Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Bismarck, Iowa, Yamato


6 comments:

  1. Two on the sea floor, one on display. As it should be. Brave crews all, nonetheless.

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    Replies
    1. Yep. And one had effective air cover, and the others ... didn't.

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    2. Supposedly, one of my Great Uncles went down with the Bismark. I'm sure I've forgotten more than I remember about the who;e story. I've researched it extensively, and still don't know what function he performed on the ship. I suspect it was in the galley. A familial trait.

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    3. Given the first comment, I guess all I can say is "Size Matters!"

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  2. We had designed the Montana class, which would have come in at about 72,000 tons and carried four triple-16 in turrets, two forward, two aft.

    We actually did build an Alaska class heavy cruiser, which looked like a mini-Iowa and sported three triple-12 in turrets

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  3. I'm amused by the editing of Bismarck's swastika...

    The Bureau of Ordinance (BuOrd) had originally intended Iowa to use the 16in/50 (50 caliber, length of the barrel times bore) Mk 2 and Mk 3 guns from the cancelled Battleships and Battlecruisers of the 1920 program (South Dakotas BB-49 and Lexington classes) The Bureau of Ships designed a ship that could not use that gun. The confusion resulted in BuOrd designing the superlative 16in/50 Mk 7, a 16in gun so powerful with a superheavy shell that she could have a fighting chance against Yamato, an opponent nearly a quarter larger than her...

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