Oceanliner Designs

Oceanliner Designs

Oceanliner Designs explores the design, construction, engineering and operation of history’s greatest machines and vessels- from Titanic to Queen Mary and from the R.101 airship to the battleship Bismarck. Join researcher and illustrator Michael Brady as he tells the stories behind some of history's most famous ocean liners and machines!

Support the channel channel on Patreon www.patreon.com/oceanlinerdesigns
Or become a KZread channel member here for all kinds of perks: kzread.info/dron/sE8PTncfn2Vga48jH46HnQ.htmljoin

Website:
www.oceanlinerdesigns.com

Business Enquiries;
[email protected]

Write to me at:

PO Box 1352
Camberwell, VIC
Australia
3124

Our friends:
Titanic Honor and Glory
www.youtube.com/@titanichg

Bright Sun Films
www.youtube.com/@brightsunfilms

#titanic #history #ships #engineering #oceanliner #queenmary #machines #building #abandoned #disaster

8 Funniest Moments in Ship History

8 Funniest Moments in Ship History

Titanic Before Disaster

Titanic Before Disaster

What Is a Bulbous Bow?

What Is a Bulbous Bow?

How Do Ships Stop?

How Do Ships Stop?

Пікірлер

  • @MARKETMAN6789
    @MARKETMAN67893 сағат бұрын

    Wonderful narriation and wonderful video

  • @original.dwornboy
    @original.dwornboy3 сағат бұрын

    She watched it 'two times'? You mean she watched it twice. Much more succinct... Aside from that, great video.

  • @l.v1473
    @l.v14733 сағат бұрын

    Steel sailboat?

  • @MajoradeMayhem
    @MajoradeMayhem3 сағат бұрын

    I often struggle to sit through Cameron's Titanic once the ship starts sinking. It's too tragic to cope with. So I can well imagine any actual survivors decided to pass on it!

  • @kats9755
    @kats97553 сағат бұрын

    Hey, our friend Mike Brady (et al)! This was fkn horrific! Job well done with this but Christ on a cracker, dude, this was so intense 😭 The people falling as she rolls over, seeing the ship and its faint lights under the water, and knowing this simulation captures merely a fraction of how this must've felt to experience... 🤢🤢🤢 it's so much, it makes me feel a bit ill.

  • @Quert_Zuiopue
    @Quert_Zuiopue3 сағат бұрын

    There is a concrete river cargo ship moored in the harbor of my hometown. It's used as a theater.

  • @felicitydeikos5250
    @felicitydeikos52503 сағат бұрын

    Now we have the Icon of the Seas Oceanliner.

  • @MrTNuke
    @MrTNuke3 сағат бұрын

    What a beautiful documentary. Thank you for sharing this. Fair winds and following seas to all souls lost that night. May their memories always be a blessing. 🖤

  • @artemvalkyrie7451
    @artemvalkyrie74513 сағат бұрын

    Passengers themselves didn't participate in emergency training at the start, then ignored alarms, and at the end had the gal to blame the crew and captain, who did everything they could. Bunch of morons.

  • @jamessicard6682
    @jamessicard66823 сағат бұрын

    A night to remember is available for free currently on KZread movies.

  • @joezephyr
    @joezephyr3 сағат бұрын

    Fabulous thank you!

  • @frog9112
    @frog91124 сағат бұрын

    My dumbass thought it was the radio antenna💀

  • @chrisdavies5253
    @chrisdavies52534 сағат бұрын

    Rocking the stiff collar buddy and nice seeing a video from you in my feed. Feel like it's been a while

  • @redshirt49
    @redshirt494 сағат бұрын

    Will it have a "get rammed by Storstad" function, though?

  • @dcmastermindfirst9418
    @dcmastermindfirst94185 сағат бұрын

    Wow so this footage is infact not of Titanic.

  • @Knicks518
    @Knicks5185 сағат бұрын

    It’s our friend Mike Brady, from ocean liners designs

  • @didgereemedia194
    @didgereemedia1945 сағат бұрын

    I'd like to know about the submarine wreckage that was on display at the Australian War Memorial (I don't know if it's still there). It was part of an attempted attack in Sydney Harbour, I believe

  • @kevingardner1658
    @kevingardner16585 сағат бұрын

    brilliant narration mate

  • @Eric-qo8vv
    @Eric-qo8vv5 сағат бұрын

    Once again great Job Mike thank you

  • @trickiification
    @trickiification5 сағат бұрын

    Thank you for clarifying the rutter issue.

