Please ensure all Q&A questions are posted as replies to this post. :)
@goodman49666 жыл бұрын
Drachinifel do you have family in Royal Navy now or in the past!
@Drachinifel6 жыл бұрын
@@goodman4966 none currently, but plenty in the past, and a few friends currently. Last family member in the Navy was a great uncle who found himself in the engine rooms of HMS Royal Oak when U-47 showed up...
@murderouskitten25776 жыл бұрын
GJ mate .
@Moorbote6 жыл бұрын
Was the japanese 100mm AA effective as an AA gun, and how about its ability against surface targets? (Also pls do a guide on the (Aki)duckys, thanks)
@GoonMcGoonerson6 жыл бұрын
Are you ever going to do something like this for the IJN? They had some pretty interesting designs, like the B-65 cruisers.
@lok3kobold5 жыл бұрын
Even the spotters on the Kamchatka could tell that those ships where not torpedo boats
@frost90414 жыл бұрын
I wouldn’t count on that. If by some chance they did, they will signal they spotted torpedo boats anyways.
@lok3kobold4 жыл бұрын
@@frost9041 Oh absolutely. The Signal men on that bucket are horribly incompetent or hallucinate about torpedo boats. But the spotters might accidentally see the difference if the ship is large enough
@andrewgraham60064 жыл бұрын
@@lok3kobold oh no I don’t think you relise the true horror that ship was it see a pack of fucking seagulls and signal that the whole Luftwaffe and raf are attacking it
@Ealsante3 жыл бұрын
@@andrewgraham6006 "We are sinking!" *everyone liked that* "Wait, no, we're fine!" *sigh*
@andrewgraham60063 жыл бұрын
@@Ealsante oh no false alarm one of the crew men accidentally turned a tap on
@CapitalTeeth5 жыл бұрын
Raeder: "Okay, so you want another High Seas Fleet that can challenge the Royal Navy? Hitler: "Yeah." Raeder: "Okay, then just give us until about 1948-ish and we might just be ready." Hitler: "Don't worry. I'm not going to war until then." **The German Reich has declared war on Poland** Raeder: *_"Sigh..._* U-Boats it is." Dönitz: "Somebody said U-Boats?"
@evanhunt18634 жыл бұрын
I have this mental image of Doenitz crashing through a wall when Raeder said "U-boats."
@Paludion4 жыл бұрын
@@evanhunt1863 *"OH YEAAH!!" but in german*
@ronnybohme53664 жыл бұрын
@@Paludion so you mean "AU JAAAA!!!"?
@evanhunt18634 жыл бұрын
@@Paludion German Kool-Aid Man. ADMIRAL Kool-Aid Man, I should say.
@i.r.s94943 жыл бұрын
What is interesting is that Wilhelm II built his entire battle fleet of dreadnoughts and super-dreadnoughts in eight years, along with doubling the numbers of cruisers and destroyers in the High Seas Fleet. So, it was possible for Germany to build a formidable fleet in less than a decade... in theory. Of course, the real situation is that German industry in general was very poorly run under the Nazis, who were generally ill-educated brutes, or well educated people who were detached from reality. Add to that the material requirements of rebuilding a military fro scratch are very high compared to the stead state of arming of the German Army prior to WWI. That is to say that the Army was already mostly armed and only a few major weapons systems were added. The new Wehrmacht needed a lot of everything and add to that whole new families of weapons systems like tanks, armored vehicles, self-propelled guns, etc. As well as building an air force from scratch. So the material demands on the German economy for re-armament in 1933-1939 was far higher than 1906-1914. All that said, yes, Germany could have built a large fleet quickly had it truly been a priority.
@Lord_Foxy135 жыл бұрын
"A High Seas Fleet if you will.... because that worked out so well the first time" The salt and sarcasm is palatable
@Rauschgenerator4 жыл бұрын
I think, beside being a funny comment, it's not quite comparable as in WW1, the German fleet could not break out of the North Sea. The situation was completely different in WW2, with France and Norway occupied and the existance of an airforce.
@robertbruce76864 жыл бұрын
Flash doors? Who needs them?
@Icetea-20003 жыл бұрын
Well the only reason it didn’t work was because the only bigger fleet in the world was the british who could easily contaminate the high seas fleet in the north sea. Not to mention the lesser supply
@lucasfragoso76348 ай бұрын
@Rauschgenerator except during plan Z, france would probably have had its shit together by then, and Norway would have 100% modernized. Nevermind Poland would have modernized by then
@hajoos.83605 ай бұрын
The Germans were stupid to hand their fleet over at the end of WWI. And in WWII the Brits unleashed the World War again, before the Germans could establish a fleet in being. But anyway the Royal Navy is dead like the entire west.
@DrThunder885 жыл бұрын
"There won't be a war." [Starts largest war in history] That guy was literally Hitler.
@EneTheGene4 жыл бұрын
@@felix_halcs123 But Hitler started the war...by invading Poland
@EneTheGene4 жыл бұрын
@@felix_halcs123 *After* Hitler invaded Poland on the 1. of september The UK sent an ultimatum to Germany to stop hostilities, which Hitler didn't. On the 3. since Hitler didn't respond, both France and Britain declared war.
@z3r0_354 жыл бұрын
To be fair, if Hitler didn’t start World War II, Stalin would’ve done it anyway a year or two later, if not over Poland than possibly over the Baltic countries or Finland, or maybe picking a fight with Japan over Manchuria. Ultimately, it was the Munich Agreement that led Hitler to think he could get away with taking Danzig off of Poland without the UK or France intervening (and he was right - while war was declared, they refused to actually try and counterinvade Germany and help the Poles directly, largely due to the formidable defenses of the Siegfried Line, though the fact that French strategy was pretty much dependent on fighting defensively like in the previous war didn't help, especially when the Germans demonstrated that they weren't going to allow themselves to be bogged down into a war of attrition again if they had any say in the matter). By his own admission, had the UK and France been more firm in opposing the occupation of the Sudetenland, he wouldn't have made a similar ultimatum to take Danzig from Poland, which led to war when Poland refused and the UK and France finally put their foot down.
@donsambo54884 жыл бұрын
I feel like he received a cancer diagnosis and went full Walter White so he could see his destruction of the world before it got him, then got bored halfway in amd just intentionally made poor decisions to get it over with quicker...
@JStryker74 жыл бұрын
The ww1 reparations started the war
@deathbypoi45576 жыл бұрын
I love your pronounciation of Spähkreuzer, it sounds like Sparkreuzer witch would translate into Discount Cruiser and thats kinda fitting ;)
@Kromaatikse5 жыл бұрын
The proper pronunciation should be more like Shpare-croizer, which is amusing enough to an Anglophone.
@Ioan_Iorgu5 жыл бұрын
😁
@jimtaylor2945 жыл бұрын
Poundland doesn't do Cruisers... but if we did...
@jimjacobs28174 жыл бұрын
[Eager young aide sticks his head around the door of the naval design department] AIDE: Admiral Doenitz wants more Sparkreuzers [Naval designers sadly shake their heads and begin folding their complicated plans for gigantic battleships into paper boats...]
@paulbobenhausen80314 жыл бұрын
I honest to God thought he actually meant discount cruisers-
@geoffreymowbray67896 жыл бұрын
The Z plan had one massive flaw; the British response to actual German building programmes. British survival was based on her merchant fleet and the security of the merchant fleet was dependent on the Royal Navy. Britannia's sword and shield was sea-power; Germany was a continental power and would win or loss on land. Thanks to an intelligence source inside the German Navy design department the Royal Navy had some idea of what the Germans were thinking about. The British were well aware that the Germans, Italian and Japanese were in breach of the Naval treaties but were not in a position to openly or privately protest about it. The pre-war proposed minimum British 1942 fleet was for 20 battleships & battlecruiisers with the 2 Revenge class battleships (that were in the Reserve Fleet in 1939) having been scraped or reduced to training duties. The fleet was to include 12 aircraft carriers (2 as peace time training ships), 70 cruisers and 198 destroyers. There was to be a greatly increased trade defence force with the oldest light cruisers converting to AA cruisers and older destroyers converting from fleet roles to ASW and AA escorts. New designs of versions of types of deep sea and coastal escorts and the increasing tempo in their peacetime construction (but inadequate to the massive wartime needs).
@Drachinifel6 жыл бұрын
This bears repeating, the single greatest flaw of the Plan assumed no-one else would change or expand their forces to account for it.
@klobiforpresident22546 жыл бұрын
I'm sure there were many smart people doing estimates and analysing the best course of options. 198 ships though, that I can't ignore. You could've just thrown in two destroyers for good measure, but no, the English had to screw it, didn't they?
@charlesbaker77036 жыл бұрын
@@klobiforpresident2254 reminds me of MHV's most recent video showing relative timelapse of US vs Japan WWII warships. ... Like someone was just churning out US DDs and DEs.
@washingtonradio6 жыл бұрын
Do not forget the US 'Two-Ocean Navy' plan of the same time period which would have built an fleet of approximately the same size as mention for the RN with the more elderly units still hanging around for secondary roles. Given economic realities, the Z-plan was a pipe dream as the German economy could not out build the British at all and the US could out build both combined once it got cranked up. So the real problem with the Z-plan was it would antagonize the UK and the US both who could out build you and could build very solid designs if they could avoid idiots like Jackie Fisher (not a problem in WWII as both navies did suffer from another Jackie Fisher). The Japanese building plans would have the same effect, UK and US ramp their building plans. Given the tendency for German and Japanese designs to have some real ly bad design features that the UK and US mostly avoid, both Germany and Japan have fewer and overall inferior ships to the UK and US.
@klobiforpresident22546 жыл бұрын
@@charlesbaker7703 Yeah, when watching that and his other videos about the balance of power in the Pacific … it's scary.
@Ensign_Nemo6 жыл бұрын
The Axis did not have enough oil to properly fuel even the Italian battle fleet. If the Plan Z fleet had been built, it would have been forced to stay in port for most of the war, much like the Japanese battle fleet was inactive in the Pacific during much of the war.
@themadhammer33056 жыл бұрын
Ensign Nemo maybe having designs like the Revenge class battleships which were coal powered and with Poland vast coal supply they may have stood a chance of being useful. But for all the axis navies they suffered through the entire war with a crippling lack of fuel
@w8stral6 жыл бұрын
What most do not know, was that lack of fuel transport was also the ultimate limiting factor for the assault on Japan by the USA. The amount of fuel required to take even a tiny island was mind numbingly stupendous and there simply were not enough tankers till middle of 1945.... @@themadhammer3305
@themadhammer33056 жыл бұрын
w8stral yeah, the planned invasion force for the invasion of Japan was monstrous, it makes sense that fuel was an issue. Between Britain and the US they maybe could have chucked enough tankers together after VE day but the logistics involved were still mind boggling even for the two largest navies in the world.
@BrigadierBill6 жыл бұрын
Although I agree for the most part, one serious problem is that Stalin was paranoid about the British prior to Operation Barbarossa, and would probably have sold Germany fuel throughout their war with Britain (and by extension Italy, making the Mediterranean even more dangerous); even the possibility of a victory at sea may have convinced the Germans not to attack the Soviets until after a British defeat. There's a reason no one could convince Stalin to prepare for a German attack in 1941 when all signs pointed towards an obvious, imminent invasion.
