You completely missed my point and you still look at it from the 'now versus then' perspective, mate.
Look at it from a 'then only' perspective. And then, compared to what we know was wrong - from their own accounts at that time even - and compared to other ships of the era, she was a poorly designed ship, amongst better designs in her time.
Easy as that. Not a great ship, not destined for great things at all.. But sadly though, she did become a ship of 'legend'. Which has everything to do with the loss of life, and nothing with her quality as a vessel. But Titanic 'buffs' seem to be unable to look at those things seperatly.
So I'm not talking 'any old design is poor compared to what we have/know nowadays' I am talking 'she was poor THEN, among her peers'. Don't take modern times into account at all, that was my point. In fact, I even think the opposite is true, they used to make some things in the 'old days', that we can hardly do better these days. Old is not bad by default, to me.. On the contrary.
They knew themselves that they made mistakes, and that the ship was not as safe as it was 'designed' to be. They recorded it even, and how can their own records be nonesense, and someone's unsubstantiated thoughts be factual?
It has nothing to do with the iceberg or the disaster. That's after the fact. Some measures were taken to right some of the wrongs (design flaws, POOR desing) but nothing could have prevented the iceberg taking her down, the way she was sailed at that moment. And again, that event has NOTHING to do with the design being poor to begin with. One does not exclude the other. Had she not sunk, it would have been obvious within years.. Or did all great ships of that time have that same, inadequate steel? I suspect not.
Oh, and the incident with the Islander was pretty similar, in general terms. Something like it HAD happened, more than once too even. The details about holes and compartments is just talk after the fact and does not change the fact that they could have known there could be icebergs in those regions, and they could have known what those could do, as ships had sunk before. It was not as if no one had ever thought about icebergs before, as some make it seem. That's simply not true.
And to say that they didn't take it into account as she was 'unsinkable' anyway (like some do), then I can only say that the unsinkable myth came into life after the disaster.
Also as said before, that 4 compartment idea, that is not backed up by any fact. The water rushed in so quick, that it soon reached levels that could not be blocked anyway. If their design was poor on some area's, then I don't put much faith into the 'thought' that 4 flooded compartments would keep her afloat. It might, it might not. No way to tell that for sure, they didn't KNOW that, they ASSUMED that.. they didn't go and flood her to find out...
You almost make it sound as if EVERY ship then had similar problems, since they were all doing 'new stuff', but that's not what I was saying at all. Some were better than others, and that's always the case, in any era. And Titanic was just not as good as other ships. Not good, not great. Average and flawed at best.
Fred