How long does it take for a question to be answered in the drydock right now?
@KPen3750 Жыл бұрын
Given how much you like these questions, New Jerseys front and rear turrets are aimed at roughly 20-25 degrees elevation. Assuming no structures are in the immediate flight path out of the city, where would the shells land respectively?
@picklerick8785 Жыл бұрын
Did the USN and RN dismissal of interwar IJN pilots and their skills also stem (in part) from the fact that they were not officers and college graduates like the USN/RN pilots, but enlisted sailors with a technical school education? Did this class distinction matter to how Japanese officers treated enlisted Japanese pilots as expendable?
@michaelkovacic2608 Жыл бұрын
@@KPen3750 you can answer that question yourself by looking at the elevation/range table for these guns at navweaps.
@stevevalley7835 Жыл бұрын
@@michaelkovacic2608 well, Drac has not gotten up to answering questions from guide 334 yet, and guide 334 was posted May 6th. so the lead time, right now, looks to be about five months.
@jonskowitz Жыл бұрын
"It's a shame both of these were sent to the bottom..." Well, it seemed important to do so at the time.
@stillcantbesilencedevennow Жыл бұрын
Lmao
@khaelamensha3624 Жыл бұрын
I must admit, you seems to have made a point right here 😇
@Bilskirnir3124 Жыл бұрын
The USN had a point to prove. It's ships were best, and everyone else's ships were coral reefs.
@jaysonlima7196 Жыл бұрын
And provided they DID somehow survive the war I have my doubt that they wouldn't be expended at Bikini....
@judahboyd2107 Жыл бұрын
@@jaysonlima7196They would probably have been scrapped. We weren't really interested in keeping our enemies ships as museums (They were the losers, why show how great their ships were?), and the age of big guns was coming to a close so there was no excuse to use them. Hell, we scrapped Enterprise. It's a miracle Texas is still around, and a bigger miracle the funds exist to preserve her.
@Wolfeson28 Жыл бұрын
When the time comes (hopefully FAR in the future, of course) for Drach to cross the River Styx...I'm sure he'll spend the entire voyage explaining to Charon how the Barge of the Dead could really be much more efficient if he switched it to an all-forward main battery. 😁
@baalzeebub4230 Жыл бұрын
With a diesel - steam split system.
@gayprepperz686211 ай бұрын
LMAO 🤣🤣
@TomFynn3 ай бұрын
At one point Charon will go: "Alright, I warned you. Now we'll turn back."
@maryholder37956 күн бұрын
😂😆😂😆😂
@thingamabob39026 күн бұрын
and Charon may or may not stuff the coin he got for the fare in Drachs face to shut him up .... and then proceed to refit to the bloody forward battery 😉😉
@Khymerion Жыл бұрын
So, is the Nelson type pretty much the naval version of the evolution of crabs?
@bella_ciao4608 Жыл бұрын
Nelsonization
@chicken_burgers Жыл бұрын
And she’s not the pride of Royal Navy because they find her ugly.
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
I’d argue the “3x3 two forward one aft” layout is another candidate.
@Khymerion Жыл бұрын
@@bella_ciao4608 Perfect.
@grahamstrouse1165 Жыл бұрын
PBS Eons fan, by any chance?
@michaelsnyder3871 Жыл бұрын
If you look at Japan's "8-8-8" program in 1922, you will notice that even the "No.13" design with 46cm guns had a full load displacement under 50,000 metric tons and a draft that did not exceed 35 feet. This was due to the limitations of Japan's infrastructure, industry and harbors and coastal waters. What the Japanese did during the period of the London Treaty of 1930 was to not only rebuild their entire battle line, three battlecruisers and two capital ship derived aircraft carriers, but also update their infrastructure, industry and harbors and coastal waters. The main limitation was launch displacement and deep draft. The Japanese improved their launch displacement at the two slips used to build "Yamato" and "Musashi" from ~40,000 metric tons to 55,000 metric tons. They also dredged their harbors and the lanes in their coastal waters. They improved their industries and infrastructure, such as building a special vessel to transport the guns and turrets from the IJ facility were they had been built to the construction yards. Yet even 55,000 metric tons proved too little, when combined with a full load draft limitation of 37 feet (this is why the succeeding class retained the main features of the "Yamato" class while changing the main armament from nine 46cm guns to six 51cm guns). The Japanese had to adopt the second best solution for the joint that joined the upper and lower belts, because the optimal design would have been too heavy for the target displacement. This didn't seem too matter as much when the decision was made as the joint, like the "Yamato" classes' torpedo protection system was designed to resist torpedoes and mines with a warhead of 880lbs of TNT equivalent. This was even after the Japanese themselves adopted a surface ship torpedo, the 61cm Type 93, with a warhead equivalent to 1,088lbs of TNT. Then in 1943, the British and Americans developed TORPEX for their ASW weapons, torpedoes and mines. TORPEX has the explosive effect ~50% greater than TNT. This meant that the USN's Mk.13 aerial torpedo with a 600lbs warhead which was now equivalent to 900lbs TNT could now seriously stress the "Yamato" classes' torpedo protection system. The warheads of the Mk.14 submarine and Mk.15 surface torpedoes became a definite overmatch. Yamato was hit by a Mk.14 torpedo which carried a TORPEX warhead equivalent to ~1,000lbs of TNT. The hit near the stern caused significant damage, the failure of the upper and lower belt joint failing, leading to the aft 46cm magazine flooding. IJNS Musashi was hit forward by a Mk.14 on 29 March 1944 causing a similar failure of the joint. When designed, the Japanese believed that "Yamato" could take four torpedoes with 880lbs warheads on one side, resulting in much of the hull outside the protected "raft body" being flooded (the raft body covered about 55% of the side of the class) and still reach an IJN base. Both ships of the class were by USN dive and torpedo bombers, the "Musashi" taking between eleven and nineteen Mk.13 aerial torpedoes with warheads equivalent to 900lbs of TNT before she sank and "Yamato" took between eleven and thriteen Mk.13 torpedoes. Both attacks simply overmatched the defensive capabilities of the protection of the "Yamato" class, a situation unforeseen by her designers.
@willxiv Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the details.
@VM-is8by Жыл бұрын
Good details
@GregMoress Жыл бұрын
Cool. Hit Enter twice to make a paragraph. Like this.
@johncollins6755 Жыл бұрын
@@GregMoress Thanks Greg...as an "older fella", I have struggled to find a means to insert a spacing for a new paragraph. Sometimes you can find some particular help, even when you aren't looking for it at the time. Blessings to you...
@heatmyzer9 Жыл бұрын
@@GregMoresssavage comment.
@juliantolley2191 Жыл бұрын
My grandfather was dockyard foreman and was involved in the rush to shorten the Nelson. He was on the bridge when they first fired all the main guns together. He related that they watched the boat heel over and over. It approached the maximum angle and went past, then very slowly righted itself. It was made clear that the Nelson was never to fire all main guns at the same time ever again....
@brownwrench Жыл бұрын
At least not broadside
@kennethdeanmiller7324 Жыл бұрын
But what about HMS Rodney, I had heard that when she was firing at Bismarck that some of the salvo's were full every gun salvo's. What was different that Rodney could but Nelson could not? Or were those full salvo's staggered just a bit so the ship didn't heel too far over???