@w8stral6 жыл бұрын
How would you get the OIL to Germany from Russia at the time? Would have to do a crash course build in tankers which did not exist for going from the Caspian to Black sea and then up the Danube. Hrmm... When was the Caspian connected to the Black sea again? When was the Danube connected to the Rhine again? ... Yea, wouldn't work. Timing is wrong. But a Railroad transport for quite a bit of it... There is a reason the Persian and Texas were so important. All that oil is right next to the coast. @@BrigadierBill
@1Korlash6 жыл бұрын
You forgot the Graf Zeppelin's best feature: Her catapults! The Graf was to be a catapult carrier who launched all her craft via compressed air catapults. Had she been completed, she would've been able to launch 18 aircraft before her catapults needed to recharge...for about 50 minutes. So not only did the Graf carry a really small number of planes for her weight, but she couldn't even launch half of them within an hour! Truly she was a masterpiece of Nazi German engineering! Jokes aside, the Germans had no idea how to design or operate a carrier effectively. This isn't surprising: Every navy that builds and operates carriers goes through that awkward first few ships where they're just trying to figure out what works and what doesn't. China's going through the same thing right now. And once you have a workable carrier design and aircraft for it, you're only halfway done. You still have to figure out how to operate a carrier so it can be a decisive force in battle, then build the organizational framework and institutions to train crews and produce ships, planes, and equipment to support a carrier. This takes a lot of time, resources, and serious organizational effort to develop; just look at what the IJN and USN had to go through to get effective carrier forces, and how long it took the RN to get close to their level because for a long time they weren't willing to put in the same effort to learn "how to carrier". Graf Zeppelin was a terrible carrier design (though in fairness she wasn't an awful first attempt for a navy that had no carrier experience), but it didn't really matter since, again, the Germans had no idea how to use carriers in the first place. They could've been handed a brand new Shokaku-class ship with a full compliment of Japanese carrier planes and probably would've gotten it sunk on its first mission. (Funnily enough, Graf Zeppelin is one of my favorite German ships of WW2. Maybe it's her interesting story. Maybe it's because I like pointing and laughing at Nazi incompetence. Maybe it's because her humanized version in Azur Lane is humorously grumpy and stupidly hot. Probably all of the above.) *EDIT 4/18/20* - About a year ago I added to this comment a reply I wrote to someone else (which you can find below) that was chock full of errors, which many commenters have pointed out. I was a new naval history fan and something of a know-nothing know-it-all, and I apologize for my arrogance and touting wrong information. To keep someone else from stumbling on this post and getting fed bad info, and as an apology for my screw-ups, I’ll go over the correct info about the Graf Zeppelin as best I can, as well as address a few things people keep bringing up. Note that I don’t speak German, so I’m limited to English sources for this, though most of them draw on the works of German historians and seem to be largely the same minus a lot of details about the technology planned for the Graf Zeppelin. The sources I have with info about Nazi Germany’s unborn carrier program on hand are: -Conway’s All The World’s Fighting Ships, 1922-1946 (1980) -The German Aircraft Carrier Graf Zeppelin by Siegfried Breyer (1989) -Without Wings: The Story Of Hitler’s Aircraft Carrier by Stephen Burke (2008) -Fleets of World War II Revised Edition by Richard Worth (2015) -Aircraft Carrier Impero by Davide F. Jabes and Stefano Sappino (2018) All displacements listed are in metric tons unless specified. Here we go: *Part 1: Comparison to other carriers* In my initial post I compared the Graf to various contemporary carriers to show how she would’ve matched up, but I switched up the standard and full displacements for some of the ships. Here’s an accurate, more thorough (though by no means comprehensive since this is already going to be enough of an essay) comparison of overall length (L), beam or width (B), standard displacement (SD), full load displacement (FD), and aircraft compliment (AC). Graf Zeppelin class: L - 262.5 m (861 ft 3 in) B - 31.5 m (103 ft 4 in) SD - 23,200 tons initially: ~24,500 tons after bulges were added in 1942 to compensate a 4-degree list the ship developed as its topweight increased) FD - 29,720 tons initially: 33,550 tons with bulges) AC - 42-43 (planned, no German plans for deck parking) Yorktown class (United States): L - 246.8 m (809 ft 9 in) B - 33.4 m (109ft 6 in) SD - 19,875 tons FD - 25,484 tons AC - 90-96 with a deck park (~63 without a deck park, but the USN used deck parking for the entire war) Illustrious class (Britain): L - 229.6 m (753 ft 3 in) B - 29.2 m (95 ft 9 in) SD - 23,000 tons FD - 28,620 tons designed: 29,110 - 29,240 in service AC - 36, later 52-57 when the Royal Navy adopted deck parking in 1944 Shokaku class (Imperial Japan): L - 257.5 m (844 ft 10 in) B - 29 m (95 ft 2 in) SD - 25,675 tons FD - 32,105 tons AC - 72 + 12 disassembled spares (no deck park; the Japanese didn’t use them) Bear in mind, the weight of the ships actually completed increased significantly as the war went on and they received more AA, sensors, crew, and better, heavier planes. Plane size also affects how many aircraft can be stowed in a carrier, but the numbers are still good for giving us a general idea. Note also how much smaller the Illustrious is than the other carriers - nearly 100 ft shorter than the Graf. That hugely limits her hangar size, so her smaller air wing is understandable. Her weight comes largely from her heavy armor and larger AA battery, especially her armored flight deck which none of the other carriers have.* So defending the Graf’s tiny air wing by pointing to Illustrious’s smaller one (like some commenters have done) doesn’t hold up. Illustrious is limited by her size and made reasonable tradeoffs for having a smaller airwing. She’s a solid design; she just has different strengths than a typical CV. *(Actually, while it’s not as important as her other issues, the Graf has arguably the poorest protection of the group, with all the other carriers having thicker belt armor and Illustrious and Shokaku having thicker deck armor. I won’t go through listing more numbers, so I’ll just point you to Wikipedia, which seems to take its armor numbers from Conway’s. Overall, not great for a CV trying to double as a bloated light cruiser.) It's best to compare the Graf Zeppelin to the Shokakus: Both are purpose-built CVs, they’re actually close in size (Graf is longer and wider) and displacement once the Graf got her bulges, and neither navy planned or implemented deck parks for their carriers, so we don’t have to factor them into any comparison. Suffice to say, it’s really not good for the Graf. And that’s not even getting into other factors like flight-handling facilities, AVGAS storage, protection, and more. Moving on. *NOTE: KZbin keeps eating my changes when I try to add everything I wrote so I'm adding the other 3 parts plus this one as separate posts below. They're around post #90, so you'll have to dig for them. (As stated, it took me a year to come back to this.) Sorry for the inconvenience.*
@Zarastro546 жыл бұрын
1Korlash Not to mention that Germany’s poor (i.e. nigh nonexistent) troop rotation system meant that their navy pilots would be fighting until killed or captured, meaning very few, if any, veteran pilots staying behind to help train. In the already unlikely scenario that a German carrier fleet would survive a good way into the war, they’d be facing the same problem as the Japanese did with their training deficit to the Allies. Imagine having a bunch of novice pilots having to take off and land *109’s* of all things on carriers in the Atlantic. I feel accident rates would do half the Allies’ work for them!
@krisk46136 жыл бұрын
I think the other planes after the first 18 could takr of confentional, moreover her planes are counted without deck cariing, meaning that she could have roughly comparable plane numbers
@1Korlash6 жыл бұрын
@bh5496 Agreed, but "navy pilots"? I think you mean "the dregs Goering and the Luftwaffe threw our way"! Yeah, that's another problem with any potential German carriers: If it flies, it's Goering's. The carrier pilots would answer to a separate Luftwaffe chain of command aboard the ship, not the navy. As the inter-war Royal Navy could tell you, having your carrier pilots controlled by a separate air force (the RAF) and not the navy is very bad for rapid and seamless operations. And given how relations between the Kriegsmarine and the Luftwaffe were worse than they were between the RN and RAF (to the point where the Graf might have had separate mess halls for the different services to prevent fraternization), that doesn't bode well for the cohesiveness of German carrier crews.
@1Korlash6 жыл бұрын
@@krisk4613 The surviving plans for the Graf tell us EVERYTHING was to be catapult-launched. That would affect pilot training, flight crew training, standard operational procedures, etc. It might be possible to fly planes off the Graf Zeppelin's deck, but without the doctrine and training to do that, it wouldn't be an option for her. With enough carrier experience, the Germans would likely realize that the catapult-only launch was really dumb. Whether or not the Graf Zeppelin would even live long enough for them to figure this out is another question entirely.
@krisk46136 жыл бұрын
@@1Korlash year thats the problem with 1cariers lots of ideas, theoris and wishfull thinking.
@RedXlV6 жыл бұрын
You're being too generous to Plan Z by comparing it to the High Seas Fleet. The HSF consisted of ships that were comparable or in some cases superior to their closest Royal Navy counterparts. That's not really the case for Plan Z.
@deeznoots62415 жыл бұрын
RedXlV for Battlecruisers? Sure, but the actual Battleships of the high seas fleet were pretty bad until the Bayern class in comparison to the Royal Navy Battleships, the German guns were consistently of a smaller calibre and thus more limited in capability than the British, and the layout of such guns was often horrendous(Hexagonal turret layout is gross)
@AdamMGTF5 жыл бұрын
Not sure I can agree there. Call me bias and I guess I could be. But apart from the outlying terrible designs on both sides (I'm looking at you, so called "Invincible" class)... The British ships were ahead of the German classes. Can hardly blame the Germans. The British ship building industry was the thing of legand. They started the race for Dreadnaughts and never really lost the lead. German armour was excellent. British was arguably as good. British power plants were much better in every respect, especially overall efficiency. Guns were of larger caliber. Obviously I'm talking about capital ships. As a purely qualitative argument. I think the British ships had a technical lead of a couple of years at least. Before factoring in the size and quantity of British ships. That said. I'm no expert (my knowledge is much more 30s and 40s and geo-political rather than technical). So any good source on the subject is one id enjoy reading. Also *Whisper's* The German ships were cooler. Especially Von-Derr Tann, Sydlitz and Baden.... Other than Warspite. Because. Warspite.
@piotrd.48505 жыл бұрын
@@deeznoots6241 Calibre isn't everything - 18" of Yamato wasn't that superior to 16" of Iowas, Bismarck's 15" wasn't overwhelming to British 14" from KGV which itself (can be argued) was quite comparable, if not better, than Rodney's 16". Sorry to break it to you, but British shipbuilding SUCKED - compared to other powers their ships were overengineered and obsolete at the same time. Quadruple turrets like those on PoW were constant cause of trouble and British battleships were just about slowest of the bunch. Only the Soviets trailed behind by significant margin.
