rivets
Rivets
Yes, Titanic will continue to erode. The metal plates will buckle, one-by-one. The "rusticles" will multiply and the wreck will fall in on itself. The only thing left to wonder is "how long".
The RMS Titanic had a displacement of 52,310 tons and a Gross Registered Tonnage of 46,328. The greater part of which was iron and its alloys.
Titanic was built from the keel up with mostly iron and steel.
Sea water corrodes metal, and the Titanic was made out of iron, so the entire ship is rusting out and slowly disintegrating. One day, the structure of the wreck will no longer be there
Many of the rivets were made with a large ratio of slag but they were originally above high-grade so, even diluted, they were still regulation-strength.
The rivets in the titanic were made of iron.
It hit an iceberg and made a hole
Rivets
No. It was made of iron and steel like other ships of that era.
Titanic was built of iron, steel, and too much wood to pass today's fire codes.
Titanic was built in Belfast, Ireland, in the dockyards of Harland & Wolff. She was made of iron, steel, and too much wood to pass today's safety codes.
A Girl because In the movie the Guy who made the Titanic said "She's made of Iron Sir and I'm sure she can't Sink".
Mostly steel. And since welding was new at the time it was held together by rivets made of iron and steel.
titanic was good because it had two layers of iron.
She wasn't built out of iron, but steel.
Its density. The iron that the Titanic was constructed of was denser than that of the water surrounding it; when there was not enough displacement and upforce to balance the downforce, the ship sinks.