It is debatable whether or not the disaster would have been prevented with binoculars. The surviving lookout claimed during the investigation that they would have seen the iceberg in time to avoid it. However, this is nothing more than the claims of a crew member who was under investigation and afraid of prosecution.
Many experts suggest that binoculars would not have helped as it was a moonless night. In such darkness, icebergs can only be seen by the water breaking over them. But on this night the sea was extremely calm. So while they MAY have seen it sooner, they may not have. In fact, they may have seen it later since binoculars limit your field of vision. Of course, had they seen it a few seconds later, Titanic likely wouldn't have sank either. Because rather than hitting the iceberg broadside and popping rivets along the side, it would have been a more head on collision, which would have caused many more injuries, maybe even some deaths, on impact, but would not have flooded enough compartments to sink the ship. There has been at least one case of a ship intentionally steering into an iceberg and slowly limping into its intended port, badly damaged but with all passengers safe.
There was no actual answer for this question but it seem the crew forgot to bring the binoculars aboard with them. any more question about Titanic please E-mail me: iamevanwang@gmail.com thank you!
There was a last minute change in the officers who were charge of the Titanic when it sailed from England to the USA, and the officer who was in charge of the equipment, (absentmindedly) took the key to the storage locker with him when he left the ship in England. They couldn't find a replacement key and the lookouts were not issued any binoculars, even though White Star Lines official policy was that binoculars were supposed to given to lookouts. They only had a few binoculars, and these were given to the high ranking officers, not the lookouts.
I never knew this before, but the binoculars were actually on the Titanic, but locked up inside a locker that no one bothered to look into. Before second officer Henry Wilde was given the job, the position belonged to David Blair. Blair had kept the binoculars inside a locker in his original cabin aboard the Titanic, but after he was moved, the room wasn't occupied. Therefore, no one knew the binoculars were on board.
Fredrick Fleet, the lookout on the Titanic, was miffed when his request for binoculars was denied in 1912. This incident is believed to have played a role in the ship's failure to spot an iceberg in time, contributing to the tragedy.
There are many online retailers that sell such goods as binoculars, like OpticsPlanet. OpticsPlanet retails the newest and best binoculars and ocular lenses to the general public, including the Minox Binoculars.
the titanic crashed because the person on look out forgot his binoculars, by the time they could see it, it was to late. this is just one theory, but there are many others
They were supposed to, but they were missing the night the ship collided with the iceberg
There was no actual answer for this question but it seem the crew forgot to bring the binoculars aboard with them. any more question about Titanic please E-mail me: iamevanwang@gmail.com thank you!
There was a last minute change in the officers who were charge of the Titanic when it sailed from England to the USA, and the officer who was in charge of the equipment, (absentmindedly) took the key to the storage locker with him when he left the ship in England. They couldn't find a replacement key and the lookouts were not issued any binoculars, even though White Star Lines official policy was that binoculars were supposed to given to lookouts. They only had a few binoculars, and these were given to the high ranking officers, not the lookouts.
there are many. the look out had no binoculars they ship went very fast they tried to turn from the ice berg they ignored the ice warnings
I never knew this before, but the binoculars were actually on the Titanic, but locked up inside a locker that no one bothered to look into. Before second officer Henry Wilde was given the job, the position belonged to David Blair. Blair had kept the binoculars inside a locker in his original cabin aboard the Titanic, but after he was moved, the room wasn't occupied. Therefore, no one knew the binoculars were on board.
They did not have binoculars. (reported later as lost, missing,or left behind in the UK)
No person sank the titanic, unless you attribute the sinking to the Captain's recklessness in steaming at full speed at night in potentially ice infested waters when his lookouts had no binoculars.
halfway through the journey of the titanic in the middle of the Atlantic ocean the metal of the titanic was at its most brittle and was easy to tear so the iceberg had no problem to rip the metal it was mostly the weathers fault it was a calm moonles night and the watchmen had no binoculars if they had seen it sooner the titanic would not have sunk
Is it a stroke of bad luck that sank the Titanic?David Blair was a sailor who forgot to leave a key on board the ship.Without it, his shipmates could not open a locker in the crow's nest containing a pair of binoculars. The binoculars were to be used to look out for bad weather and obstructions-such as icebergs. Lookout Fred Fleet who survived the disaster that claimed 1,517 lives, said that if they had the binoculars they would have seen the iceberg and have enough time to get out of its way.-Berrynic3
The Binoculars website sell many brands of binoculars. One can buy Zhumell, Bushnell, Nikon, Barska, Leica, Vortex, Zeiss, Alpen and Steiner brand binoculars from them.
Fredrick Fleet, the lookout on the Titanic, was miffed when his request for binoculars was denied in 1912. This incident is believed to have played a role in the ship's failure to spot an iceberg in time, contributing to the tragedy.