@frankgleaves108411 ай бұрын
Didn't they find a Very slight delay of the center gun in each turret necessary to reduce shell dispersion? I don't know if that would have been enough to also solve the heeling issue without causing a distinct delay.
@kennethdeanmiller732411 ай бұрын
@@frankgleaves1084 I do know that the US Standards that were equipped with triple gun turrets were having accuracy issues that were fixed by a short delay in firing the middle gun because the blast radius of all 3 together would cause the shells to go tumbling way off course. But I'm not sure if HMS Nelson experienced that problem as well, which the slight delay was the easy fix for it. But as far as the ship heeling over too far after a full salvo of all the main guns, I would also think that the direction and/or angle of the guns when fired would also have a bearing on how far the ship heels to the other side.
@DeDerpyDerp_11 ай бұрын
@frankgleaves1084 I know HMS Belfast did that, hence the center gun on every turret is also a few inches shorter
@RaptorMaitre Жыл бұрын
Glad you kept the naval gun shots in the intro. I can't help but love Naval big gun sounds. Great video as usual.
@EliteValor1003 Жыл бұрын
Don't forget that it had Shock Cannons and Wave motion engine options with plans to take it to space.
@kmech3rd Жыл бұрын
Hoping for an in depth analysis of Gamilas space ships...
@thundercactus Жыл бұрын
And a large hanger bay for fighters!
@Battleship009 Жыл бұрын
I got that reference.
@arthurschipper8906 Жыл бұрын
I grew up watching star blazers too.
@Battleship009 Жыл бұрын
@@arthurschipper8906 I didn't, I found out in the 2010's as I was born in 1993.
@Kevin_Kennelly Жыл бұрын
Beautiful ship drawings. They worked well with your narration. I think it's safe to say that we all walked away from this with a smile. Many thanks. 35:03 "And this, AT LAST, would be the ship that would become Yamato."
@ironteacup2569 Жыл бұрын
I love behind the scenes stuff like this. The depth of understanding on how/why they built what the built is of extreme interest to me
@Habdabi Жыл бұрын
Agreed, much better than splurging stats
@Alobo075 Жыл бұрын
Glad to see the fine work of Tzoli getting shown in these videos. I have been a follower of his gallery for many years. His alternate designs are well researched.
@sirjohnbarlow7261 Жыл бұрын
Totally agree! Was kinda waiting for him to actually be showcased in this channel someday but totally didn't expect it anyway, lovely match for the videos.
@Big_E_Soul_Fragment Жыл бұрын
Oh sick, a history of the IJN Izumo
@davefinfrock3324 Жыл бұрын
It's in there. Somewhere. What we have in WoWS as Izumo is--mostly--one of the J-series ships, but with a notional AA refit, hence the loss of two of the 6.1" turrets. However, there are design elements in the in-game model reminiscent of the C and D-series diesel ships and the more conventional G-series. At a guess, this is done for visual cues reminiscent of Yamato, since some of these ships had fairly radical appearances with only the tower-style pagoda mast being similar to Yamato.
@atpyro7920 Жыл бұрын
Or alternatively, a history of the IJN Iwami. Or Hizen, or-
@gothia1715 Жыл бұрын
25:04 Here we have it.
@BruceRKF Жыл бұрын
For those interested, World of Warships features designs A-140-J2 and A-140-J3 as Izumo and Hizen, respectively. Iwami is also mostly A-140-J3, but with only twin turrets (I guess you could say the B2 gun layout, but with 410 instead of 460 mm guns). At least that is what I could infer from pictures and reading up about the A-140 series. Please feel free to correct me if I'm wrong.
@BruceRKF Жыл бұрын
@lurkingcarrier8736 It would fit better, yes, but you could continue the argument with other ships: e.g. Tosa could be the tier 8 and Amagi wander over to the battlecruises. There could be a complete tech tree for battlecruisers from tier 4, starting with Myogi and Kongo and new tier 4 and 5 battleships (there are enough blue prints available) and on and on and on. Sadly, WG never goes with what the fans want or things that are sensible or require effort (and money).
@davemehelas5053 Жыл бұрын
There’s a Japanese film out there named Yamato. Gives the whole background from the Japanese perspective. English subtitles. Very well done.
@glenchapman3899 Жыл бұрын
The Great War of Archimedes, and yes a very well done film
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
@@glenchapman3899 Except the entire plot doesn’t make sense historically for three big reasons-the Japanese didn’t abandon carrier construction to build Yamato as presented in the film, Yamamoto never quite figured out battleships were obsolete (though, in his defence, no WWII-era admiral ever really did), and trying to get Yamato cancelled by pointing out she breaks treaty limits would never work because Japan wasn’t part of the treaty system by 1937.
@tholmes2169 Жыл бұрын
I saw it the other day but instead of subtitles it had horrible English dubbing. Interesting story but I’m guessing most of it was fictional.
@edwardhebert3055 Жыл бұрын
I own it, good film
@frankgleaves10849 ай бұрын
@@bkjeong4302 Remember Yamamoto never got to be IJN Chief of Staff (Nagano in 1941) Or the Navy Minister (Yonai from 1937 to September 1939), who had been the one who had backed the Yamato class as the way to assure Japan qualitative superiority even if the US outnumbered them. Admiral Mitsumasa Yonai had been a supporter of the Naval Treaties and an opponent of growing Japanese Militarism even before the 1930 London Naval Treaty, when Yamamoto threatened to "smash" the Japanese Economics adviser at the Conference if he said again that Japan couldn't afford a Naval Race with the UK and US. (Hoyt, "Yamamoto") By the 1934 Naval Treaty Conference Yamamoto belonged to the "Treaty Faction" like Yonai, and Osami Nagano of the "Fleet Faction" had told him he could be silenced with a knife between the ribs. When radical young officers proclaimed a "Showa Restoration" February 26, 1936, Yonai commanding Yokosuka Naval Station near Tokyo was the first Officer to denounce the young officers murdering the Emperor's advisers and Cabinet Ministers as actually being in Rebellion against the Emperor. military-history.fandom.com/wiki/Mitsumasa_Yonai Hirohito was encouraged by the sign of support from the Navy to announce he was taking personal command of his Palace Guard to disperse the Rebels, and Tojo's "Control Faction" of Senior Army Officers was forced to take action and call out their troops to protect the Emperor. By December Yonai was Commander-in-Chief of the Combined Fleet, and within 6 months Navy Minister. Yamamoto was appointed Deputy Minister, and soon became the mouthpiece for his chief, a "man of few words" with an "indecipherable Nambu accent", infuriating the militarists with his apology for the sinking of the gunboat USS Panay safeguarding refugees at the siege of Nanking. When Germany betrayed Japan with the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact a few days after Zhukov's victory over the 29th Division of the Kwantung Army at Khalkin Gol, Japan had to abandon its plans for an Alliance with Germany against the USSR. A new Government was formed without the outspoken Yonai and Yamamoto, sacrificed for more moderate officers to take advantage of the Army's loss of face after their defeat by Zhukov and German betrayal to try to restore harmony in Japan. Before leaving the Navy Ministry August 30, 1939 Yonai sent Yamamoto to sea in command of the Combined Fleet, where he would have better security against militarist assassins. So Yamamoto developed his plans for Pearl Harbor and a Great Naval Battle nearer Wake Island with the support of the more moderate old "Treaty Faction" officers running the Navy Ministry, rather than the pro-Nazi "Fleet Faction" officers like Chief of the IJN General Staff Nagano, in charge of planning. Agawa mentions Yamamoto's proposal to the Navy Minister in 1939 to move the site of the Great Decisive Battle closer to the Marshall Islands, and by 1940 the modern school on Eniwetok Island was demolished to make way for an airfield while work was begun on a submarine base in the great atoll. Agawa even wrote in his Yamamoto biography "The Reluctant Admiral" (1969) that Yamamoto hoped Yonai could be brought back from retirement to replace him as Chief of the Combined Fleet, so that he could command the Kido Butai in the attack. (Against being yet another military Prime Minister, Admiral Yonai had retired when Emperor Hirohito had him appointed Premier January 16, 1940.) On the Eve of the Germsn Break-out across the Meuse River at Sedan, Agawa says Yamamoto had told his Chief of Staff Admiral Fukudome that an air attack on Pearl Harbor was now feasible. War Minister General Hata had just begun his campaign to force Yonai to approve Alliance with Germany or be forced to resign by Army refusal to provide him a War Minister. And the airfield and submarine base on Eniwetok were under construction, only 600 nautical miles from Wake Island and about 1200 from the big base at Truk Atoll. Yonai's return would prove impossible until Tojo resigned with the loss of the Emperor's support on the Fall of Saipan, four years after Yonai's resignation.
