Obamerican
Senior Member
- Aug 21, 2010
- 1,732
- 136
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If the US didn't screw up the climate and cause global cooling they wouldn't have had that ice cube floating around in the shipping lanes.


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If the US didn't screw up the climate and cause global cooling they wouldn't have had that ice cube floating around in the shipping lanes.
of course, the keel was made with special DoD C4 coated Steel
And it sank at free-fall for only 2.25 seconds because of Newtonian Physics.
ALL HAIL NEWTONIAN PHYSICS!!!
Yet Eots says nothing. Hmmmmmm.........................of course, the keel was made with special DoD C4 coated Steel
And it sank at free-fall for only 2.25 seconds because of Newtonian Physics.
ALL HAIL NEWTONIAN PHYSICS!!!
Ever notice that they didn't impound the iceberg as evidence?
They knew it would prove an iceberg did not sink the Titanic
Titanic was an inside job
of course, the keel was made with special DoD C4 coated Steel
And it sank at free-fall for only 2.25 seconds because of Newtonian Physics.
ALL HAIL NEWTONIAN PHYSICS!!!
Ever notice that they didn't impound the iceberg as evidence?
They knew it would prove an iceberg did not sink the Titanic
Ice can't beak metal, however the blunt force of the impact of the ship against that huge iceberg would be enough to rip open the ship in my view.
Ice can't beak metal, however the blunt force of the impact of the ship against that huge iceberg would be enough to rip open the ship in my view.
Bull crap
Metal is harder than ice. Ice is just frozen water
If a metal ship hit an iceberg, the iceberg would sink not the ship
The steel used to build the Titanic was not as "impact-resistant" as modern steel, according to Dr. H.P. Leighly, a professor emeritus of metallurgical engineering at UMR. But it was the best steel available at the time, says Leighly, who studied some 200 pounds of steel from the wreckage.
Inferior steel wasn't the only reason the luxury ocean liner Titanic sank in the early morning hours of April 15, 1912. Other factors -- such as flaws in the ship's design, the crew's negligence and the lack of lifeboats -- also contributed to the disaster, Leighly says.
Ships made with this type of steel, this brittle, would certainly break open if they hit a large enough berg.At UMR, chemical and stress tests of metal samples from the Titanic's hull and bulkhead show that the steel used to build the ship was very inferior to modern steel. Impact tests conducted by Felkins show that the steel from the Titanic was about 10 times more brittle than modern steel when tested at freezing temperature -- the estimated temperature of the water at the time the Titanic struck the iceberg.
Testing Shows Titanic Steel Was Brittle
The steel used to build the Titanic was not as "impact-resistant" as modern steel, according to Dr. H.P. Leighly, a professor emeritus of metallurgical engineering at UMR. But it was the best steel available at the time, says Leighly, who studied some 200 pounds of steel from the wreckage.Inferior steel wasn't the only reason the luxury ocean liner Titanic sank in the early morning hours of April 15, 1912. Other factors -- such as flaws in the ship's design, the crew's negligence and the lack of lifeboats -- also contributed to the disaster, Leighly says.Ships made with this type of steel, this brittle, would certainly break open if they hit a large enough berg.At UMR, chemical and stress tests of metal samples from the Titanic's hull and bulkhead show that the steel used to build the ship was very inferior to modern steel. Impact tests conducted by Felkins show that the steel from the Titanic was about 10 times more brittle than modern steel when tested at freezing temperature -- the estimated temperature of the water at the time the Titanic struck the iceberg.
I saw different Titanic movies and ran them in slow motion and freeze frame...I also had a few friends over to confirm my findings...
We all agree that thermite charges was used just before the ship went under...
Definitely a controlled demolition.
Little known fact.
The Titantic didn't sink the ocean rose and swallowed it up.
Little known fact.
The Titantic didn't sink the ocean rose and swallowed it up.
Actually the ice did break, but the iceberg itself was solid all the way through as it stayed mostly intact, where as titanic was not. Metal is harder than wood but I doubt your car would stay all that intact if you drove into a tree at a somewhat fast speed.
Little known fact.
The Titantic didn't sink the ocean rose and swallowed it up.
Actually the ice did break, but the iceberg itself was solid all the way through as it stayed mostly intact, where as titanic was not. Metal is harder than wood but I doubt your car would stay all that intact if you drove into a tree at a somewhat fast speed.
But would your car sink?
I don't think so
Actually the ice did break, but the iceberg itself was solid all the way through as it stayed mostly intact, where as titanic was not. Metal is harder than wood but I doubt your car would stay all that intact if you drove into a tree at a somewhat fast speed.
But would your car sink?
I don't think so
What kind of silly statement is that?
Little known fact.
The Titantic didn't sink the ocean rose and swallowed it up.
Actually the ice did break, but the iceberg itself was solid all the way through as it stayed mostly intact, where as titanic was not. Metal is harder than wood but I doubt your car would stay all that intact if you drove into a tree at a somewhat fast speed.
Little known fact.
The Titantic didn't sink the ocean rose and swallowed it up.
Actually the ice did break, but the iceberg itself was solid all the way through as it stayed mostly intact, where as titanic was not. Metal is harder than wood but I doubt your car would stay all that intact if you drove into a tree at a somewhat fast speed.
The only reason your car gets damaged when it hits a tree is because the Bilderburgs and the NWO are stuffing the trees with pieces of icebergs.
True story!
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