@swunt104 жыл бұрын
what he is totally missing is how germany always builds ships that (even today) on paper look bigger than other countries ships of the same class and with smaller caliber guns, but in reality these ships are well balanced and just worked. they can take enormous damage and they can accurately hit the enemy unlike british ships which somehow always end up exploding from being hit by a single shell or rocket (ww1, ww2, falklands), rolling over when taking in a bit of water eg. from a torpedo hit, to outright sinking because they hit a single mine and can't stop the flooding. german ships just work better than that, maybe because they are better balanced. just looking at the datasheet doesn't tell you that but reality proved them right.
@eliahaj22334 жыл бұрын
Why would plan z be completed with battleships and battlecruisers? It takes up to 1948 to get completed,weren't battleships and battlecruiser obsolete by 1944?
@navalhistoryhub37486 жыл бұрын
The Yamamoto of naval KZbin channels. Destroys all competitors. Top work this one. I been watching for a long time to back when we had no human voice. I don't have a question more a request. With your skills would you please do a decent video on the British pacific fleet of WW2. Too often overlooked and its a big interest of mine and I reckon would make a great vid. Although I'm a little bias! Not enough vids on the subject in my opinion.
@1Korlash5 жыл бұрын
Agreed. Drach's videos are always excellent. My favorite aspect is how he's able to compare ships, doctrines, etc. He doesn't just wank to statistics like too many people (and most naval documentaries, for that matter); he gives context and comparisons that allow for a deeper understanding of the subject matter. Every video I watch excites my interest and drives me to learn more, and for that I'm grateful. (Also, as a side nitpick, I'd say he's the Cunningham, Nimitz, or, if you want to go Japanese, Togo of naval KZbinrs rather than Yamamoto. Yamamoto made way too many colossal blunders to be considered a great admiral; Pearl Harbor, Midway, Solomons, etc.)
@mwnciboo5 жыл бұрын
So Drach will die in a Plane crash?
@AdamMGTF5 жыл бұрын
I came here it make a humorous comment about said admiral. I was too slow :( Still. Agree with the spirit of your satment
@piotrd.48504 жыл бұрын
Check out Cool Worlds.
@joeyjorczak4065 жыл бұрын
It’s evil…it’s diabolical…it’s LEMON SCENTED
@beaglemanzzz5 жыл бұрын
I'm glad I'm not the only one who thought of that haha
@Homieman-nz6si5 жыл бұрын
was looking for this very comment
@AdamMGTF5 жыл бұрын
This is a very confusing comment 😂
@jackandersen12624 жыл бұрын
Adam Bainbridge it’s a reference to the Spongebob movie.
@jasondouglas67554 жыл бұрын
Me too
@Ulquiorra41633 жыл бұрын
"They might even lose a fight to a well commanded destroyer." USS Johnston: "Did someone call me?"
@EmperorNefarious15 жыл бұрын
I'm sure in some alternate reality Graf Zeppelin got to use its guns in a glorious duel against Kaga and its 200mm guns...
@MyVanirАй бұрын
Were the Lexington class carriers invited?
@bigburd8755 жыл бұрын
"Hey guys, you know how Britain has the literal best navy in the world?" "Yes, we are well aware, did you have a way for us to beat them?" "Yes I did" "well, tell me!" "BIG boat, REALLY BIG boat"
@AdamMGTF5 жыл бұрын
Hitler: "Enough really big boat?" "... probably not..." *Hitler looks displeased and reaches for the 'send for the Gestapo' button" "...BUT!...Wait...err..." *Hitler hesitates* "... U-Boats!...yes, erm. *cough* Yes! U-Boats.....lots of them!" *Hitler looks unsure* ... "Annnddddd" "...And... Goering will supply the planes!?!." *Even Hitler face palms*
@Acekiller19954 жыл бұрын
You should do some research of your own. Not so much. At one time yes. By world war 2 british gunnery standards and training had fallen pretty badly. And many of thier battleships were poorly maintained antiques.
@matthewang89344 жыл бұрын
@Shonono Yeetus Biggest? Maybe, bit not the best. Their Battleships were shit. Nelson and Rodney were only decent. The Prince of Wales, King George V were jokes, quad 356mm? Many others would go for others, their own treaty was the death of their Navy. France while new had began building far more Modern Navy ships, quad 380mms were experimental, but were better than anything Britain's quad 356mm.
@matthewang89344 жыл бұрын
@Shonono Yeetus The only reason they won was by numbers, most of their ships were all either outdated or crap. Aircraft Carrier wise, they were in the game for a while and had to dish everything out from the Prototype Aircraft Carrier to work out everything. Germany was still oudated on armor, using Turtleback Armor against Convoys and smaller ships. Italy is Italy, both were not aspiring Naval Powers and never were. Germany even by WW1 only had one good class of Battleship, the Bayern, others were shit designs. I'd say, Britain won only by numbers and every ship they had were quite shit.
@alganhar14 жыл бұрын
@@matthewang8934 Utter crap. Tribal Class destroyers were amongst the best gun Destroyers of the war, Town Class Cruisers ranked amongst the finest Light Cruiser design of the War. The only real issue with the King George V Class were the 14 inch guns, 9 15 inch in triple turrets would have been a better choice, otherwise they were well armoured and fast. While not the best BB's of the war they were more than adequate. Most of the modern British Destroyers were good all round fleet destroyers. As for the British Carriers, they were designed the way they were because they were designed to operate in seas covered by hostile land based aircraft, which neither the Japanese or US Carriers were. Show me a US or IJN Carrier that would have survived multiple 1000Kg bomb hits.... Don't worry, I'll wait, though I won't hold my breath as you WONT find one.... You WILL however find several British Carriers that did just that..... This is what those such as yourself do not seem to understand. Many of these ships were designed for specific roles. The Arathusa and Leander Class Light Cruisers were NOT designed for Fleet Roles, that was the job of the Towns. Instead they were Trade Route protection vessels. That is the job they were DESIGNED for. A factor people like you never take into account. Real war, is not a game of Trumps. A Leander Class does not have to be able to sink a German Surface Raider, it simply has to damage it enough to send it back to Port for repairs, that is STILL a Mission Kill..... WWII came earlier than any Navy really wanted, the build plan for the Royal Navy from 1935 - 1944 (when they were expecting war) included a complete modernisation of the Navy, with virtually EVERY pre 1930's ship being replaced, including the Battleships, with both the Lions and KGV's replacing the Queen Elizabeths and Revenges.
@RRW3594 жыл бұрын
"An Aircraft Carrier is not a Cruiser" Tell that to the Soviet Union/Russia.
@bjorntorlarsson4 жыл бұрын
Because a treaty Soviet entered after ww1 forbids any aircraft carrier from passing through the Dardanelles. Some cruisers do carry recognizance aircraft/s, ehum...
@igoryst30494 жыл бұрын
@@bjorntorlarsson i think he said about "Kiev" Aircraft carrier/cruiser hybrids
@vasskolomiets414 жыл бұрын
@@igoryst3049 "Kuznetsov" is the same hybrid with the ramp... Soviet admirals have been prepared to win the past war in the maximal scale. They improvised with idea of the lone aircraft carrier/raider
@IrishCarney4 жыл бұрын
The Japanese top that in audacity by calling their current carriers "destroyers".
@Damien_N4 жыл бұрын
@@IrishCarney this is the same sort of handwavy behaviour that had the Italians flying aircraft under the banner of the Order of Malta
@anto95716 жыл бұрын
The Bismarck's Achilles Keel :P
@a.morphous666 жыл бұрын
Anto 😑
@dougstubbs96375 жыл бұрын
Kiel?
@AdamMGTF5 жыл бұрын
From now on I'm using the term "Bismarck's Rudder" Instead of "Achilles heel"
@tomhutchins74956 жыл бұрын
The issue I have with the Z plan is that it plays against Germany’s strengths. Germany is a continental power with powerful enemies on two sides, possibly even three given Mussolini’s support wasn’t certain. Not only is Germany not a naval power, it is in a horrible position from which to conduct naval war, with one of the world’s dominant naval powers plonked right athwart its approaches. Germany is a continental, not a naval, power. If you’re a continental power, rule 1 is to avoid symmetric naval confrontation with a naval power. Granted Germany needs some form of naval power: she imports too many raw materials from overseas to avoid this, but an asymmetric strategy of using U-boats and maybe fast torpedo boats, minefields and aircraft could have contained the Royal Navy. Ultimately, it can be argued that the decision to pursue symmetric naval competition led to Germany’s failure in both World Wars.
@AdamMGTF5 жыл бұрын
You are of course 100% correct But your reasoning is irrelevant... Think of it this way... The stratigic situation is irrelevant to the Z plan. Nazi Germany was a dictatorship and Hitler wanted a big powerful navy and that was that. So he got the Z plan. Ok. Over simplified a bit. You could argue that what he wanted was to *say* he wanted a big powerful navy. To bang his bathtub. maybe he just wanted to ruffle a few feathers internationally (especially in Britain) *mayyybeee* he was just drumming up support amoung the populace and the (militaristic) party faithful. My thinking is that given he was ( if nothing else ) a political mastermind. It's likely this was a case of all the above and more (he was very good at accomplishing many positives out of any one action). But the point is. He wanted a plan for this big navy. He got the Z plan. The actual reality of the situation from a geo-political point of view is irrelevant to the how and why the plan came about. The plan doesn't ignore the theory you stated. It's just that your theory (reality) isn't a factor. Hope that makes sense. It's a different way of looking at history and my favourite. Especially when it comes to Nazi Germany. So much of what happened goes against anything that we see as being rational and logical. So it's always interesting to work out the Nazis "reason" behind the action taken.
@iansneddon29564 жыл бұрын
@@AdamMGTF True, the actual reality of the situation is irrelevant to the request for and development of ... a plan. Kind of like Operation Sea Lion. Orders were given and the Luftwaffe and Kriegsmarine made a great show of making preparations while finding ways to blame each other for it not being able to actually proceed with an invasion of Britain. Plans don't depend on reality. Only actual implementation and potential for success depends on reality.
@IrishCarney4 жыл бұрын
_If you’re a continental power, rule 1 is to avoid symmetric naval confrontation with a naval power._ Beijing is forgetting this key rule
@vikkimcdonough61532 жыл бұрын
"If you’re a continental power, rule 1 is to avoid symmetric naval confrontation with a naval power." Or be the United States or China and get big and powerful enough to out-navy even a dedicated naval power.
@Battyj2 жыл бұрын
@@vikkimcdonough6153 the usa isn't really a continental power, they have weak or friendly neighbours north and south and have done since the early 1800s, they might as well be an island, it wouldn't make much of a strategic difference, so most of their focus is on having a strong navy and its been like that since ww1, they are just as much a dedicated naval power as the British empire was. China on the other hand seems to just be going down the same road as the German empire, they won't be able to fully compete with the USA unless there is a massive decline in the US navy
@williambeavis99296 жыл бұрын
High Seas Fleet Mk2 Electric Shipaloo.
@nonautemrexchristus56376 жыл бұрын
The royal navy is going to fuck you
@derptank33085 жыл бұрын
William Beavis *mark 2 Naval Superiority Boogaloo
@Frolaire5 жыл бұрын
I remember reading somewhere that the Graf Zeppelin's design was based on the design of Akagi, I just don't know WHICH version of Akagi it was designed from.
