no
If you are asking about what was the distress signal the Titanic wireless operators used, it was "CQD" ("All stations: distress").
Before the adoption of the SOS distress signal, the Titanic used the Morse code distress signal "CQD," which stands for "All stations, distress," to call for help. The ship's operators also sent out flares and used the ship's whistles to signal for assistance. The Titanic's last distress signal was a combination of CQD and SOS, as operators were transitioning to the new SOS signal when the disaster struck.
The first distress signal was sent out from Titanic at 12:27 AM ship's time.
it was destress rockets
Carpathia was 58 miles from Titanic when she received her distress signal.
Yes, Titanic called for help. The first distress signal was sent out after midnight at 12:27.
Carpathia, the only rescue boat, was 58 miles from Titanic when she received her distress signal.
there was no boats around, it was very late at night.
not as such, there was a ship not far from the titanic when they sent the distress signal out but, the captain of that ship thought it was a hoax so they ignored it.
The first SOS distress signal was transmitted by the RMS Titanic on April 15, 1912, during its sinking after hitting an iceberg. The ship's radio operators sent out the distress signal to alert nearby vessels for help. The SOS signal, which consists of three dots, three dashes, and three dots, was later adopted as the international standard for maritime distress calls.
RMS Titanic struck the iceberg at approximately 11:40pm on the 14th of April and a distress call was sent out just after midnight.
The abbreviation for a distress signal is DS or SOS.