Жыл бұрын
Thx to Tzoli for the beautiful illustrations of all those designs. They really helped the Story.
@auxityne Жыл бұрын
Somewhere there's a universe where every battleship is a Nelson, but Nelson and Rodney had aft turrets.
@WalterReimer Жыл бұрын
Not so loud! World of Warships will hear you!
@bullreeves1109 Жыл бұрын
We need a portrayal of the true timeline where Nelson, North Carolina, and Yamato are all Nelson layout carrier hybrids!
@cavalierliberty68383 ай бұрын
I'd argue out of those three, North Carolina is the only one worth a damn. Namely cause she still is topside in one piece.
@karlgustav999 Жыл бұрын
Considering that the Japanese burned the plans for these ships after the war, what sort of design mysteries remain?
@jamespocelinko104 Жыл бұрын
I used to think that inventing time travel would result in lots of people using it to try and stop Hitler. Now I suspect it would mostly be used by historians (professional and amateur) to steal books and documents before they could be lost or destroyed.
@ph89787 Жыл бұрын
The Death Star?
@gbreslin6635 Жыл бұрын
Saw recently that Mitsubishi kept at least some of the plans for Musashi.
@pendragooon Жыл бұрын
Ask Wargaming’ Fantasy Department.
@konstantinriumin2657 Жыл бұрын
Installation of either 800mm Schwer Gustav copy or Tesla's death ray as a spinal weapon
@cmcb7230 Жыл бұрын
I love how the Japanese navy only seemed to take photographs of their warships while they were traveling at full speed.
@carlossaraiva8213 Жыл бұрын
It looks good for propaganda.
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
@@carlossaraiva8213 Yamato was never used for propaganda purposes (due to all the secrecy) so that was not a factor with her or her sister.
@carlossaraiva8213 Жыл бұрын
@@bkjeong4302 you mean Hotel Yamato?
@B1900pilot Жыл бұрын
These were taken while running her trials…I think she made a shade over 27 knots.
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
@@B1900pilot She got slightly over 28kt on trials.
@charlescdt6509 Жыл бұрын
Wargaming needs to hire you stat. You are far better at explaining ship designs then their crew is.
@timgodderis1918 Жыл бұрын
New Drach video ... instant like
@ironteacup2569 Жыл бұрын
Every time he gets a like
@christophpoll784 Жыл бұрын
Instant like and Mark to watch later.
@khaelamensha3624 Жыл бұрын
@@christophpoll784yep, Wednesday vidéo are ready at the same time of my meeting with my manager. As I think he is the seasick on a calm lake type, no way he would accept that I use the meeting screen to watch Drach video. This world is sick 😇😂
@trickydicky2908 Жыл бұрын
It certainly was a beautiful ship design.
@glenchapman3899 Жыл бұрын
I am not a fan, but that sweep of her foredeck is an absolute thing of beauty.
@mazdrpan4099 Жыл бұрын
It was completely horrible and makes Bismarck design seem efficient.
@greener2497 Жыл бұрын
@@mazdrpan4099 the cope is strong with this one
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
@@mazdrpan4099 A Yamato shrunk down to Bismarck’s size would still be significantly superior to Bismarck.
@AmosDohms Жыл бұрын
She certainly has her own distinct style. I like the bow shape and the curved sides, not a big fan of everything going on aft. I prefer the Yamato's look to that of any of the American fast battleships, but rank the Germans and British higher still.
@SMGJohn Жыл бұрын
Cannot believe they made this heavy thing go into space, just mind boggling engineering to achieve it
@SaturnCanuck Жыл бұрын
That was great! I always loved the design of the Yamato and thought she was both a pretty and aggressive class. I look forward to your follow up history of the A-140S-74, when, in 2199, she was converted into the Space Battleship Yamato of the Earth Space Fleet to defend against the Gamilas.
@kyleolson8977 Жыл бұрын
Gamilas: "Does anybody know why the humans keep sending all their tech to the bottom of the ocean near Okinawa? Seems weird."
@Ah01 Жыл бұрын
Would have been an aggressive design, had the empire possessed anywhere nearly enough fuel to actually operate it. 😂
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
@@Ah01 It wouldn’t have mattered how much fuel the IJN had; Yamato was always going to be useless because there was no real strategically justifiable use for her. Which is exactly what happened with things like the Iowas at the same time, being actively deployed but proving to be wastes of money themselves.
@Ah01 Жыл бұрын
@@bkjeong4302 yeah, but US had the fuel to use Iowa's as (somewhat overexpensive) Carrier escorts... so, they had their uses. And no one knew at the time when the Iowas were ordered if USA would have a decisive air superiority at their commissioning time, so the Yamatos had to be countered somehow. In hindsight it proved that any five essex'es could do the job, and did.
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
@@Ah01 Using a capital ship as a gigantic destroyer/CLAA instead of as an actually viable capital ship is already a strategic disaster. The fact the USN used the Iowas in that manner doesn’t mean the Iowas were useful, it just means the US war economy was so powerful that it could actively fuck itself over with unnecessary battleship construction/deployment and still win the war. The Yamatos had nothing to do with the design and construction of the Iowas because the USN had no idea the Yamatos existed, let alone how capable they were, at that point.
@leopardone2386 Жыл бұрын
"What do you mean they are turning warships into anime waifus?"
@mecharobby Жыл бұрын
Lol
@Cobra-King3 Жыл бұрын
The fact that Drach was exposed to such makes this even funnier
@champagnegascogne9755 Жыл бұрын
@@Cobra-King3 and he ultimately decided he loves Hood's design.
@alexvisser5913 Жыл бұрын
It's good stuff trust me
@drakeconsumerofsoulsandche4303 Жыл бұрын
Yamato best hotel waifu
@fifthcrusade4607 Жыл бұрын
Next video will be: Imperial Star Destroyer another Nelson design
@ph89787 Жыл бұрын
Or the Fire Nation ships. Nelsons with catapults.
