Titanic 1912 Wreck - 1:100 scale model by Jason King

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Published 2014-05-26
This is my latest model, completed in May 2014. I scratch built this Titanic wreck model to 1:100 scale. As far as I am aware this wreck model has never been built before. It depicts how I imagine Titanic looked the morning she sank and hit the sea bed. Titanic wreck April 15th 1912.

All Comments (21)
  • @JABORG666
    CHECK OUT MY OTHER VIDEOS SHOWING MY CURRENT 1:72 SCALE TITANIC MODEL.
  • Man, I always wondered what it must have looked like the morning after it sank, and now I can. Great job!
  • @lune78
    So cool to see the wreck as it would have appeared the next day, without all the rusticles, I wish we would've had the technology to explore the wreck in 1912.
  • @SLLindstrom
    This should be exhibited at a Titanic museum, such detail!
  • @TheRavendearest
    I noticed that the grand staircase was missing. Good touch! It’s theorized that it broke loose and floated free at one point as she sank. James Cameron talked about how they had built the film set to the original specifications and that when it was first was flooded for filming it tore loose and began to float out.
  • @femmefuntime
    The amount of detail and those tiny things you'd never think of (like that part of the break where the internal wall sections are different colors) is just amazing
  • Keep this to show future people how the titanic looked before it deteriorated completely.
  • @Protantagonist
    What's scary and creepy is that the morning after it sank, there must have been 100s of bodies floating around inside the ship
  • The amount of details in this is just amazing not everyone will put this much effort into a model like this
  • @yea0276
    Amazing job. 1.this model shows exact damage without all that mud,rust etc. 2.Thats how Titanic looked, straight after hitting the ocean floor.And later on slowly , slowly, rust appeared, titanic went deeper in to a mud. Etc
  • The clean wreck really shows off the devastation. Thinking about the forces involved to to that makes your stomach churn.
  • @harveyblore2764
    This person who did it deserves a medal because some people here might not know about it but thanks to you I think they'll be able to!
  • @hop208
    Amazing model!! Without all the the ocean grime and rusticles, it is much easier to understand what exactly happened to the ship once it hit the ocean floor.
  • @StellarYankee
    How can someone dislike this video, my brain exploded from watching and seeing all the detail. Well done.
  • @richterkleiber
    This is absolutely astonishing and must have taken hundreds of hours to do—thank you for this and congratulations!
  • It took her nearly five minutes for her bow to hit the bottom, just imagine her drifting through the cold blackness of the ocean, the final minutes before she meets her final resting place, oh man it gives you chills
  • @Lycon721995
    Looks as if shes was found only a couple days after going down
  • @csigunner5087
    Woah, this is accurate as hell. I mean to how I imagined the wreck looking the morning she hit bottom. Besides, beside the rusticles and the deterioration of the wreck due to those bacteria eating away at her she is still in pristine condition due to her depth. If you look at footage from the wreck you can still see the difference between the white and black paint. I bet if it was concluded that this was an incredibly accurate model of her soon after she hit bottom any museum would be willing to take it. Are you a professional model maker or is this just a hobby of yours. In case you can't tell I am very, very impressed.
  • Great model! Such a unique depiction too. Most “wreck” models show after it has been ravaged by time and not the “fresh body”. Again GREAT job.