@sander64383 жыл бұрын
Germans went in 1935 to japan and inspected the akagi
@nickolashogg259 Жыл бұрын
@@sander6438It would most likely end up like the akagi, sunk by American/ British AirPower
@daneershen41386 жыл бұрын
Just a stunningly well done series. Unlike many KZbin presenters, you don’t seem addicted to the sound of your own voice. Had I den told someone could talk about a class of ship in 5 minutes, I would have politely asked when they last saw their therapist. But, you do it. Very impressive, keep it up. Not normally a Patreon supporter, but you forced me. Well done.
@johnfisher96926 жыл бұрын
Great video The biggest flaw of the Z plan was it required the British and French to do absolutely nothing about expanding and modernizing their Navies. It bears frightening similarity to Tirpitz's Risk-flotte theory which ultimately proved a failure and a disaster for Germany. Strangely teh H-39's had even thinner belt armour than Bismarck and the inclusion of underwater torpedo tubes is strange considering all the problems encountered with them in WW1. It also weakens the hull and reduces watertight integrity. The 'fantasy' H-44 design was to have 20 inch guns and considering all the problems Yamato had with blast effect from her guns, I shudder to think what the effects of these monsters would have. Not to mention the very slow firing rate. With your redesigned German ships Drach, another thing to get rid of is the German obsession with the Triple screw propulsion system. It has been proved that either a twin or quad screw is better as the quad allows steering with the engines in case of rudder damage *cough Bismarck cough* Navies prefer a quad for larger ships as it provides redundency, which the military loves.
@1Korlash6 жыл бұрын
Great post. Small nitpick: Yamato's blast damage problem has been badly overstated and may not have existed at all. The only thing it MIGHT have done is some minor damage to her wooden deck face, but that was purely cosmetic and, again, may not have even been a thing.
@johnfisher96926 жыл бұрын
@@1Korlash Sorry for not being clearer but the blast problem I was thinking about is the effect it would have on the crew. All the light AA guns on Yamato were shielded as the blast effect would have a very high chance of concussing any exposed personal. I can't recall the figures I read but the difference between even 16 inch guns and 18.1 inch is massive. While some say AA guns would not be manned during a surface action, the Japanese developed main gun ammo for the long range AA role. Yamato firing her big guns would cripple the light AA crews just as an air attack was incoming. So I can only imagine the pressure wave from 20 inch guns on any exposed crew.
@1Korlash6 жыл бұрын
John Fisher See, I've heard that, but I've never found any primary sources that support it (or secondary sources that present a relevant primary source). Do you have a source?
@johnfisher96926 жыл бұрын
@@1Korlash It's something I readmany years ago and, of course, now i go looking I can't find it :( One excellent book I have is "Conway's All the world's Battleships 1906 to present. Edited by Ian Sturton. This states the Blast effects from Yamato's main guns was so severe that all light AA had to be shielded and the ships boats stored below deck. Another lesser evidence is one of the reasons the British did not go for superfiring turrets in their first dreadnoughts was the guns would concuss the crew of the lower turret due to the sighting hoods when fired on certain bearings. The turrets were later redesigned to correct this. Considering these were 12inch guns, the effect of the Yamato's 18.1 inch guns on unprotected crew would be devastating, perhaps even fatal. And the Germans were thinking of 20inch for their fantasy H-44 class.
@1Korlash6 жыл бұрын
@@johnfisher9692 Interesting. Thank you for sharing that.
@flyingsock68366 жыл бұрын
German Navy: Plz no war until 1948 Adolf: Okay *Starts war* German Navy: Excuse me what the fuck?
@hajoos.83605 ай бұрын
Where is Your education? Germany had a local conflict with the Czecks in 1938 & Poland in 1939 about illigally occupied German territory. Historically seen, both states were always a part of the German I. Reich. You slackers unleashed 2 times a World War, which destroyed Europe in favour of the US. The heart spent by Drach is the evidence of exceeded British stupidity.
@Wolfeson286 жыл бұрын
The Germans really were stuck on their fixation for surface commerce raiders. I agree that virtually all of the Plan Z ships intended for that role would have simply been too specialized to be very useful. Those designs just ignore the historical reality that the ship types which tended to do the most commerce raiding were generalist ships that did many other things besides attacking merchant ships. Even all the way back into the age of sail, the frigates and smaller ships that often raided enemy commerce had numerous other roles as well, such as friendly convoy escort, battlefleet reconnaissance, repeating command signals, and a number of other independent missions that took advantage of their long range (in terms of provisions) and relative self-sufficiency. Those sailing frigates were the spiritual ancestors of world war-era cruisers (and the independent "cruises" they routinely undertook gave the later ships their name), and standard light and heavy cruisers could function well as commerce raiders, provided they had a strong enough force to overwhelm the escort. The difference was that those standard cruisers were equally adept at the myriad other roles for a medium-sized surface combatant. So many of these Plan Z ships, though, focused so much of their design on commerce raiding that they kept growing in size and cost, while at the same time sacrificing most of their ability to fight enemy warships of comparable size and cost.
@jamestheotherone7426 жыл бұрын
Well, mostly it was the German politicians, admirals, and the industrialists who wanted large capital ships for greater profits and phallus contests. Commerce raiding was just the only practical use for them.
@1Korlash6 жыл бұрын
It's even crazier when you remember that Germany's U-boats had already shown that they were far and away the best commerce raiders Germany could field against Britain.
@Betrix50605 жыл бұрын
@@1Korlash To be fair a mix of surface and subsurface raiders is absolutely necesary to keep your enemies on guard. IMO you should also throw in some air power for good measure.
@WilliamJones-Halibut-vq1fs5 жыл бұрын
The German plans were quite modest. 2 x Scharnhorst class, 2 x Bismarck class, 6 x H-class. In addition a small number of aircraft carriers. The Germans had to protect their own commerce as well or at least make it unpalatable for the British to run roughshod over German commerce without paying a hefty price. In reality they recognised the limitations and the two H-class keels (with about 10,000 tons down between them) were scrapped and turned into U-boats. Had the two H classes been built they would have been ready about the same time as Iowa.
@AdamMGTF5 жыл бұрын
@@1Korlash I dunno. The seeadler did rather well for a sailing ship! Lol But yes. If you can make one sweeping statement about Germany* in the run up to and during ww2 that's totally accurate, it's this. "Did not learn lesson of ww1" *I of course, actually mean Hitler. A man so determined to avoid a war in the east and west. That he managed to end up fighting a war in the west. The east. The south. The north AND in the skies over Germany. (Insert back to the future "your just not thinking 3 [sic] dimensionally" quote here)
@manilajohn01826 жыл бұрын
Plan Z suffered from a number of fundamental flaws. First, it took little to no account of a British response in terms of warship production. The British would not have simply stood idly by and allowed the Germans to complete such a fleet. Second was the fact that Germany was incapable of making the Z Plan a reality. In plain non-Vulcan English, Germany lacked the resources- both human and natural- to build, operate, and maintain a large army, navy, and air force, and was thus not a "world" power. What's more is that the Germans would not ever become a world power until such time as she had ready access to abundant natural resources- and those resources could only have come from the east; meaning the Soviet Union. War with the Soviet Union would have required the largest and most powerful army and air force that the Germans could field, and the resources from that could only have come at the expense of the navy. Lastly was that senior German leaders failed to realize that a negotiated peace with Britain- or even victory over her- could not alleviate Germany's lack of natural resources. Nor could it help Germany in what clearly was an impending war with the Soviet Union. Indeed, victory over Britain would have made Germany responsible for overseeing the feeding of, and security over the British people- and Germany was unable to do that over conquered Europe.
@piotrd.48505 жыл бұрын
ManiliaJohn01 - you are so ignorant.... German's LAST concern was feeding anybody except GERMANS. They would starve of just plain murder excess number, like they did in Poland and further East. Germans were literally ploundering all supply and production, including agriculture.
@giupiete65364 жыл бұрын
@@piotrd.4850 You don't understand what was written, and call John ignorant. We call this irony. Even with all that 'plunder' Germany could not hope to build a fleet to challenge the Royal Navy for control of the channel. Even with all that 'plunder' people were going hungry and Germany could not meet the needs of the war. Where Britain had spent centuries developing overseas territory, supporting the industrialization(Is it hilarious when people claim the US colonies went to war because they were being 'exploited' when they'd been developed and supported to the point they out-produced many European states already by the 18th century.) all it's colonies/possession and building a merchant marine big enough that all could trade with each other, Germany had just gone to war again and again and again... and made continental Europe poorer by contrast every time, much as France and Spain did before it. Continentals (and to be fair post-war Britons) are like that though, revering Empires for the territory they've conquered and the people they've killed rather than the things they've built. Regardless, nothing John said was wrong. People make a very big deal out of Germany's few naval successes in the world wars but tend to ignore the fact that none of these ever even came close (by an order of magnitude or two) to leveling the field in terms of combat capable warships. 'Plunder' is hard to turn into warships, it takes years to develop the capability at shipyards and those were years that the Germans didn't have.
@piotrd.48504 жыл бұрын
@@giupiete6536 I'm afraid that you don't understand - I was commenting on John's ridiculously naive concept of [..] Indeed, victory over Britain would have made Germany responsible for overseeing the feeding of [..] . It would have been other way round and doesn't have anything in common without building anything or not! As of matching UK naval power - don't you understand they DIDN'T HAVE TO LEVEL PLAYING FIELD? Britain was already overstretched and still maintained idea of outbuilding next two competitors. Therefore every single major German warship would cause disproportionate response, therefore strain, on British economy and shipbuilding capability, because that's what they were - fans of disproportionate response. How many naval assets had e.g. Tirpitz alone tied? Every Lion-class battleship would mean that much resources taken away from aircraft, tanks.... Anyway, what boggles the mind is opinion of people who were THIS close to defeat despite horrendous number of German blunders and on more than one occasion. For most of the war, Germany and Germans were whipping asses left and right like nobody's business - in the war, which they themselves had no concise concept of fighting and winning! It took obscene amount of resources and research to protect convoys against flimsy, uncoordinated, poorly informed and armed U-boot fleet whose communication were read. Hell, had they somehow had torpedoes of Japanese quality it would end then and there for Great Britain. Even "loosing' reportedly "hopeless" war Germany dismantled two large world powers, as seen now, effectively turning them into vassals, mortally wounded third (USSR) and thoroughly obliterated anything of value in Poland and similar countries. This kind of thinking by their opponents largely contributed to German successes and actually belittles enormous human and economic cost to stop them - it took whole 2nd half of the war with mammoth effort from literally entire industrialised world to reasonably stop and push back against "capability and resource lacking" Germany. I happen to know for a fact, that same reasoning as yours was behind Churchill's decision to dispatch Prince of Wales to Singapore and similar sentiments were onboard, until it was blown out of the water by then underestimated Japanese.
@youraveragescotsman71194 жыл бұрын
@@piotrd.4850 The British had an Empire it could draw from. The Anglo-German Naval Arms Race barely put a dent in the Empire's economy while it nearly crashed Germany's. Starving a people into extermination is an excellent way to paint a target on every single soldier/Officer on the Isles. They would not enjoy being on the island when everyone wants you dead. The resistance movements of the UK would be crippling to Germany's control of it, along with the Royal Navy that would have sailed to Canada to regroup and fight back.