@theheretic6398 Жыл бұрын
You laugh, but that's what I started building in Space engineers. A Star destroyer like shape with a heavy triple battery each super firing in the center 😂 superstructure 😂😂
@arthurschipper8906 Жыл бұрын
😂😂
@MM22966 Жыл бұрын
Lies! Kuat built a balanced capital combatant!
@MM22966 Жыл бұрын
@@ph89787Oh shit, Now I can't unsee it. The squared off sterns, the weirdly lengthened but somehow bare area forward of the superstructure...
@ididthat1st Жыл бұрын
I'd love you to do a video on how the Japanese were able to copy their British built Kongo in their own dockyards. What components were built locally etc. Keep up the great work Drach!
@michaelsnyder3871 Жыл бұрын
Easy. The British sold them the building plans, provided tooling and mechanical engineers and trained Japanese naval architects, engineers and workers. While Kongo was built in Britain, Fuso was claimed to be the first dreadnought type vessel completed in Japan that was totally of materiel and systems built in Japan. Follow the trail, each successive member of the Kongo class had less and less major assemblies and systems produced in Britain.
@Tuning3434 Жыл бұрын
I would expect the design process, build plans and technology transfer where part of the deal, because IJN for sure wanted to have the capability to maintain / modify their ships on their side of the world. Doesn't change the fact that the RN were the trailblazers of technological development, and the Japanese got the entry to the 'current level' with their newbuilds.
@chicken_burgers Жыл бұрын
Ended up having all four ships slightly different, after second refit all had different pagoda towers.
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
@@chicken_burgers Hiei ended up not having a pagoda at all and got a tower mast instead, as a test to see if that would work for the Yamatos (it did work, and the Yamatos ended up being the only Japanese battleship class without pagoda masts).
@bryant7201 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the 36 minute 5 minute guide! Amazed you found such resources given the secrecy and post war destruction of documents.
@nostalgiaof9810 ай бұрын
The way the front shapes up, side on is beautiful. Reminds me of a chinese rooftop. Its beautiful how tanks and ships can just reflect the aesthetic of their nation.
@martinhaigh8345 Жыл бұрын
Being a Japanese naval architect in the 1930s sounds like every 9 Yr old boy's dream job. I wonder if one of them ever looked at himself in the mirror and said "Dude! You are getting paid to draw fantasy battleships!"
@Antisocialnerd2 Жыл бұрын
yeah but then they had to add "if you make a mess of this job then countless numbers of your fellow countrymen will be killed and your home conquered "
@martinhaigh8345 Жыл бұрын
@@Antisocialnerd2 They did a great job then.... Seriously, this is a classic case of generals preparing to fight the last war. How much of their resources did the Japanese devote to designing and building immense battleships to fight a war where battleships would be largely irrelevant?
@Antisocialnerd2 Жыл бұрын
@@martinhaigh8345 Easy to say what will be obsolete etc with seventy years of hindsight. If someone comes up with a way to completely negate stealth technology you could be saying the same thing about America after ww3
@AKUJIVALDO Жыл бұрын
@@Antisocialnerd2like Russia and China does? I mean, "the stealth" doesn't exist...what does is optimised plane geometry while facing short wave radar head on.
@Antisocialnerd2 Жыл бұрын
@@AKUJIVALDO You literally just defined what stealth is while saying it doesn't exist and claim Russia and China can negate it without saying how. Sorry but that is a really REALLY dumb comment.
@arkdeniz Жыл бұрын
More evidence supporting the maxim that a design that looks aesthetically pleasing is probably a pretty good design (at least for the parameters you’ve set for it).
@AGTheOSHAViolationsCounter Жыл бұрын
Okay now THIS intro music is absolutely the best attempt at a replacement for the much missed old intro music.
@esmenhamaire6398 Жыл бұрын
A particularly wonderful episode, Drach, explaining the design process involved, and many thanks to Tzoli for allowing you to make use of their wonderful drawings!
@thundercactus Жыл бұрын
I love the discussion and arguments around the building of the Yamato class. And I've seen so many people ask "why did the IJN even build battleships during the age of naval air power"?? Well it's very simple: They DIDN'T! Many of the IJN's famous carriers of the Kido Butai had been in service prior to Yamato being laid down, Shokaku and Zuikaku being the exceptions having been laid down around the same time and commissioned mere months before Yamato in December of 1941. So one could argue the IJN was already heavily shifting towards carriers, HOWEVER, carrier doctrine had not been established or proven at this point in time. The Battle of Taranto was actually the first time the world realized the tactical value of carriers ADDED TO A FLEET. That was all the way into November of 1940. The sinking of Bismarck once again solidified the fact that carriers were now a staple of future naval warfare.... in their capacity of being ADDED TO A FLEET. This was now May of 1941, and the allies have now just decided that every battle fleet NEEDS a carrier. Battleships still aren't obsolete by a mile at this point. The US and Britain are still hard charging to design and build new battleships. The very first Iowa class was laid down in June of 1940, nearly THREE YEARS after Yamato was laid down. And they kept pumping out Iowa's until the end of 1942, and were even preparing designs for the Montana class with 3 extra 16" guns! So clearly the allies didn't think concentrated naval air power was the future and that battleships were obsolete yet. The very first time the world realized concentrated carrier air power was the future of naval warfare was actually the Pearl Harbour attack in December of 1941, only a week before Yamato was fully commissioned! And worth noting that while some of the carriers used at Pearl Harbour were over a decade old, the famous fighters used in the attack were actually QUITE new! The Zero and Val having been introduced in 1940, exception being the Kate which predates the Yamato being laid down by a few months. Fact is, just a week prior to Yamato being commissioned, no one IN THE WORLD, not even the IJN, fully understood just how effective aircraft carrier task forces could be. And even after the fact, battleships were still seen as indispensable. What else would you fight another battleship with? What's going to perform shore bombardments? I'd argue that the end of the battleship era didn't really come to pass until Yamato was sunk exclusively by air power. And so it has a rather awkward lifespan of coming in right as air power starts to turn naval doctrine, and it's destruction signalled the end of an era.
@imprisongroverfurr525211 ай бұрын
There's also the fact that most of the supposed examples of battleships being helpless against aircraft were: 1. Stationary ships in port (Taranto, Pearl Harbour, Kure, Sinking of Tirpitz) 2. Completely unescorted battleships (Hunt for the Bismarck) 3. Battleships with terrible or malfunctioning AA guns (Hunt for the Bismarck, Sinking of Tirpitz, Force Z, Sibuyan Sea, Operation Ten-Go) 4. Battleships hit with such an overwhelming air attack that it would have sunk a whole armada of any other ship type (Sibuyan Sea, Operation Ten-Go) Not a single battleship that was well escorted and had good AA capabilities was sunk at sea by aircraft alone during WWII. And they still proved extremely useful assets in both surface action and shore bombardment.
