Captain Seafort wrote:If that was a failure, then so was every ship crossing the Atlantic at the time - continuing at full speed unless there was a specific reason not to was standard procedure. Since the Mesaba's message warning of ice in the ship's path was never reported, there was no reason to slow down.
And I did point out that it was the best they could get. Though if they'd properly tested the steel, i.e. in North Atlantic conditions, they would have been able to better plan for it or design around it or both. I'm not sure they knew about the ductile to brittle transition at the time, but that's why you test in conditions your expecting to operate in: so that you can catch things you might not have expected. (Consider that scale model of San Francisco Bay that was built to test proposed changes and still operates today, decades later.)
True, but given that they saw the ice while it was still three or four miles away and didn't recognise it, inexperience was a bigger problem.
Yeah, but if they'd had field glasses they'd have been able to recognize it sooner than, "HOLY SHIT WE'RE GONNA HIT A BERG!" Even inexperienced lookouts can't deny that there's a really big fucking obstruction if they have an eyepiece filled with one.
Agree that it was a non-engineering fuckup, but it was made even worse because, IIRC, the Titanic had more than enough space on her davits to carry enough boats for the entire complement - they simply weren't carried because they'd have filled up the boat deck rather than leaving it free for afternoon strolls.
Yeah, they originally had enough boats, either stacked on top of one another or collapsible ones, but thought they cluttered the deck. I think they also assumed that if the ship was hit they'd have enough time to call for help and so didn't need them. Note that they were still carrying more boats than then required by law since, at the time, lifeboat capacity was based upon tonnage not crew/passenger compliment. Which doesn't work too bad for a relatively lightly manned cargo ship, but, as we see here, is fucking catastrophic for a passenger liner.