  • @dianalindeman1644
    @dianalindeman16445 сағат бұрын

    Tragic

  • @kiereluurs1243
    @kiereluurs12435 сағат бұрын

    The interference explanation is the first real justification I heard of. Though I still see a lot of bow-waves in the footage, as if nothing has changed. And as someone else remarked: the energy has already been wasted into 2 sets of waves. It does not even matter what they do to each other. Hmm.

  • @jason60chev
    @jason60chev5 сағат бұрын

    Where do you get your shirts? Or are they just separate collars fitted to a different modern shirt?

  • @markc7456
    @markc74565 сағат бұрын

    amazing

  • @wolferlorg1887
    @wolferlorg18875 сағат бұрын

    Man i guess this is some Concrete proof...

  • @ghwheels_02
    @ghwheels_025 сағат бұрын

    Would’ve been funny if titanic survivors were asked about “Raise Titanic”

  • @grahamlait1969
    @grahamlait19696 сағат бұрын

    The Captain of the Rawalpindi was the father of Ludovic Kennedy (broadcaster and author) whose naval career had been blighted by an unfair accusation of cowardice in WW1. To go up against Scharnhorst and Gneisenau in an undergunned converted liner was an act of incredible bravery. Apparently Captain Kennedy said just before joining battle, ' We'll fight them both. They'll sink us and that will be that. Goodbye.' How's that for guts?

  • @flameguy3416
    @flameguy34166 сағат бұрын

    RAD photos from the 20s.

  • @boneshakerjake
    @boneshakerjake6 сағат бұрын

    whenever the titanic comes up in media or conversation all I ever think about is the fact that many of the dead that were recovered went through a single morgue in halifax which if you are unaware was the closest major city to the sinking at the time not only that but for the history buffs of the world wars the halifax explosion happened... and MANY bodies from that (which is actually more than titanics death toll being around 2000 total most of which dying in seconds) that happened in 1917 and what do you know the same morgue held the dead and today is regarded as one of the most haunted buildings in halifax it's not easy to find a place where TWO horrific accidents took place that don't have to do with disease so being haunted is justified.

  • @garybuechel8133
    @garybuechel81336 сағат бұрын

    That's why it's called a movie.

  • @PorscheRacer14
    @PorscheRacer146 сағат бұрын

    No reaction to Raising the Titanic? That would have been priceless. Of course that movie is far fetched, but there is one scene when the submersible Starfish implodes that is terrifying. Not the way it's portrayed with it leaking, but the implosion sound and wreckage.

  • @hope716
    @hope7166 сағат бұрын

    what about the 1943 Titanic movie made in Germany, weren't parts of it used in A Night To Remember ?

  • @Red_sm1rk
    @Red_sm1rk6 сағат бұрын

    Genuinely hope all the survivors found peace and closure in the end, weather it be though friends and family or though a movie

  • @darrenmackenzie1892
    @darrenmackenzie18926 сағат бұрын

    Insurance inside job

  • @nicholasmorsovillo2752
    @nicholasmorsovillo27526 сағат бұрын

    The movies I've seen on the Titanic and one on her second sistership: Raise the Titanic (1980) Titanic (1997) Titanic (1943) The Titanic (1996) Titanic (1953) A Night to Remember Britannic And one movie on one of her most famous passengers: The Unsinkable Molly Brown (1964) Ghosts of the Abyss (2003)

  • @sparky6086
    @sparky60867 сағат бұрын

    Mike, You didn't mention the 1943 Nazi propaganda film, "Titanic", commisioned by Goebbels himself. Two clips from it, were actually used in "A Night to Remember".

  • @J.Severin
    @J.Severin7 сағат бұрын

    awesome Video, brought me to tears at the end.

  • @billt6116
    @billt61167 сағат бұрын

    Hartley's violin was in fact recovered from the wreck some years after it's discovery, And it was not in a case....

  • @helvaxh8348
    @helvaxh83487 сағат бұрын

    I saw the “Titanic” exhibit in Vegas a few years ago and there were several displays of things that were arranged exactly as they had been found. Every piece had a picture taken at the time of its discovery. The dish rack, still full of dishes, was probably to craziest. Sooo many fragile things survived the sinking intact and oftentimes still arranged as they had been before the ship went down. It was bizarre.

