All of Titanic was over 46,000 tons. Probably most of that would have been the steel.
Over 24,000 Tons Of Steel Was Used, Almost 1500 Tons Of That Went Into Making The 3 Million Rivets.
100 tons
The Titanic weighed ABOUT 46,000 tons. A large portion of that weight was the steel of the vessel.
The titanic used 825 tons of coal per day.
57,000 tons of steel
690 tons.
steelThe Titanic was (or is) largely constructed of steel, particularly the hull and all the internal bulkheads and decks. Her machinery spaces were filled with steel machinery (like boilers and the steam engines and shafts). She also had tons of wood, glass, fabrics and other materials used in her construction, particularly in the finish of the ship. The three screws (what some folks not familiar with things might call propellers) were fabricated of many, many tons of bronze.The bulk of Titanic is steel, which, as you know, is an alloy of iron and something on the order of about 1% carbon. Certainly a wide variety of construction materials were also used, but the hull and major structural elements were all steel. The massive screws (some call them propellers) were bronze, just to cite one example of "other" material used in construction.The hull of the titanic was made out of steelTitanic was built of iron, steel, and too much wood to pass today's fire codes.
1134
690 tons
The RMS Titanic was one of three sisters ships. Her sisters were the Olympic and Britanic. Although the Titanic was identical at the begin with her sister ship the Olympic, the Olympic was laid down first and sailed first. From her early voyages, changes or modifications were made to the Titantic as she neared completion. These modificatios added more tonnage to her making her the largest moving vessle at the time. Titanic's tonnage was 46,000.
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The Titanic displaced 52310 tons.