@5000mahmud2 жыл бұрын
@@piotrd.4850 The British had planned to seed Germany with anthrax if worst comes to worst. I'm pretty sure they would've struggled to feed their population when all their cows died from the anthrax laden cakes. Sure, this would result in chemical response, but Germany had no major bomber arm to actually deliever the chemicals, and the V-1's and V-2's were far too expensive and off limited range to use as a replacement.
@atpyro79203 жыл бұрын
“Assuming somebody can keep Hitler locked in a room to keep him from mashing the ‘Lebensraum’ button for two seconds.” I think my soul departed from my body for a second from how hard I was laughing at this.
@Isildun92 жыл бұрын
That, and the, "Shoot whoever thought of using the BF-109" comment just got me for some reason.
@RobertWilliams-us4kw2 жыл бұрын
Your mentioning of competition for finances and natural resources between the competing branches of the Heer, Luftwaffe, Kriegsmarine and the Waffen SS reigns so true, in a regime which was purposefully designed and administered to compete within itself at every level, makes me think of another aspect which I never appriciated: 'Had the Z Plan been completed as intended, fuel consumption by the Kriegsmarine would have more than quadrupled between 1936 and the completion of the program in 1948, from 1.4 million tons to approx 6 million tons. On top of this the Kriegsmarine would have to construct some 9.6 million tons worth of fuel storage facilities for enough fuel reserves to allow just one year of wartime operations; longer conflicts of course necessitating an even larger stockpile.'
@florinivan69072 жыл бұрын
You have to account for the fact that the nazis had long term plans. Their goals were not just revenge for WW1. Their true goals were a complete reordering of the german nation. Which meant creating new structures from scratch like the SS. In time a sort of stability would be reached. But short term it would be chaotic until a clear set of rules between party state and secret police/paramilitary force was reached. Problem is this happened in the midst of a war. Also the nazi movement was the result of two forces. The far right paramilitaries of Weimar Germany(Freikorps) merging with the more occult mystical ultranationalist movements ie the Thule organisation. These two forces due to their chaotic and bloody birth were bound to have a hard time reaching an understanding with traditional government structures. The nazis could never completely abandon their roots. If anything the chaotic style of leadership was still preferable to the de facto civil war of early Weimar Germany. You no longer had street battles in Berlin. Well not between germans in any case.
@RobertWilliams-us4kw2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your informative reply@@florinivan6907 Regards Rob
@riderstrano7836 жыл бұрын
The lebenshram button
@juri87236 жыл бұрын
Rider Strano Lebensraum!
@Squad19936 жыл бұрын
It's a lebensSHAM I say!
@riderstrano7836 жыл бұрын
rly nis my phone is a massive potato
@josephd276 жыл бұрын
Beep beep
@EdMcF16 жыл бұрын
2' 18" "heavily-armed Raeders"? There was only 1.
@michaelarmstrong115 жыл бұрын
Thank You for providing a treasure trove of ACCURATE detail on the warships and battles of days gone by. I have been fascinated with WW II ships of the world for over 50 years starting in my early teens. So many documentaries use the same footage of a battleship blowing up or a submarine being strafed with little regard for accuracy. I have even seen the iconic footage of the USS Arizona blowing up at Pearl Harbor attributed several times to other ships/ The strangest one was footage from 'Triumph of the Will supposedly being McCarther's arrival in Australia. Thanks for not doing that and providing hours of bingeworthy viewing material, my wife sends her regards for helping to keep me out of her way. maybe we shall see 40 years of marraige after all.
@alexanderc94624 жыл бұрын
Wait, that zeppelin weight reducing scheme is utter genius, someone comes around and sees a warship gently bobbing on top of the water with 10 zeplins huddled together above it.
@paulhinds48406 жыл бұрын
Not only would you have seen the British respond in their building but the enhanced danger to American shipping likely would have triggered the huge scale up of the USN two years earlier. This not only 6 Iowa completed but the four turret follow up. Many overlook the tensions between the US and Imperial Germany at the end of the 19th century. The dreadnought competition of RN and SMS has obscured that the pre-dreadnought and then the Delewares building was aimed at Germany. The USN still had mistrust of the KM even though the focus shifted to the Pacific and thus the drive for a true "two ocean" navy.
@bigblue69176 жыл бұрын
I had wondered why the Western Allies gave the Russians the unfinished German aircraft carrier. They obviously realised that it only realistically value it had was as scrape. This also explains why the Russians never got the hang of carriers. You do have to wonder why they were trying for a High Seas Fleet Mk2. Even with Plan Z they were never going to be in a position to seriously threaten anyone else. And with the airstrike capability from carriers and land based aircraft they could no longer expect to hide in port. U-Boats and Commerce raiders would have been a far better bet for taking on the Allies. This was recognised in WW1. Some of the most effective German commerce raiders of WW2 were the disguised armed merchant ships. And it would have been much more cost effective. You could build a fleet of converted merchant ship raiders from those you captured. Just have a couple of supply ships carrying some guns and other equipment. Capture a ship. Refit it and then send it out to raid. Plan Z was a wishlist vanity project.
@murrayscott95464 жыл бұрын
Thanks, as always for your research and insight and also to your followers/responders for their equally adept addendi. Although not a naval history fan-boy myself, and thus feeling unworthy to add any intelligent additions, your channel provides me with some excellent bed-time stories. Thanks, again.
@ciaranquinlan87103 жыл бұрын
Loving the content. Only discovered the channel recently, very much enjoying it all. Fav so far it's the 3 part Jutland, with aftermath summary being a great addition. Context and outcomes in all these are great
@robertneal42446 жыл бұрын
An over-ambitious and bordering on fantasy level plan. Not only cost, but time and lack of materials would be against them. You would also need large shipyards that were out of range of the Bomber Command. Wilhelmshaven is too close and Kiel cannot build this number of capital ships.
@AdamMGTF5 жыл бұрын
Just a small clarification. The whole plan was intended as a pre war building effort. Infact (as mentioned in the video) the plan was fundamentally based on the premise that war would NOT come with any power before 1945. So the dockyards position in relation to bomber command is irrelevant as as soon as war started, the plan was instantly defunct and didn't exist. Hope that makes sense. Also, the unrealistic plan part of your post is bang on. And sums up pretty much all plans made under Nazism 😂
@iansneddon29564 жыл бұрын
@@AdamMGTF But Germany could not have held off until 1945. They began the war bankrupt and in need of purchasing raw materials to keep their economy and armament program going. Germany's key supplier was the USSR as they could negotiate payment in kind - manufactured goods and technology in exchange for raw materials. The longer this went on the less Germany would be able to borrow to purchase iron from Sweden and tungsten from Spain. And the more dependent on the USSR they became the more the USSR would demand in exchange. The German economy was run on conscription, subsidies and wage/price controls. To pursue a massive naval expansion in addition to the resources that went into the army and air force... where would these additional raw materials and additional skilled workers come from. The superiority of the Luftwaffe over the Royal Air Force was a result of the Germans starting earlier than the British. When they both were going in war time production in 1940 the British were out-producing the Germans almost 2 aircraft to 1... and that isn't counting production in Canada or the US $1.2 billion (about $22 billion in current dollars) of aircraft the British purchased in 1940 from USA (paid in gold). German production was held back until they captured raw materials and a large slave labor force. While Germany was manufacturing the Bismarck and the Tirpitz (to go from zero proper battleships to two), the British commenced construction on five battleships to add to their existing 12. I am not counting the Hood as a Battleship. The Royal Navy had three battlecruisers (Hood, Renown and Repulse) compared to Germany's two (Scharnhorst and Gneisenau). A faster manufacturing of ships by Germany would have triggered faster production in Britain.
@pedrofelipefreitas2666 Жыл бұрын
Geez, the nazis were delusional, who would've guessed... On a more serious note, the germans theoretically weren't expecting a big war until 1945, their plans were intended for that time frame. What they didn't expect however, was that they'd go bankrupt in 3 years, because printing money doesn't work, and have to conquer european countries to offset the economic crisis.
@falloutghoul16 жыл бұрын
The thing about the GZ's casemate secondaries. They were the result of an error, with the original design having 8 150mm casemates in single mounts. The doubles were a mistake.
@RedXlV5 жыл бұрын
Specifically, the ship's designer had the idea of saving some weight by replacing the 8 single casemates with 4 double casemates. Miscommunication with the shipyard resulted in replacing the single mounts with doubles on a 1-for-1 basis.
@seanmac17934 жыл бұрын
@@RedXlV seems like something you might want to clarify but hey that's just me
@nmccw32456 жыл бұрын
Schnapps- at 04:30? Yes sir.
@Napalmratte6 жыл бұрын
One of the great "WHAT IF`s" that keep you up at night. With a lot of hindsight we can all come up with many questions, recommendations and "why didn´t they think of this & that" Because clearly, the realitiy of 2 WW´s is not enough for civilized Reddit discussions ;)
@spookyshadowhawk67766 жыл бұрын
The Rocket Propelled Battleship, with a bank of 80 V-2 Engines in the back to overtake Merchant Convoys or escape the British. With the 700,000 ton, 8 32" Gustaf Guned Fantasy, why not?
@Colonel_Overkill6 жыл бұрын
@@spookyshadowhawk6776 seems a bit under ambitious to me.....
@spookyshadowhawk67766 жыл бұрын
@@Colonel_Overkill World of Warships did a special test on the H-45, when you're firing Shell's that weigh over 30,000 lb each, even a near Miss is dangerous. A slow rate of fire though. Probably used Destroyers for life boats.
@stef18966 жыл бұрын
There is no 'what if's, whatever Nazis do, they would lose the war. 'What if' are just the wet dreams of contemporary Nazis, too stupid and too ignorant to understand both, the reality and the history. Nazis were a bit lucky and too crazy on the onset of the war, and that's pretty much it.
@Napalmratte6 жыл бұрын
that is a monumental fail of a comment @@stef1896 it is stupid, ignorant and completly misses the point.
@seventhson274 жыл бұрын
The allies ALREADY had a reply to the Yamatos. It was called the Essex Class.
@bamagrad994 жыл бұрын
True statement. The same year the Germans started building Bismarck, the USA started work on Enterprise. Edit: I'll cut them a little slack because, as of the mid-late 1930s, only a handful of people in the world had figured out that battleships were obsolete and aircraft carriers were the new rulers of the seas.
@bkjeong43022 жыл бұрын
@@bamagrad99 Actually, NO navy figured it out even up to and past the end of WWII. Do remember that the USN and RN kept putting new battleships into service even after the Axis had stopped and people began to realize all these new battleships (on both sides) were just a waste of steel.
@AFGuidesHD2 жыл бұрын
So Germany building a big navy whilst sandwiched between France and Russia is an obvious non-starter which is why it historically didn't happen. I think a more interesting debate would be about whether the Axis, now controlling Europe, could compete with the USA after defeating France, the USSR and for arguments sake, also Britain. This was after all the main idea behind Germany's ideals, that Europe as a continent needs to unite in order to compete with the American continent.