@thundercactus11 ай бұрын
@@imprisongroverfurr5252 Excellent points! Even after WW2, while no one built any *new* battleships, they still retained the ones they had for another decade or more for exactly the reasons you mentioned. The US even brought some back into service in the 80s just for the bombardment capabilities. A strong argument can be made that the "carrier age" didn't truly begin until the jet age began, with the addition of air to ship missiles putting jet fighters beyond the capabilities of AA gun emplacements. While we see carriers start to replace battleships at the core of fleets in late WW2 (fast carrier task force), those fleets still had battleships with them! We do see carrier based fleets at this point (taffy 3), but they're not meant for naval surface combat, just ASW, ground support, and to be attached to other fleets for escort. On that note; the Battle Off Samar can't really be seen as a good example of a carrier victory either. Taffy 3 HEROICALLY managed to get the Japanese fleet to retreat, but they lost half their own fleet in the process, and the only reason the Japanese didn't press their attack was because they thought they were attacking 3rd fleet (which had battleships).
@williamgreen7415 Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@leeroyjamesstudios Жыл бұрын
Considering i'm about to start a Japan Campaign on Ultimate Admiral: Dreadnoughts - this video is well received. Pleasure to be here as always.
@Drewmikola Жыл бұрын
Best new intro music yet! Sounds like a winner.
@JessWLStuart Жыл бұрын
Oooh! I love this intro music! Great presentation on how Yamato was developed!
@swordmonkey6635 Жыл бұрын
The evolution of the A-140 project reflects the IJN was still heavily influenced by their former RN mentors. Japan did what Japan does best: not invent a new thing, but innovate. I can't wait to see your video about Project A-150, the two proposed follow ups to the Yamato class BBs.
@aslamnurfikri7640 Жыл бұрын
So you're telling me Yamato class isn't big enough for Japan?
@swordmonkey6635 Жыл бұрын
@@aslamnurfikri7640 Japan didn't have the ability to build a lot of battleships, so the ones they built needed to be force multipliers. The Yamato was designed to engage 4 Pennsylvania class BBs at the same time. The A-150 would be the same for the North Carolina or Washington Class BBs. A-150s were proposed to hit service mid 1940s if war hadn't been declared.
@JerrySeriatos Жыл бұрын
well all countries innovate rather than invent
@swordmonkey6635 Жыл бұрын
@@JerrySeriatos If that were the case, no new inventions would be made. There's got to be a "first" of everything and then innovation or evolution after that.
@JerrySeriatos Жыл бұрын
@swordmonkey6635 yea but the invention could be in a lab experimental and never mass produced. Because the Japanese industrialized later than the europeans, they improved or modified existing technology. For a answer we need to look the patents and see who got more
@Brendan200 Жыл бұрын
You could also go to the Yamato museum in Japan which has a huge Yamato model
@pkhaha161 Жыл бұрын
been there in early march this year,huge model, 1:10 scale, i was running up and down inside the building to take photos of the model
@pkhaha161 Жыл бұрын
some japanese youtubers have post detail video of the yamato museum
@marckyle5895 Жыл бұрын
I need one of those of the Enterprise!
@emilchan5379 Жыл бұрын
An old and much simplified version of the chart at 16:42 which details the layout of the different designs can also be found there.
@edtrine8692 Жыл бұрын
@@pkhaha161 It's hard to imagine a model ship a little over 80 feet long lol.
@patricklenigan43094 ай бұрын
I like these sorts of episodes... it really shows that a ship's design process is never a linear process, but merely the culmination of many design attempts before reaching the final design.
@deanwood1338 Жыл бұрын
I miss the old intro 😢 but nothing will stop me watching drac 😁
@TomFynn Жыл бұрын
"It was big. Really, really, big. No, bigger than that. It was BIG." -Arna Kennerüd, Skyknight
@nigelleyland166 Жыл бұрын
Drach, gue to your ever informative vids rarely needing to actually be watch I listen to them while I play WoWs, which I am doing as I type. You are the perfect accomponyment to the game which I have now been playing for eight and a half years, including beta testing.
@dougjb7848 Жыл бұрын
11:12 Are you sure he’s an admiral in the IJN? He appears to be … smiling?
@davidvasquez08 Жыл бұрын
Is that a good thing?
@MM22966 Жыл бұрын
@@davidvasquez08 Possible sign of mental instability. Or his dad worked in theatre.
@robertf3479 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely amazing process that brought this idea into a 72,000 ton steel reality. Some of these could have been built and completed as thoroughly workable battleships ... not in the same league as Yamato but as smaller 16" armed "baby sisters" at least as battleworthy as Nagato or replacements for the Kongo types, better armed and armored though perhaps not as fast in a few designs. Well done and well presented as always sir.
@mattlund5705 Жыл бұрын
Really enjoying the new intro music/soundtrack to all the new video types!
@Brock_Landers Жыл бұрын
Oh, and I have been playing WOW Blitz for a little while now and I love it. It's hard for me to commit much time to as I am 40 with kids, a wife, and a more than full time job, but it's still fun. My best battleship at the moment is Tirpitz.
@ВасилийМорозов-л7х Жыл бұрын
9:50, 13:11, 14:31, 17:00 (too many Nelson-types to list further) Now I see the general inspiration for WoWs' Izumo. I've always thought it was just a Wargaming invention just to have another Nelson-type, but now I see.
@ВасилийМорозов-л7х Жыл бұрын
It also seems like Nelson layout is the same sort of meme for the naval community as bullpup for the firearms community, being a rare, unconventional and more efficient (for ships in terms of armour arrangement, in guns in terms of barrel length/gun length ratio) layout.
@kimpatz2189 Жыл бұрын
@@ВасилийМорозов-л7х The great advantage of the Nelson type is its rather compact armor layout. Every explody bits huddled together and armored to ridiculous levels is cheaper than spreading it all to the ship. The all-or-nothing armor concept done in the most cheapest possible way. The opposite end of this is the Fusou type layout. The reason it has subpar armor, matching a battle cruiser armor, is its gun layout. The bits needed to armor up are spread on the ship. It increases weight as more surface area is needed to armor up. The reason for its slow speed is also due to its gun layout. There are 2 turret wells close to the boiler rooms hindering space. The subclass Isei re-iterated the gun layout into a Wyoming type, thats why the Isei and Hyuuga has more horsepower to muster. Its also the reason why the Fusou and Yamashiro were relegated as training ships for most of the time as these could not keep up with expected speeds on the fleet until the final struggle where they were finally deployed as fighting ships. Nicknamed the unclucky sisters. The both of them are even dreaded by the IJN crews due to cramped living space and uncomfortable layout. Isei and Hyuuga were regularly assigned as command ships (or the largest and most armored supply ship ever afloat at that time. Large hangars with no planes to store after conversion to Aviation BBs) while Fusou served as command ship only once and Yamashiro (with the 3rd turret facing aft has more boiler space and a bit faster) did it a few times but not as common as their sub-sisters.
@ВасилийМорозов-л7х Жыл бұрын
@@kimpatz2189 Yes, the Fuso's layout was rather questionable.
@X8X8X8X8X8X8X8X8X8X Жыл бұрын
12:10 This picture gives us a good idea of the ridiculous scale of battleships.
@WiiR4Him Жыл бұрын
While I miss the OG music for the intros, the music on this one definitely has felt like it has fit the best of all the different ones tried so far.
@roderickcampbell2105 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating. The Yamato is an enigma. My Yamato model remains incomplete. It's kind of intimidating.
@orangelion03 Жыл бұрын
Which kit are you working on? One of the Tamiya 350th, or the monster Trumpeter/Gallery 200th? Built the Tamiya New Jersey for a customer back when it first came out, and have wanted to build the Yamato since.