  • @boudicaastorm4540
    @boudicaastorm45407 сағат бұрын

    Thank you, this was interesting. I'm always wondering about things like this, what people think of catastrophes that have been made into movies when they were actually there. It's like Chernobyl where you have all the TV series and horror movies and video games and such, I always wonder whether the survivors are ok with it or not when those things are made by people who didn't experience it firsthand.

  • @nathalia65157
    @nathalia651577 сағат бұрын

    Very moving! I thought one of the first accounts of Eugene Daly was powerful where one of the last things he saw before hitting the water were priests giving absolution. That’s pretty powerful that they were doing their duties for those close to death when they could’ve been focusing on saving themselves; similar dynamic to the musicians who kept playing till the end. I imagine Daly, especially as an Irishman, recognized that and perhaps that’s why it stuck in his memory. Very cool video- all very moving accounts!

  • @trickiification
    @trickiification7 сағат бұрын

    absolutely fascinating. So grateful i found this channel! ty, Nicole.

  • @johnishikawa2200
    @johnishikawa22007 сағат бұрын

    One thing I'm sure all of those survivors could agree upon - it was a lot more comfortable watching the film in a nice warm theatre than it was remembering how cold that ocean was in those life boats and being plucked from the sea , the night sky ablaze with stars .

  • @trickiification
    @trickiification7 сағат бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @Rugerman205
    @Rugerman2057 сағат бұрын

    Very interesting video… we know Airplanes have headlights aside from the markers/beacons on the wings etc. Trains have them so this video was very enlightening Thanks for sharing!

  • @SailorV84
    @SailorV848 сағат бұрын

    I think i met Eleanor Johnson, She was at a titanic exhibition of some kind that displayed artifacts and models and information about Titanic, it was in south bank Brisbane, i feel like it was 97 or 96 when i went with a friend. We spent time alone with her, it was wonderful, my mind is foggy on the time tho, perhaps it was someone else, i truly am unsure, i remember she said she was a baby on titanic, she gave me a hug too.

  • @wingedbuffalo4670
    @wingedbuffalo46708 сағат бұрын

    ANOTHER TWO telltale signs (other than the names of the tugboats actually from NEW YORK harbor [which Titanic never got to] being scratched out of the footage purportedly depicting "Titanic" being pushed out to sea) are the following: 1) In the footage of Titanic's Captain Smith supposedly conducting a "final inspection" of Titanic "just 10 minutes before" Titanic got underway on her ill-fated maiden voyage, there are NO passengers shown. "IF" the vessel was truly a mere 10 minutes from cast-off, certainly the passengers would have already been aboard and milling about, so at least "some" of them would most assuredly have been visible; also 2) In that same footage purporting to show Captain Smith conducting a "final inspection" of "Titanic" mere minutes before she sailed (instead of admitting that it was in truth film footage of Capt Smith instead inspecting his prior ship -- Titanic's sister ship Olympic -- on a previous occasion), Capt Smith is depicted wearing his WHITE naval uniform -- which he would NOT have been wearing crossing the Atlantic in APRIL of 1912 !!!! He would have been wearing a dark/navy blue uniform unless it was summer.

  • @specialnewb9821
    @specialnewb98218 сағат бұрын

    Didn't Lightoller actually admit later that he'd been attempting to cover White Star Line's ass? Maybe not specifically on whether it broke in 2--after all he was kind of busy at the time--but his general approach.

  • @ursulageorgeson7086
    @ursulageorgeson70868 сағат бұрын

    'It was almost like murder, wasn't it? ' It was murder. The number of lifeboats cut before she was even launched shows willful negligence in her design. It would be interesting to study the alternative timeline of the Titanic. What changes could have brought her home safely. If she'd survived into retirement, she'd probably be on display now in Belfast: carefully preserved and loved as a landmark. THAT gives me chills.

  • @rosesandsongs21
    @rosesandsongs218 сағат бұрын

    What a superb production, and at the end, you almost made me shed a tear or two, well done. I was thinking, how would I react if an enemy saved my life by risking his own... That would probably spin me into an emotional duality, one side hates them but another pulls towards sympathy and tolerance, one very difficult cognitive dissonance if ever there was one: your country sends you to the butchery, but the butcher saves your life, ya gotta have some gratitude, but only later, after the war, for now, if you ever meet him again, you got to kill him... Ah man, stupid wars!