@florinivan6907 Жыл бұрын
No it couldn't. Because of physics. Once the Bomb was ready no later than the mid 40s there were two possibilities either a detterence a la the Cold War settled in one in which the US with a better naval tradition was poised to win long term. Or nuclear war. Personally I believe detterence with Nazi Germany as opposed to the soviets would have failed. Since ideologically german superiority was tied to war a long Cold War would eventually have discredited their ideology. The soviets did not view war as a goal unto itself. Just as a means to an end. Eventually a nuclear armed Germany would have chosen war even at the risk of a complete destruction once the US retaliated. Their ideology mandated war. The German-US version of the Cuban missile crisis would have resulted in war.
@notbobrosss36704 жыл бұрын
Far to heavily armed. As a American I can’t comprehend that statement.
@GearGuardianGaming3 жыл бұрын
By that he meant gun caliber, as the H-44 was drawn up with 20" guns.
@JohnSmith-kg2rt3 жыл бұрын
Such a thing does NOT exist
@fredricunderhill2046 жыл бұрын
The results of WWI U-boat action should have been enough to make them the priority. However, Donitz was too compliant and followed orders despite results. The U.K. was starving by December, 1941. Any German Surface was vulnerable. Brilliantly the Reichmarine had a similar composition as modern navies with submarines, larger destroyers and specialized craft. Even aircraft carriers are targets and specialized.
@mikeday57763 жыл бұрын
Sincerely glad you were not A/ a time traveler, and B/ so minded as to give aid to the German navy. Much happier with you where you are, providing sound historical analysis and information. Thoroughly enjoy your work, Cheers.
@bernardtimmer67234 жыл бұрын
Hms Unicorn, although a light carrier used her 4 inch guns for shore bombardement during the war in Korea as she was the only ship available lol.
@lefrenchaudir1883 жыл бұрын
Uss card served in ww2 and the Vietnam war i think it was sunk in sallow water but she was raised
@paulneeds2 жыл бұрын
The irony and sarcasm is strong in this one - love it!
@feanorn84096 жыл бұрын
I love your intro ! This channel is getting better and better with every new vid.
@jcgamer8926 жыл бұрын
Plan Z can be summed up like this: Possible IF germany dedicated every last resource to the project, otherwise, it's just wishful thinking. The German economy was no where near what it needed to be for the plan to be completed in 10, let alone 15. 20 years would be possible as that gives just enough time to put everything that is need to support and produce such a fleet size in place. As for the ship designs, a good starting point considering the kriegsmarine had to start from almost scratch.
@TwistedSisterHaratiofales5 жыл бұрын
16:08 They actually intended to build 6 H-39 class Battleships. The next designs, H-40 Scheme A, and B, H-41, H-42 were some what serious design considerations, however if and when any of these could and would have been built would have been after the six H-39s were at least floated. H-42, H-43, and especially H-44 were design studies that were not even shared with Admiral Raeder or Admiral Doughnuts (pun intended). These ships were designed as 97,000 ton, 118,000 ton, and 141,500 ton ships. Germany had now way of building any ship of this size at the time. There projected main guns were to be. 16.54" (420mm) and 20.06" (508mm) on the last 2. by 1942 the Design Navy Weapons Office had just got to the determination that a 420mm gun was possible by boring out and lining the 406mm gun, for the H41 design. This came also came with testing special projectiles and powder to get that to work, and would have taken time to get it tested and working right. In all honesty if Germany could have built any of the H-39s it may have helped them a little, but unless they could have made the whole six battle groups, and supply ships along with replenishment ships, and cruisers/destroyers to escort them, then as noted it just wasted a lot of time, money and manpower that could have built more submarines that were so successful in the first 2 years of the war.
@1993Crag4 жыл бұрын
If Germany had built the H-39, by the time it was finished they'd be up against 6 Lion class and some 30 extra carriers.
@TwistedSisterHaratiofales4 жыл бұрын
@@1993Crag Not to mention they most likely would have been bombed during construction.
@piotrd.48504 жыл бұрын
@@1993Crag and simply bought entire bankrupt Great Britain in another round of MEFO, instead fighting it.
@68RatVette Жыл бұрын
The big fleet idea worked up to WW1 when COAL was the main source of energy. With no domestic oil, this Z-Plan puts the cart before the horse! I really enjoy your vids Drach
@ThomasAffoltertevis5 жыл бұрын
The Germans had no hope of competing with the British and American navies. Not enough industrial capacity, simple as that.
@jtough74995 жыл бұрын
Or the resources to supply that industry if they did...or didnt....either way comes down to supply
@AdamMGTF5 жыл бұрын
Both arguments of course are irrelevant when it comes to the Z plan as it was drawn up for Hitler. And he didn't care about such things. He wanted a plan for a large navy and that's what he got.
@piotrd.48504 жыл бұрын
Yeah, Britain thought so before WW I. They paid heavy price in ships blown in indecisive battle, which was supposed to end war in weeks, instead required millions of dying in the mud and trenches. Continued that trail of thought - lost empire due to war 20 years later, and now are smaller and far less industrialised economy then Germany. Also, Germany didn't plan war with USA.
@ThomasAffoltertevis4 жыл бұрын
@@piotrd.4850 perhaps but they won the war
@captainseyepatch38795 жыл бұрын
The real issue with the "German tillman ships" is simple. Where to build them. The Germans where barley able to build the Bismark class, they would have needed to effectivly build all new drydocks to make the things.
@swunt104 жыл бұрын
so what. just build a dry dock. it's not a big deal.
@piotrd.48504 жыл бұрын
@@swunt10 It could take time in that day and age, be vulnerable to sabotage during construction and served as huge announcement of intentions.
@youraveragescotsman71194 жыл бұрын
@@piotrd.4850 "Attention Royal Navy, we are creating a huge dry dock to obviously create a huge ship in clear violation of the treaties." The reply? The Royal Navy starts to modernise and build more ships.
@hittman12226 жыл бұрын
This made for an entertaining lunch break video. Thank you for posting.
@maddyg32086 жыл бұрын
It could be argued that Hitler's late 1930s international strategy was not based on war but on expanding German territory and influence by picking off individual countries with treaties, intimidation and/or bluff. The threats of invasion by the German army and terror bombing by the Luftwaffe were part of this too. The Z Plan would have allowed for a continuation of this via "gunboat diplomacy", especially for countries heavily reliant on shipping for food and/or their economy and/or with vast overseas empires (ie all western European countries in those days). Hence the Z Plan's emphasis on commerce raiding and cruisers, which could have gone - and did go - all over the world, not just a battlefleet to match Britain's. Also, it would have allowed Germany to bombard those hard to reach countries such as France, Britain etc from the sea. One by one each could have fallen into line behind Germany with no actual war, just the threat of it or a display only. The strategy worked for the militarisation of Germany contrary to the Versailles Treaty, the military reoccupation of the Rhineland, the Anschluss with Austria, the incorporation of the Sudentenland, and the occupation of Czechoslovakia. The fact that Poland (and later, other countries) said "no" to German intimidation was the beginning of the end to this strategy (though it continued up until the invasion of the USSR), which would also have been a reason why the Z Plan was terminated.
@jjayyoung73352 жыл бұрын
When it came to WWII Cruisers the US Alaska class were badass. These cruiseer's 12" 50 caliber main armament were better than most 14" guns. Those cruisers were beautiful, handsomely great looking, these cruisers and the German Prince Eugene and Bismark and Tirpitz along with the Iowa class battleships were hands down the best looking ships of steel to ever put to sea. IMHO, Which is awesomely important.......to probably only me. 😎😎😎😎
@stevebroadbent50803 жыл бұрын
Drachinifel, you are clearly an engineer or perhaps more precisely a Naval Architect. Excellent video, thanks. The concluding comments promptly whacked it all into place. As an aero eng, what you said about navalising ME109 vs FW190 resonates. Naval aircraft need to be robust and for all its other qualities the Messerschmitt was anything but.
@mitchelloates94066 жыл бұрын
As I've heard said on occasion, there were times when Hitler himself was the best "ace in the hole" the Allies had. Thank God he decided to make the German navy follow this plan, instead of first building up the U-Boat arm in case of a sooner-than-expected war, and then constructing the surface fleet. As it was, with just 60 U-Boats at the start of the war, it was still a damn close-ran affair. If they'd had 90 or 120 boats at the start of the war, enough to where Doenitz could have almost immediately kicked off effective wolfpack operations, things might have ended very differently indeed. A very good read as to what they were able to accomplish with very limited numbers of submarines is "Operation Drumbeat", a detailed account from both sides of the U-Boat offensive against the US East Coast in the first part of 1942 after the US entry into the war. They were very nearly able to bring shipping to a complete halt, thanks in no small part to some utterly boneheaded decisions on the part of the US and USN, and Admiral Ernest King's Anglophobia, ignoring intelligence and operational advice from the RN. In many ways, it was a worse defeat than that suffered at Pearl Harbor.
@aquila44606 жыл бұрын
Half of those rumors come from German Generals who basically wanted to cover the tracks of their own mistakes by claiming that they could have one without Hitler. And Hitler made about as many good decisions as a made bad decisions. Though thanks to his ideology he made a few pretty stupid decisions.
@Drachinifel6 жыл бұрын
Later in the war the Allies abandoned attempts to support Hitler's assassination because they were worried someone more suited to command would take over.
@francesconicoletti25476 жыл бұрын
The same could be said for the U boats as has been said for plan Z . If they were there in greater numbers effective counter measures would have been implemented earlier. The American reluctance to convoy, the British reluctance to release aircraft for submarine patrols, the British tendency to chase around the ocean in hunter killer groups would all go away quicker in the face of earlier losses. With luck it might even get King fired. Knowing more submarines were being built might have gotten some corvettes on the slipways earlier.
@blackdeath4eternity6 жыл бұрын
@@Drachinifel late in the war hitler was suffering from a illness (likely schizophrenia) & meth from what i remember so....
@fyorbane6 жыл бұрын
@@Drachinifel Too true. Imagine a Donitz or Rommel in charge. Heaven forbid.
@The_Alt_Vault6 жыл бұрын
you should do the iceberg ship
@bjorntorlarsson4 жыл бұрын
V1 towed torpedoes was another interesting idea.
@AdamMGTF4 жыл бұрын
He has done it. Hms habbakuk
@Warriorking.19634 жыл бұрын
Great video, very informative. One question, have you any links to articles on the proposed Y Plan? I've tried finding more out about it, but to all intents and purposes come up with nothing. Here's a funny little fact, if the Z Plan fleet had been built, it would have taken the entire oil imported into Germany to fuel the ships. I wonder what the Panzer divisions and Luftwaffe squadrons would have thought of that?
@youraveragescotsman71194 жыл бұрын
Probably would have lined up to shoot the Admirals and then Hitler.