@roderickcampbell2105 Жыл бұрын
@@orangelion03 Hi. The kit I have is Hasegawa 1:450 scale. The instructions are combined Japanese and English. I'd love to build New Jersey. I'm subbed on a New Jersey museum ship channel so I get a dose of the New Jersey pretty much every day. How did your model come out?
@mralsace1 Жыл бұрын
Yamy had many designs, and this kept changing because of plans and budgets, i guess, and one design, stood out, and that is the one design, the one and only, we all know and love, A-140F6. Gotta love it man, it's easily the most majestic looking boat in all of WW2. The Iowas, looks like it's wearing sunglasses, which looks good. But Yamy is most handsome, definitely, can't argue with that. Fusō also looks good, really nice, looks trash before the refit, but looks awesome after the refit.
@TomSedgman Жыл бұрын
This new intro music is excellent
@comentedonakeyboard Жыл бұрын
Yamato is not sunk, she is kept in Reserve (in case of Alien Invasion)
@davidvasquez08 Жыл бұрын
Not sure how it’s kept in reserve when it’s split in half (one side which one half is right side, whilst the other half is upside down), and rusting away
@boogts Жыл бұрын
whoosh @@davidvasquez08
@comentedonakeyboard Жыл бұрын
@@davidvasquez08 just some superficial demage, she will need a refit before going to space anyway
@merafirewing6591 Жыл бұрын
@@comentedonakeyboard unless a replica of her is sunk in an upright position.
@WalterReimer Жыл бұрын
"Some assembly required."
@agesflow6815 Жыл бұрын
Thank you, Drachinifel.
@jamespocelinko104 Жыл бұрын
Experience has taught me that asking the question "Who would win in a shooting match, Yamato or an Iowa Class?" is rather appropriately bound to result in an online shooting match.
@issacfoster1113 Жыл бұрын
People that asks those just want attention and validation 🙃
@KHETTIUS Жыл бұрын
This question has been asked many times i'm guessing, i think it's basically been covered on this channel at some point stating that the Iowa was faster, had modern radar guidence for it's guns and subsuqently could engage Yamato outside the range of what Yamato could effectively fire back and thus could dictate the engagment range and pick Yamato apart.
@paulrasmussen8953 Жыл бұрын
@@KHETTIUSfrom what i heard the advantage depended on weather. Clear day Yamato. Stormy weather Iiwa
@stillcantbesilencedevennow Жыл бұрын
There's honestly hundreds of different factors that would come into play in real life. Crews, steel quality, ammo quality, ammo quantity perhaps, training time, support, weather, etc etc
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
@@KHETTIUS Actually this channel has never said that (mostly because Iowa’s supposed ability to engage Yamato from well outside Yamato’s effective range didn’t actually exist in practice outside of poor-visibility conditions: NO battleship ever was able to reliably hit things from 30,000+ yards, and Iowa would have had to close to within Yamato’s effective range to start reliably hitting her). Even at closer ranges Iowa does stand a good chance of killing Yamato (the 16”/50 gun has more than enough power to basically ignore Yamato’s belt) but Yamato also stands a good chance of killing Iowa (same situation), as long as visibility isn’t poor (in which case Iowa’s radar advantage would kick in and prove decisive).
@ThrowawayModeller Жыл бұрын
I think this intro music is the best choice out of all the ones you tried to use
@carlossaraiva8213 Жыл бұрын
"How large you need the ship to be?" "Yes!"
@larsrons7937 Жыл бұрын
Super interesting. As a child I had a small 15 cm playtoy Yamato, and since then I've had a special interest in this behemoth of a ship. Very interesting to see the design process that led to the final version of the ship.
@5StarAdmiral354T Жыл бұрын
Years ago I remember reading somewhere that Admiral Hiraga’s 1929 Battleship Design (I think) made use of dual purpose casemates for the secondary battery, but I can’t find any writings which back this up or expand on how exactly a dual purpose casemate would work. Have come across anything which expands on the concept or are familiar with this design choice?
@lumberlikwidator8863 Жыл бұрын
“And here’s where things start to get a little strange.”? I love that! All these earlier designs looked very strange to me, with the cockamamie arrangement of the secondary guns so close to the aft main battery turrets. It looks like the blast effect of the 18-inchers would have made the secondary guns uninhabitable during a surface action. All these sketches are fantastic, and as I am an avid 1/700 scale modeler it makes me want to buy about a dozen waterline kits of Yamato and Musashi and kit-bash them into some of these earlier designs. Thanks for a great, well-researched presentation. I don’t know how you find the time to do it!
@davidlewis9068 Жыл бұрын
would have loved to have seen the plans for the Yamato class ships. Very nice video
@gerarddelmonte8776 Жыл бұрын
I kitbashed a 1/72 scale Yamato kit into the A150 design with Nelson style layout and some tweaks of my own. Looked pretty cool.
@stevevalley7835 Жыл бұрын
From my reading, it was the amount of material being ordered for Yamato that tipped off British and US intelligence that the Yamatos were going to exceed the 35,000 ton limit. Just how much the ships exceeded the limit was significantly underestimated by western intelligence, resulting in the Second London tonnage escalator being triggered, but the new limit being set at only 45,000 tons. If the IJN had gone with a more modest design, say 45,000 tons, western intelligence may not have twigged at all, and the treaty tonnage escalator not triggered until 1940, when the completed hulls were launched, too late to design the Iowas and Lions.
@michaelsnyder3871 Жыл бұрын
See my comment about industrial limitations. Much of what Japan did between 1930 and 1941 was shrouded in mystery which the Allied intelligence apparatus either was unable to penetrate or when they did , their senior leaders couldn't accept it. Read how the Chinese and Chenault and the US naval aviation attache acquired information on the A6M2 or how USN and USMC observers described and took pictures of the "daihatsu" landing craft with their bow ramps, yet the USN continued to insist it couldn't be done and wasted time designing and building "surf boats".
@stevevalley7835 Жыл бұрын
@@michaelsnyder3871 intelligence operations always involve a degree of guesswork. Remember the conversation between Charlton Heston and Hal Holbrook, as Rochefort, in "Midway"? Heston asked how much of the IJN correspondence they could actually read. Holbrook said words to the effect "we don't really read them. we see a hint here, a glimmer there". Heston says "you're guessing!" That is about it, educated guessing. The Admiralty designed the Admiral class battlecruisers, based on their best guesses about the Mackensens. The Alaska class cruisers were designed based on best guesses about an IJN class of heavy cruisers. The 1938 conference between the US and UK regarding where to set the new displacement limit, was based on their best guess about the size of the Yamato, and their own facilities. Reportedly, the UK wanted a limit of 42,000 due to limits of facilities around the empire (which really makes you wonder if the G3 and N3 were intended to be built, or a bluff, only bargaining chips to be traded away for concessions by other parties to the treaty), while the US wanted 45,000, because that was what was needed to achieve their goals for speed, protection, and firepower. The only thing the US and UK could be reasonably sure of was that Yamato was going to be considerably over 35,000, which triggered the escalator clause. The estimates of how much over 35,000 could have been colored by the parties own agendas. I have read that the assessment was Yamato would be 45,000, which was what the US wanted. I wonder if British Intelligence was saying 42,000, because that was what the Admiralty wanted? The actual data in hand was imprecise. As we saw with Bismark and Littorio, you could be significantly over the treaty limit, without the UK and US catching on. That is why I suggest that, had Yamato not been so far over the limit, but closer to Bismark and Littorio, the US and UK might have not had the confidence to call the IJN on it, and increase the displacement limit.
