olympic class

  1. J

    A Larger Olympic Class Liner Design?

    What if Harland and Wolff and the White Star Line had decided to take the plunge and make the design of all three Olympic Class Liners even larger than they originally were? Say they decided to increase the length of the three liners from 882 feet to, say, around 975 feet instead, along with...
  2. Angelgreat

    Had WSL built a 4th Olympic-class ocean liner, how would her career be like?

    This is a follow up to What if the 4th Olympic-class ocean liner had been built? In a alternative universe, White Star Line decides to build a replacement sister ship for Titanic. She is named "Germanic" and is nearly identical to Britannic. She starts construction in late 1912, and is...
  3. Aurélien WOLFF

    Gallica and the olympic class (in french)

    Hello, for those who can read french, gallica has a bunch of period french press reports on the olympic class (and the lusitania as well). Here, the navigazette from june 1911 talk about the olympic entering service: Navigazette | 1911-06-22 | Gallica
  4. Aurélien WOLFF

    the olympic class as auxillliary cruisers?

    Hello, I wonder, had those ships been used for that role instead of troop ship or hospital ships, where would the guns be? The same location as olympic? Thanks for your answers, I reccall reading theyre was at least an idea on the olympic class being used as that but it seems to have quickly...
  5. I

    Olympic interior refits

    I know about what was changed and added to the ship but I just want to know something. I’m looking forward for descriptions of the designs of each room (1st, 2nd, Tourist-Third/Tourist & 3rd.) I'm also looking for some pictures of the new interiors. Specifically the interiors of the: 2nd Class...
  6. The RMS Britannic in B&W scheme.

    The RMS Britannic in B&W scheme.

    The RMS Britannic in black-and-white.
  7. The RMS Britannic in color.

    The RMS Britannic in color.

    The RMS Britannic in color.
  8. Jessie M.

    Switches

    So one thing I've noticed in quite a few representations of the sinking - A Night to Remember and James Cameron's Titanic being two of them - is that during scenes of the engine room that depict the later stages of the sinking the switches shut off by themselves and thus the engineers repeatedly...
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