i figured it out one egine in full ahead the other egine in halg reverse hard a port when back of ship starts coming up to the berg you put the egine in reverse in full and turn hard a starbord to avoid a stern collison
How long time did it take for you to figure this out? I am asking because Murdoch had only 38 seconds to get the message about the berg, figure out a solution and see it carried out. Not much time to consider ramming the berg or evade it.
However I am sure (this is my opponion only and no evidence) that Murdoch had enough knowledge about the engines and their influence of the course.
If it was me and with the knowledge we have today I would still not have rammed the berg. Again in my opponion and not supported by evidence, it would have made greater damage. If the bow were crumpled, but not torn off, you would have a lot of dead weight hanging there, not contributing to boyancy. The chockwave alone could make a lot of damage to the hull.
I dont believe the claims she make in the book. I think that she is mixing things. I somewhere have heard that there were such a mistake in helm turning under Lightollers command but that was under 1st world war, as the navy were using one order and civil shipping the other.
Also, if they made a wrong order 4 minutes before the impact, why did they not just keep turning? They would easily make a 90 degree turn in those 4 minutes.
Also, why should Hitchens be confused? It was not the first time Titanic had to turn.