@pedrofelipefreitas2666 Жыл бұрын
I wonder what a japanese iowa-esque yamato would look like, supporting the carrier forces and being fast battleships at 30 knots, give or take a knot.
@stevevalley7835 Жыл бұрын
@@pedrofelipefreitas2666 it appears such a ship would have been within Japanese capability, if they settled for "average" amounts of armor, vs the exceptionally thick armor of the Yamato. The Kii. basically an uparmored Amagi, and the Number 13, were estimated to make 29.75-30kts. According to Wiki those classes had 11.5"-13" belts and 4.7"-5" decks, vs Yamato's 16" belt and 9" deck and Iowa's 12.1" belt and 6" deck. The 13, with it's four, twin 18" turrets, modernized for late 1930s thinking on secondary/AA armament, could have been an interesting alternative, and it's 47,000 ton displacement might have been close enough to the treaty limit for western intelligence agencies to not twig until it was too late to design and built a reply. An updated Kii, with 16" armament and 42,000 ton displacement almost certainly would have flown under western intelligence's radar.
@merafirewing6591 Жыл бұрын
@@stevevalley7835 would the Kongou design replacements also fit the bill?
@danielkennedy1524 Жыл бұрын
An excellent epoch! Had they perfected the diesels seems they would have been even more formidable! Thanks for a great video!
@fishua5564 Жыл бұрын
I never understood the Nelson style main battery layout. Especially if you have the better range guns and a faster ship. I want to be able to dictate the range at which I fight and some times that means turning away. So rather than having an aft turret that can't fire forward or aft, might as well have an aft turret that can fire aft and even over the shoulder.
@bluelemming5296 Жыл бұрын
Spreading the guns fore and aft typically means you have to turn more to bring all guns into firing position against a single opponent. This makes torpedo evasion harder, and creates a larger silhouette for the enemy to see and hit, especially if you're forced to engage against the light (which could include the sun, or moon, or fires on/behind the ship, or star shells - mostly factors affecting night combat or combat in bad weather). You also need more armor weight for two separate groups of gun turrets and probably also need more weight for the torpedo protection system to cover multiple separate hull locations containing magazines instead of just one contiguous location. Being able to approach at a narrower angle also likely improves the effectiveness of the armor. Plus the British liked closing with the enemy, a habit that made them a very intimidating opponent (as the Italians learned). A rear turret by itself isn't all that useful in practice since accuracy goes down enormously if you can't fire a large salvo. Look at the studies on US Fast Battleship gunnery to see this: even with radar a three gun salvo (meaning one turret with three guns) wasn't that great, improve that to six or more guns and the results get a lot better - which is just as true with the optical targeting systems the Nelson was designed to use.
@BattyjАй бұрын
The 3 turrets being at the front was entirely just to reduce its tonnage, so that it could have 3×3 turrets while keeping within the 35,000 ton limit in the Washington naval treaty
@codydillon21448 ай бұрын
Holy cow, I didn't realize how many designs there were for the Yamato. Thanks for sharing this
@animal16365 Жыл бұрын
I wonder. Had the IJN went with a Nelson style layout with thicker belt armour. How would the ship have handled the attacks that sank them??
@michaelsnyder3871 Жыл бұрын
Belt armor had no effect on the torpedo protection system below the belt. In fact, the thicker belt armor would have made the joint between the upper and lower belts even more vulnerable to sheering and failure.
@MM22966 Жыл бұрын
Isn't that like asking if the ice cream will melt faster in the shade or out in the sun on a summer's day?
@rippertrain Жыл бұрын
Congrats on your sponser. This is my absolute favourite channel.
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
Was waiting for this one. The Japanese put a LOT of thought into designing Yamato, and the result wasn’t nearly as badly made as most people assume-just utterly pointless, but that’s the norm for battleships built around this time. And they couldn’t have built a large number of battleships anyways given infrastructure limits, so the “larger fleet of smaller battleships” plan was a nonstarter.
@d.olivergutierrez8690 Жыл бұрын
For me their biggest flaw in capability was their speed, while not bad, it certainly hampered their involvement and support in the fleet if there was something that the last generation of battleships needed as something crucial was the capacity to stay with the carrier fleet to support them and more importantly to be supported, the yamatos pretty much expend her entire career in second line duty, Guadalcanal, the Solomon’s to mention some, saw their absence simply because they weren’t fast enough leaving the much older kongos to face modern American capital ship and ultimately loss in the process. Or you are fast or you are not different from a old dreadnought in second line duty.
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
@@d.olivergutierrez8690 By that logic the KGVs and SoDaks/NorCals (which were also unable to keep up with carriers at flank speed) were also too slow to be useful in WWII, even though they were often used as carrier escorts. And for a battleship, being a carrier escort is ALREADY being on second-line duty, because the carrier is doing the job the battleship should be doing and the battleship is incapable of serving as a capital ship in that scenario (since it has to stay way out of gunnery range of the enemy fleet due to being part of a carrier task force). Not to mention the whole idea of battleships as carrier escorts is based on the assumption carriers are going to be attacked by enemy battleships, when the whole reason carriers rendered battleships obsolete was because battleships couldn’t deal with them outside of exceptional circumstances (hence the situation above with battleship carrier escorts being nothing more than hideously gigantic and expensive destroyers/CLAAs). It really didn’t matter how fast a battleship was in WWII because it would be strategically non-viable and wasteful either way. The reason the Yamatos were left out at Guadalcanal was only partly due to speed (they were just about fast enough to make the Slot run); the bigger concerns had to do with fuel, the sheer overkill, and the fact bringing battleships into shallow confined waters is asking for trouble (even the Kongos were left out of the campaign initially due to this reason until Yamamoto forced the issue).
@d.olivergutierrez8690 Жыл бұрын
@@bkjeong4302 fair points, but there is still a gap that needed to be covered: nigh fighting and the “killer cruiser” issue, the fact that you don’t want to encounter enemy surface units with bigger guns that you in a situation when carriers are not available, that is an undeniable reality, there’s no scenario where carrier base aircraft save the cruisers at savo island or stole Washington kill at the 2th battle of Guadalcanal. Carriers suck at night fighting you need capital ships of all shapes and sizes.
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
@@d.olivergutierrez8690 Carriers do suck at night operations, but they can still avoid being run down by enemy surface ships by keeping on the move; in all likelihood they would have a huge lead on any enemy surface forces in the area, enough that the enemy is going to have a hard time even finding them, let alone closing the gap in any reasonable length of time. At Savo Island the issue wasn’t a lack of capital ships capable of night fighting but human incompetence and Japanese night-action training (keep in mind that of the Japanese ships involved only Chokai was more powerful than the Allied treaty cruisers, the Americans had every right to win that battle going by ship capabilities alone), and Second Guadalcanal was an exceptional case (and the Japanese still managed to land their troops during that battle).
@warwatcher91 Жыл бұрын
@@bkjeong4302 They only landed some of their troops. Remember the air attacks basically shredded the reinforcement convoy down to a few transports with little supplies or equipment.
@dandel351 Жыл бұрын
The new intro music cool, I did like the original but this episode has the best new tune yet !
