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Victory At Sea: J-Class DestroyersThe role of the destroyer in a fleet is to keep pace with other long-ranged warships and provide them with an effective screen against small, short-ranged attackers, such as aircraft, submarines and torpedo boats, though other small warships would also be engaged, allowing the...
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Victory at Sea - Royal Navy Submarines & MTB sectionsSubmarines: Designed for use in North European and Mediterranean waters, the S-class was manoeuvrable with a noted ability to crash dive extremely quickly. Combined with a large salvo of torpedoes, this was a successful design of pre-war years that was soon updated and put...
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Victory at Sea - IJN AircraftWitnessing massed airpower at the Battle of Taranto, the Japanese were quick to master the tactic, as seen in their infamous attack on Pearl Harbor. Later in the war, having suffered from terrible attrition and facing defeat, the Japanese turned desperately to kamikaze attacks....
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Junkers Ju-87 Stuka flightsThe Junkers Ju 87 or Stuka (Sturzkampfflugzeug meaning "dive bomber" in translation), was a dive bomber for the Luftwaffe. This is also the infamous aircraft that was equipped with its wailing sirens, which become a sound to fear for the Allies and propaganda for...
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Victory at Sea: Vittorio VenetoThe Littorio class was the first new Italian battleship class for nearly a decade when design work began in 1930. Initially designed to remain within the 35,000-ton Washington Treaty limit, the final displacement was just over 40,000 tons. As well as being good-looking ships,...
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Victory at Sea - US Navy AircraftAfter the devastation of Pearl Harbor the Americans relied heavily on the aircraft of their carrier fleets. By the Battle of Midway, the US Navy had substantial numbers aircraft operating in theatre. The age of the battleship had passed, air power now dominated. Grumman...
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Victory At Sea - Flower-class destroyersThe Flower-class corvette was the quintessential North Atlantic convoy escort. Based on trawler hulls, they had excellent seaworthiness. The radar, combined with depth charge and a good hull, made them excellent U-boat hunters during the worst battles of the North Atlantic campaign. They served...
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Victory at Sea - Akizuki-class destroyersThe basic premise of the Akizuki-class destroyers was that of task force defence. As such, they were armed with eight of the new 3.9-inch dual purpose guns, considered by many to be the best Japanese anti-aircraft gun of World War Two, whose characteristics can...
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Victory At Sea: Douglas Dauntless FlightsUntil replaced by the Helldiver, the Dauntless was the main dive-bomber of the US Navy. Its crowning glory was during the Battle of Midway, where it was responsible for sinking four Japanese carriers and damaging two cruisers. Circumstance played a great part in this...
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Victory At Sea: HMS RawalpindiAllied and Axis nations alike pressed cargo liners and other ships into service as auxiliary warships. In particular, the British organised regular patrols by armed merchant cruisers and Q-ships (merchants with concealed weapons) aimed at intercepting and capturing blockade runners. HMS Rawalpindi is one...
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Victory at Sea - Marine Nationale FleetAt the outbreak of the Second World War, the Marine Nationale of France was a powerful force with modern battleships, which should have been a major asset to the Allied cause. The rapid fall of France in the land war and the creation of...
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Victory at Sea - Surcouf cruiser submarineWhen launched, the Surcouf was the largest submarine in the world, only surpassed in the Second World War by the Japanese I-400-class submarine. Her intended role was that of commerce raider and her design was intended to maximise this mission. She had a range...
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Victory at Sea Regia Marina fleet boxAt the time of Italy’s entry into World War Two, she possessed a modern and – on paper at least – highly effective fleet. Four battleships and eight heavy cruisers were available, with three more battleships being fitted out. However, there were no aircraft...
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Victory at Sea Fubuki-class DestroyersDescribed as the world’s first “modern” destroyer, twenty-four of the class served in the Imperial Japanese Navy. They were built between 1926 and 1933, and despite being decidedly older than some of their adversaries, they remained formidable opponents until the end of the war....
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Victory At Sea: Douglas Devastator FlightsA world leader when it was introduced into service in 1937, the Devastator quickly fell behind in terms of performance to the point where the aircraft was obsolete only four years later. The inadequacies of the design were made painfully aware at Midway in...
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Victory at Sea: Dewoitine D.520 flightsWith the distinction of having fought on both sides of the war, this aircraft could conceivably fight among the likes of the Bf 109 and Spitfire but mass production did not start until after the war had begun, thus limiting its effect on history....
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Victory at Sea - Regia Marina Submarines & MTB sectionsSubmarines: Compared to a German Type VII C submarine, the Marcello-class were much larger, displacing 1,060 tons versus 769. Speed and range between the two classes were almost similar, but the Marcello-class had more torpedo tubes than the famous U-Boat. The Marcello-class should be...
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Victory at Sea - PolaThe Zara-class heavy cruisers were designed to have improved protection over the Trento-class, at the cost of speed. Originally designated light, then armoured, the Zara-class was properly rated as heavy cruisers. They were intended to remain within the 10,000-ton limits of the Washington treaty...
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Victory At Sea: Benson-Class DestroyersThe first examples of the Benson-class were ordered in 1938 as a derivative of the Sims-class with a modified torpedo armament arranged in two banks of five. A new machinery layout was implemented, using four smaller boilers rather than the three of the Sims-class....
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Victory at Sea: RichelieuThere were to have been four ships of the Richlieu-class, with the first two laid down in 1935 and the second pair following in 1935. Gascogne was cancelled and Clemenceau never completed. The last ship followed a modified design which placed one of the...
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