@robgannon43655 жыл бұрын
The inescapable reality that the German surface fleet faced in both world wars was that their geographic position was just about as bad as it could get (with Britain able to control all the exits from the North Sea) and that a nation with faced "continental" threats far more serious than any maritime counterparts was never going to be able to devote the economic resources necessary to successfully challenge the Royal Navy for the control of those exits. This was as true in 1938 as it was in 1898, and both Raeder and Hitler, with the example of 1914-1918 in front of them, should have realized what Wilhelm II never did. A "fleet in being" was necessary to hold sufficient heavy units of the RN in home waters, reducing possible convoy escorts, but this could have been done by building BISMARK and TIRPITZ as additional units of the SCHARNHORST class (although with a 15" main battery) and rearming SCHARNHORST and GNIESENAU with twin 15" turrets as soon as possible. Screen them with 4 light cruisers and a dozen destroyers and that should be sufficient for the purpose of keeping an equal number (probably more) of British battleships, battlecruisers, cruisers and destroyers at Scapa Flow. The HIPPER class should have been built as additional (hopefully improved) units of the DEUTSCHLAND class and, paired with "M" class cruisers, sent out to attack the North Atlantic convoy routes. With eight, rather than three, dedicated commerce raiders, and each of those with a capable consort, this would have required virtually every convoy to be escorted by a pair of cruisers, or a cruiser and capital ship, unless all the "pocket battleships" were known to be in German home waters. Other than that . . . BUILD MORE U-BOATS!
@WadcaWymiaru5 жыл бұрын
*Kure/Yokosuka* Officer (with feath in the voice): What have you done... **Something massive move** Me (with devil smile): A battleship.
@Warriorking.19636 жыл бұрын
Excellent video! I haven't read the comments yet but suspect you'll get a slating by some; there are people on KZbin who can't tolerate any criticism of German weapons or technology.
@scotthill87876 жыл бұрын
How many crewmen would have been needed to man and support the proposed fleet? Love these! Thanks!
@lefrenchaudir1883 жыл бұрын
The h-39 class 1000-2000 men per ship(2 in the class) Graf zeppelin 1000-1500 men The crusiers 800-1200 men per each ship Destroyers 150-211 each Submarines 15-50 per submarine
@scotthill87873 жыл бұрын
@@lefrenchaudir188 Thank you. I apologize. My question was more of a rhetorical one. My obviously poorly made point was that German manpower resources were stretched to their limits and beyond, as it was. An expanded fleet would have only made them worse.
@lefrenchaudir1883 жыл бұрын
@@scotthill8787 they can just draft danish and Norwegians tho
@jameskilcoyne19554 жыл бұрын
If the Germans had built this Z-plan fleet, or something close to it, 8 battleships, 4 carriers, and all those battlecruisers, cruisers, and wide-array of destroyers, would they have had sufficient ports and dock space to house and service such a fleet? Germany isn't Japan or Great Britain with lots of coast open to oceans. Heck! fully 3/4 of Germany is landlocked. Or! are we to assume the Z-plan included using captured ports in Norway and France, to name just two? Next question is: shipyards? Did the Z-plan depend on present German capacity, or again, did it have an assumption built in they would use someone else's to finish the fleet build-out?
@rocketman11046 жыл бұрын
650 mm guns in twin turrets? Um, that is larger than the Yamato at 460.
@asheer91144 жыл бұрын
Don't forget 12 800mm Gustaw guns on H-45 😈
@TwistedSisterHaratiofales5 жыл бұрын
Come to think of it, would you consider doing a video on if the Kriegsmarine got ahold of the French Navy?
@lexington4766 жыл бұрын
That was an awesome run down, never knew about the plan Z.
@bernhardrohrer95934 жыл бұрын
Where do I start: Kreuzer P: 35kts, not 33, hence able to outrun Hood and R&R Kreuzer M: diesel/steam turbine hybrid propulsion - you take out the turbines, you still got the diesels As for twin turrets - Germany preferred them because of the higher achievable rate of fire.
@dovetonsturdee70334 жыл бұрын
How many of these wonder ships were actually built, by the way?
@lloydknighten50716 жыл бұрын
Drachinifel, thanks for the thorough documentary. Your comment about the Graf Zepplin being used during a surface duel reminds me of the carrier that appears in the "Battleship" game. As we both know, most carriers had no where near the deck and hull armor to survive several hits from 16, 15, or 14 inch guns. I think the guy who came up with the Graf Zepplin carrier/cruisers concept must have come up the "Battleship" game. 😆 I think that if Grand Admiral Raeder had of been able to lock his master, Der Fuehrer, in a rubber room, with a ball of string, until at least 1945, Germany would have had a better fleet. I agree with you that they should have been practical and frugal with the designs and ships that they built. Don't waste time and Reichmarchs on useless super-cruisers, enlarged Deutschland class pocket battleships, or super-destroyers. And they should forget the expensive super-Bismarck class. So Stick with building all 6 Admiral Hipper class cruisers, do at least 4 Bismarck class battleships, 4 Scharnhorst class battle-cruisers, and 4 sensibly designed Graf Zepplin carriers.
@paulhinds48406 жыл бұрын
One factor that must be recalled with 'pie in the sky ' Plan Z was that Hitler never intended for it to be actually used. He really thought his posturing and diplomatic domination over the British government would continue. He had waved the hype of the army and air force so well that these paper tigers would still serve. The Nazi regime has perhaps 12-18 month head start on France, Britain and all the other European powers. The margin of victory in France was supplied by the Czech arms handed to him in Munich. When he turned on the Soviet Union a year later the hollow nature of his army and logistics train was reveled. Hitler in 1941 was believing his own propaganda!
@crungus__3 жыл бұрын
I never understood the idea behind putting anti-surface guns on a carrier. If it’s got to shoot at anything bigger than a patrol boat, you’re already doing something wrong.
@MrKKUT19846 жыл бұрын
Great video and awesome info sir! I've always been fascinated with the h class battleships, especially the h44. Just the thought of the shear size is mind blowing. I'm sure those who fought against the germans in ww2 are glad the H class were never built but man would they have been a sight to behold. It's kinda a shame that ships like yamato are sitting at the bottom of the ocean. I personally would have love to see one. The only battleship I've ever seen or been to is the uss Alabama and she is a beaut. Its amazing that something that solid and heavy actually floats, or did.
@dovetonsturdee70335 жыл бұрын
It is always fascinating to read comments about the fantasy that was Plan Z. The idea was adopted in late January, 1939. By that time, the German Naval Ordnance department (on 31 December, 1938) had already issued a report, 'The Feasibility of the Z Plan,' which pointed out that requirements in materials and manpower were so great that the whole of German industry would need to be committed to it. In other words, no weapons production for the army, and no aircraft production for the Luftwaffe. At the time the plan appeared, the Kriegsmarine were still sorting out technical problems with the Scharnhorst class yet, apparently, Germany was going to build six 56000 ton battleships, ten 21000 ton battlecruisers, and four aircraft carriers, as well as large numbers of cruisers, destroyers, and U-boats, by 1947. As Hitler always viewed the Soviet Union as his primary enemy, does anyone really, seriously, consider that he would have regarded devoting Germany's entire industrial potential to building a large fleet as having any merit at all? Honestly, the very idea is utterly ludicrous.
@cadams19216 жыл бұрын
In light of the fact that the Germans were very creative in terms of air force and land weapons. It is not surprising that they would be creative with their ships. I think your assessment of the ships is correct. I cant wonder what would have happened if they had built the fleet. We will never know.
@CaptainJetstream6 жыл бұрын
Now we need to see those in an Episode of Man in High Castle
@ijnfleetadmiral4 жыл бұрын
Agreed! While I LOVED seeing the Japanese fleet entering San Francisco Bay in Season 3, I always thought it was a shame we didn't get a look at a 1960s version of an H-class. I would've said Tirpitz, but by the time MITHC was set, Tirpitz (had she survived WWII) would've been getting pretty long in the tooth and probably wouldn't have been used much beyond a training ship in the Baltic.
@BrickNewton4 жыл бұрын
Have been binge watching this channel while playing World of Warships during our lockdown.
@TwistedSisterHaratiofales6 жыл бұрын
Actually all 6 H class BBs that were first ordered were planned to be H-39's with H-41 through H-43 being possibilities and H-44 being more of a Battleship study. H-42 most likely could have been the largest BB that Germany at the time could have built, and still wouldn't have been practical to do so for them.
@熊掌波清波4 жыл бұрын
I heard Bismark's fire control cables were protected by armored tube to its top.
@dovetonsturdee70334 жыл бұрын
Bismarck's communication systems were above her armoured deck, which is why they were destroyed within around 20 minutes at the start of the action on 27 May. The KGVs had theirs below their main armour.
@熊掌波清波4 жыл бұрын
@@dovetonsturdee7033 from what i read, it is not what happened. the bridge tower was destroyed first and second fire director followed. the armored conning tower also got blasted. its fast fall was purely the result of losing mobility and outnumbered. two battleship attacked from 2 ends while cruisers showered superstructure. while all the radars and optical directors were up high, how can any ship protect them? even kgv's armor deck is higher, there were still sections exposed to incoming shell. the idea to protect them is the same one with bismarck- armor tubes to the high ground and computer room under armor deck. as for the communication system…which part was under armor deck? i mean,officers are on the bridge giving orders, right? if they were dead…which part of communication system was left and under armor deck? as far as i know, all vital cable in bismarck was either under armor deck or have armor protection.
@dovetonsturdee70334 жыл бұрын
@@熊掌波清波 The bridge/forward superstructure, together with both forward turrets were destroyed very early in the action. Of course Bismarck was never going to survive, but I am not talking about radar (which, in Bismarck, wasn't working anyway) or optical rangefinders, but about the internal communications between departments within the ship. The senior survivor von Mullenheim-Rechberg, who was in the aft gunnery position, recorded in his book that communications with his superior, Schneider, in the main fire control position, was lost within 20 minutes, and that the gunnery plotting officer, Cardinal, contacted him shortly afterwards to say that he should take over the direction of the aft turrets, because contact with the main gunnery position had been lost. By 0930, Rechberg wrote, he knew little about what was going on within the ship. He had received no reports, nor had anyone asked him about his own situation. He writes that he used his telephone circuits to ring for information all round the ship, but only managed to get one answer, from a messenger in the damage control centre. From his account, it is clear that internal communications failed at an early stage. Bismarck's problems arose because of her outmoded, incremental, armour lay out, which, in effect, detonated incoming AP shells above the lower, second, belt, thus resulting in widespread fires and the destruction of internal cables. Similar things happened to other ships with this layout, such as Scharnhorst, Hiei, & Kirishima. The KGVs had the superior, all or nothing, armour, with all communications below it.
@熊掌波清波4 жыл бұрын
@@dovetonsturdee7033 it looks like the conclusion of communication cables destroyed is inferred from survivor's account. but i found it confusing. how can kgv put communication cables under armor deck if some positions are over it? there will be cables reach out anyway. i assume you mean the cables were over armor deck in bismarck while they detoured into armor deck and reach out to other positions in kgv. do we have first hand material to prove the case? because i cannot imagine why bismarck cannot do the same at the cost of longer cables. its designer, at least, can set up backup wires. the survived officer said he got one response which means the whole ship was in disarray. it could be the result of all comms connections were cut off except one or the commanding chain got problems. in the first scenario, we still need to examine if it was the hardware because cutting off all comms cable s running across the ship needed saturated fire power which was not liked to suffer on the early stage. for armor layout, i found all of them are problematic in terms of denfending capital guns. designing is making trade off. i cannot see the point of superiority if the main belt cannot protect its vital in practical range. i remember bismarck's 380 can penetrate 460mm at right angle in 18000m according to its own test chart. by the way, i found some research on radar indicate bismarck's radar had been back online when he fought hood. they played an important roll in accurate shots.