@MyMongo100 Жыл бұрын
Do you know if any of the combined diesel and steam turbine designs would have tried to utilise any of the waste heat from the diesel engines (either jacket heat or heat in the exhaust gasses) to either preheat the condensate for the steam turbine or preheat the feedwater going into the economiser?
@hancehanson4000 Жыл бұрын
Like the new intro-music. (DEFINITELY the best one yet so far, ....*excepting the original, a'course)... Damn, the original was SO perfect!-- anyway, i think this is closest/best replacement thus far.
@smatthewson2613 Жыл бұрын
Roll on the video on Lanchester's equations (and other mathematical abstractions of combat)
@Sarcastro_78 Жыл бұрын
Drach, Absolutely fantastic video. I had no idea so much information was available on the history of the Yamato design.
@jonathanstrong4812 Жыл бұрын
Good 'Un
@jackray1337 Жыл бұрын
This video has made me want to make some of these designs in Ultimate Admiral Dreadnought. I may try Spring Sharp to see these designs there as well.
@pierremainstone-mitchell8290 Жыл бұрын
Wow! Talk about thorough Drach! Well done indeed!
@MrTylerStricker Жыл бұрын
How did we go so long without a Drach video on Yamato design??
@khaelamensha3624 Жыл бұрын
Because the world is f... up...
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
Drach did already have a Yamato video, this video just covers how she came to be.
@marckyle5895 Жыл бұрын
A Nelson style Yamato makes a sort of sense for Japanese Naval Doctrine, which was attack, attack, attack. Here's why - to me, a single rear mounted turret is an acknowledgement that the ship may be running from a pursuer and it is needed to help keep them at a longer distance with harassing fire. Three front turrets mean pursuit at an angle that brings all the rifles into play. I know there are tens of reasons to have a rear turret, but that was my thought when building the Revell ship models and thinking the Arizona looked more balanced than the Alabama. I wanted to buy two Alabama models and kitbash a second turret back there.
@dougjb7848 Жыл бұрын
4:50 It certainly sounds like it. We’ll wait quietly over here until it’s ready.
@TheShrike616 Жыл бұрын
That was much more comprehensive than I expected. The phrase "little is known about " came to mind.
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
It’s still a lot murkier than what is known about everyone else’s projects.
@OhYeaMista Жыл бұрын
What’s with the mix of turbines and diesels? I feel like you could do a whole vid on the pros and cons of each. Was there ever a ship to combine both? I’m not aware of one.
@jasonthompson6594 Жыл бұрын
I really like the intro music on this one.
@nazarinoutama8269 Жыл бұрын
So this is why i keep building nelson like battleship in my japanese campaign in admiral dreadnought 😂
@crazywarriorscatfan9061 Жыл бұрын
Sounds intriguing!
@unbentcrayfish Жыл бұрын
Drach, you do great narration. You need to do audiobooks. Also, what microphone are you using? (Anyone else know?)
@victorkrawchuk9141 Жыл бұрын
A fascinating and riveting presentation of the various design compromises that were necessary to build the Yamato class ships. I thoroughly enjoyed the video.
@captaincharlemagne Жыл бұрын
People say the Nelson-class are ugly well folks the ugly duckling seemed to have a bit of influence over ships from other countries. As the Nelson-class almost influenced not just North-Carolina, but also the Yamato-class. An I guess you can count the French dunkerque and Richelieu-classes
@grahamstrouse1165 Жыл бұрын
@ZaHandleI expect the convergent evolution of turtle-like animals can best be demonstrated by the 19th century Russian circular battleships then…
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
@@grahamstrouse1165 LMAO!
@Ah01 Жыл бұрын
Even extremely ugly ships can be influential.. 😅
@HomelessEmperor-ps4gs Жыл бұрын
Nelson is nowhere near ugly, IMO. All-forward gun layouts also tend to be very menacing.
@imprisongroverfurr525211 ай бұрын
Nelson and Rodney were not ugly at all.
@stygn Жыл бұрын
This might be a stupid question, but please be courteous. What are the benefits and drawbacks of having 3 main batteries in front of the Citadel (and none aft)? (I can only assume that the drawbacks are that you can't aim directly aft, and that clumping all your main batteries together is a bit like putting all your eggs in one basket. One benefit I assume is that you can make the proverbial basket much stronger. What effects does the "3 in the front" have on things like firing solution, damage control and seaworthiness compared to a "1 aft 2 in the front"?)
@lukeueda-sarson6732 Жыл бұрын
The main advantage is you considerably reduce the amount of armor required to protect the magazines, because they are all concentrated in once place. This one advantage is so great it makes up for a whole host of disadvantages.
@ajsliter Жыл бұрын
Thank you for posting this. I tried to correct the wiki articles for the Yamato and Design A-150 using this information prior to your video, but I got ip banned for it.
@tianwong152 Жыл бұрын
25:19 WOWS Izumo, been looking for you the whole time!
@eiwtsexiang Жыл бұрын
Question for Drach: If the IJN wanted a fast, 18-inch gun armed ship, why did they not just revisit the Number-13 class designs which they have already mostly finalized? Why go through all this? In fact, what happened to the Tosas, Kii and Amagi plans when designing the Yamato? Were they all trashed and forgotten?
@stillcantbesilencedevennow Жыл бұрын
Id imagine resources were scarce, leading to competition and a result of "let's go with the big guns" via copious whining and posturing. Many of the generals and admirals in IJ were borderline combative with one another, often shooting down ideas and plans purely out of spite.
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
The No. 13s lacked enough superstructure for Late 30s equipment, and had less AA.
@michaelsnyder3871 Жыл бұрын
The No.13 design was limited to 50,000 tons full load and lacked the armor and torpedo protective system desired for the new battleships.
@pedrofelipefreitas2666 Жыл бұрын
Their kantai kessen required something much larger than the n.13, that'd be my guess.
@hughfisher9820 Жыл бұрын
Warship technology was still advancing during the 1920s and 1930s, eg better engines, new armour plate treatments. Threat environment has changed as well, better aircraft and torpedoes. A ten year old design, which will maybe be twenty years old by the time it enters service, is not a good idea.
@lucashinch Жыл бұрын
Love the new introduction music,very good!
@jayfelsberg1931 Жыл бұрын
When they salvaged Yamato to create Space Battleship Yamato, did they address your concerns? Please advise.
@robertmatch6550 Жыл бұрын
Interesting and timely. Thank you!
@akumaking1 Жыл бұрын
Will Drachinifel ever review USS Kidd and her career being a pirate?
@russward261210 ай бұрын
Toho pictures made a fascinating movie about the construction of the Yamato called " the Great War of Archimedes." The protagonist is a mathematician involved in the design. It's in Japanese with subtitles, now on KZbin. Yes it's that Toho pictures.
@colinmartin9797 Жыл бұрын
Everyone always asks "why is yamato?" Nobody asks "how is yamato"?
@Kirk00077 Жыл бұрын
“How is Yamato?” Not well, she hasn’t spoken to her family in decades and all her friends have the memory of a goldfish.
@brunozeigerts6379 Жыл бұрын
I invented a fictional world, and designed warships for the various navies. Watching shows like this and Battleship New Jersey makes me realize how many factors go into design and construction... placement of magazines, types of power systems... as well as potential rivals.