreck already falling apart from age and rust, exposing anything hidden under the mud could compromise the integrity of the hull and cause her to collapse entirely.
@@halloweenjunkie6000 thanks for the thorough explanation
Wait, that thing that's been hanging from the stern starboard all this time was part of the Boat Deck itself? I always thought it was more shell plate debris, that landed on top of it.
Very good work.
Incredible work
It’s amazing how the Titanic has mesmerized everyone even after so many years since the sinking! What about this ship that captivates us so!?
Well, there's the history behind it, the grandeur of its construction, the people who were on it, the sheer size of the ship itself, the legacy it left on maritime policy in general, how it sunk, how many lives were lost, the brevity of its existence, etc.
This is absolutely AMAZING!!! So sad to think something that was so grand and so beautiful was destroyed in 2.5 hours and then deteriorated over 100 years at the bottom of the ocean. This model truly captures all those aspects of the Titanic at once. Very well made and impressive, most impressive!!!
This is pretty haunting to look at. Can't help but think of what those people went through on that terrible night. Gives me chills.
I've heard about the mystery box and always assumed it was one of the cargo holds. Perhaps someone can provide more detail about this mystery box and if it's a part of the Olympic-Titanic swap. I know the cast bronze bridge telemotor bears the yard number 401. Olympic was 400....
Outstanding model!