@stevenmoore46123 жыл бұрын
“Assuming that someone could keep Hitler locked in a room, and keep him from smashing the Lebensräume button for two seconds...” 😂
@glennsimpson76593 жыл бұрын
Another really excellent video. Thank you, when do you have time to sleep and eat? One more problem the Germans faced in building the H Class BBs is the shallowness of their harbours. They were very much limited in how much water these big ships could draw without grounding on the Ems mud, which meant the hull design had to be wide rather than deep. That required extra power because of extra wave-making, which in turn required trade-offs somewhere. And the proposed Diesel engines were already pushing it terms of power output - I think diesels are not easily scaleable in the same way as boilers and steam turbines. But the extra beam would have helped with the torpedo defences, which would have been hard pressed facing 1944 scale carrier strikes.
@riphaven6 жыл бұрын
and now I'm off to world of warships. damn good video.
@mebeasensei6 жыл бұрын
I don't know much about boats, aeroplanes and buses, WW1,2 or 3, however, the over powering conclusion I can draw about this is that whoever designed the 'Z' Plan forgot to acknowledge the impact that allied aircraft would have. Particularly these four, 1) CAC Wirraway, 2) Fairey Swordfish Mk 1, 3) Blackburn Skua and 4) Aichi E13A "Jake". These four probably represent the fourmost powerful aircraft capable or reverse thrust and vertical landing at sub-sonic as well as super-sonic speeds. That's the problem with KZbin. Any kid can get up and make a video. THank God I'm here.
@jlvfr5 жыл бұрын
Wish I had seen this video sooner... :( Don't blame the germans for trying to use the Me-109. Yes, it was a bad idea, but there was no other light fighter in german service at the time the Zeppelin was launched (1936-37); a purpose-designed fighter was out of the question. You use what you have, not what you want (re: Spitfire in use in the RN, specially the disaster of the North Africa and Scicily invasion campaigns) As for the overall scheme of the Z-class, there's one massive gap that I did not hear mentioned here, and that hightlights the Krigsmarine lack of vision and experience: _there were no AAA cruisers planned_ . Sure, some light/heavy/scout cruisers would end up being converted, but, at the time the plan started (early 1939) both the RN and the USN were well into either building or preparing their anti-aicraft units, the Didos and the Atlantas...
@AdamMGTF5 жыл бұрын
In fairness. The role that dedicated anti air ships would play (and how useful they would prove to be). Wasn't something that could be seen in the late 30s. It didn't become obvious until a year or 3 into the war. Also The idea of a anti air cruiser just didn't factor at all into the doctrine, theory and concept behind the fleet the Germans were looking at with the z plan. They were thinking offensive against merchant ships and their escorts. The expectation being that each individual ships own anti aircraft armament would be enough to defend a ship being attacked. There was no reason in the mid-late 30s to doubt this theory. It was a totally reasonable expectation given what was known at the time and was shared by all the world's navy's. With the benafit of hindsight, we can see that it's a possible flaw in the plan. BUT. The videos point was to look at the plan and assess it based on its merits and flaws as and when it was drawn up. If you start picking it apart with hindsight. Where do you stop?
@sumrandumguy71774 жыл бұрын
Using a navalized messer would b no worse than the brits using their sea hurris n seafires
@IrishCarney4 жыл бұрын
The brilliant thing about the Atlantas was that their main armament was dual purpose and they had a ridiculous amount of it --- eight turrets with two guns each. So a German equivalent could not only have fended off whatever Fairey Swordfish or the like sent against it, but also dealt effectively with any destroyers on escort duty, plus run away from any capital ships (and sent a torpedo or two their way to make them think twice).
@jlvfr4 жыл бұрын
@@IrishCarney true. The germans didn't even have a dual-purpose gun...
@iflycentral5 жыл бұрын
As far as naval aircraft; yes a modified 190 would have been a better choice for a single engine navel fighter than a modified 109, however, the Bf-110 would have been a better choice overall as a pre-existing aircraft. It's wheel track was wide and thus stable, it had two engines which would give some redundancy over water, and had much lighter wing loading than either the 190 or 109. It was also capable of flying as a heavy fighter or fighter bomber. Hard to think of anything else in German service that would work better than the 110 for this role until a proper naval fighter could be drawn up.
@Johnnycdrums6 жыл бұрын
Looking forward to your presentation on the pre-Dreadnought era.
@hazchemel5 жыл бұрын
yes, really enjoyed it.....and the overview summary puts it in a real world
@donsambo54884 жыл бұрын
"Shoot whoever decided to use the 109, and instead use the exciting new 190." My thoughts from the second a naval 109 was mentioned. Yes i know I'm late, shush.
@TwistedSisterHaratiofales5 жыл бұрын
All in all I think you are very on point with the practicality angle. Germany had no hope of building an offensive fleet to compete against England. If they did start to build any significant amount of battleships, then England would have mirrored. I like to play these ships in World of Warships, and War Thunder. If Germany could have got their hands on the French Navy then that could have been a serious thorn in the side of possible effects on the allies. If Italy could have acquired better radar and not end up in the mediteranian disaster that it encountered. lot of if if if. And yes they needed way more U boats way sooner while the U boat was a serious threat.
@davids95202 жыл бұрын
Warships on paper are always the best!
@derik99k12 жыл бұрын
I'm not an able guy my Army telecommunications and Rifleman but I find it interesting with your examination I kind of agree with your thoughts
@recnepsgnitnarb65304 жыл бұрын
The FW190 would have been a more effective naval fighter with its wide track undercarriage and air-cooled radial.
@thecatfather85710 ай бұрын
25:55 Ehh... *Lebensraum* Button? Habitat Button? Did I hear that correctly?
@Benepene6 жыл бұрын
"Spaehlkreuzer" the way you pronounced it was "Sparkreuzer" which would literally mean savings cruiser :D
@Zarastro546 жыл бұрын
@Bene Hirsch And we all know with their size and cost, those German cruisers wouldn’t be “saving” much of anything.
@krisk46136 жыл бұрын
I thik you missread they are named spähkreuzer meaning scount cruser
@seanmac17934 жыл бұрын
@@Zarastro54 saving the allies time on sinking them
@reimssi4 жыл бұрын
@@krisk4613 thank you for telling us the obvious
@Straswa3 жыл бұрын
Great vid Drach, thanks for sharing your thoughts on Plan Z.
@morganchaput53766 жыл бұрын
High seas fleet two electric boogaloo
@TTTT-oc4eb2 жыл бұрын
Excellent overview. One thing: Bismarck did NOT have its main cables above its main armor deck, that's just a myth. Also the cables to the fire directors etc. were behind armor.
@andreastiefenthaler38116 жыл бұрын
finally you pulled me in... subbed!
@felonyx51234 жыл бұрын
For the Graf Zeppelin's goal of using aircraft to hunt down scattering convoy ships after an attack, it would make more sense to just use a cruiser carrying an above-average amount of catapult aircraft. Which from a certain point of view the Graf Zeppelin was, just very, very above average. Seaplane bombers will sink unarmored merchant ships just fine while carrier or land based bombers can be off doing something more useful.
@dovetonsturdee70334 жыл бұрын
And the life expectancy of such a ship in the Atlantic would be?
@randoperson35964 жыл бұрын
This plan Z can’t possibly fail
@KatyushaLauncher4 жыл бұрын
Said Erich Raeder to Hitler
@jameshannagan42562 жыл бұрын
@@KatyushaLauncher Said Plankton to Karen.
@rkelsey33414 жыл бұрын
I'm always amused at the vignette in the intro at the :22 mark. The secondary battery fires and there is a burst of paperwork blasted out as well. "Um, Captain, you know all those fitness reports and fuel requisition forms I was supposed to have filed today?"
@WildBillCox135 жыл бұрын
Germany could just buy the A6M2 for Graf Zeppelin . . . the Stuka would be good enough for an Intruder, trading slow speed for pinpunkt accuracy. As for Torpedo Bombers, why not just buy those superannuated Fairy Swordfish Great Britain is trying to sell off? They'll have the far superior Albacore, of course, but . . . why are you laughing? World War Two seems to indicate that ships without carrier air support are balls flapping in the wind. The Z Plan was cool and all, but more Carriers and Heavy Cruisers were all that Germany really needed. About twenty of each. The Merchant Raider group . . . pursuing the Guerre du Course, or Handelskrieg . . . was a great idea--for World War One. Once the B24 Bomber was drafted to patrol the "U--Boat gap", however, the paradigm had been ruined. Until then the Armed Merchantman, Merchant Raider/Panzerschiff, or Cruiser Submarine, was still a viable option for a cash strapped nation to examine. Once Air Cover became more or less universal it spoiled everything. You need Carriers to support your convoy raiders. You need heavy cruisers to support your carriers with AAA. You need Fleet Destroyers . . . or whatever the La Fantasque was . . . to physically screen the Carriers and Cruisers (or, for rich nations, battleships) from questing motobomba . . . and, suddenly, you're in a naval race* against Great Britain and the USA. Which you can't win. Back to submarines! *Naval Arms races never mention the most vulnerable factor in the coherent plan of operations at sea: the fleet replenishment train. You can cripple your enemy if you find his before he finds yours. His ships WILL run out of fuel, food, and, especially, ammunition and medical supplies after any regular engagement. If you take out his oilers and ammunition ships, he will soon be a paper tiger. If Bismarck had . . . nothing. Just finding her pre--positioned replenishment ships would have been a dangerous passage, with every supply ship used soon after destroyed on its way back to base. And, once they'd all been sunk, there'd be no second Bismarck sortie from Brest or St Nazair. There is an argument to be made that Imperial Japan ignored our Fleet Replenishment Train with her submarine force. Had her skippers sought out the USN oilers and ammunition ships . . . and hospital ships . . . she might've slowed our expansion into what she considered her personal sphere of influence. Submarine Ninja; Skulkers and Assassins; rather than stealthy Shinobi seeking a favorable advantage against a mighty foe. Oilers are critical weapons of war. We crippled Japan by sinking all of her oilers. The lack of oil paralyzed her fleet. Similarly, our war against Germany was a war against her ability to supply herself with fuel for her Panzerwaffe, Luftwaffe, and U--waffe. lack of oil grounded her fighters, stopped her tanks, and made her ships floating hulks. "Screw that well screened battleship! I'm looking for those vulnerable, juicy, oilers!" --Smart Sub Skipper
@piotrd.48504 жыл бұрын
Germans, had they simply stack to light escort crusiers and light aircraft carriers focused on supporting large submarine fleet and their logistics train would have much better outcome. In terms of buying, the would be better of buying designs of Japanese subs and especially torpedoes.
@AdamMGTF4 жыл бұрын
All that is applying hindsight. At the time, what happened made sense to the experts at the time. Always worth remembering in history. Also. The Japanese navy would never have sold the zero to Germany. They wouldn't let their own army use them lol. Also. It wouldn't be polically acceptable in Germany. For a whole host of reasons.