By the way, rank 7 is coming to us. The question is, what ship will be the premium at rank 6 for Japan then? I have a strong suspicion that it will be Nagato in the 1944/45 version.
I don’t think Hiei will be included in the premiums. And if they do give Hiei in the premiums, I would prefer to see her at the moment of her death, and this is the 1942 version. Otherwise, seeing Hiei in 1915 or 1922 version, conditionally, would be so-so…
I found this one on a digitized microfilm roll from the National Archives (M1176 R-1 Enclosure #1-9 of “Captured Japanese Ship Plans”), and it was in pretty poor condition.
Those diagrams were mostly taken from books in Japanese which are very expensive and many of them are no longer available to purchase from retailers nowadays.
AFAIK some of the captured Japanese ship plans were probably returned to Japan and the National Diet Library holds some originals. I requested a printed copy from there a few years ago and the quality was not bad.
Thats nice to hear im glad this wasnt intentional as a way to balance the ship there are ither ways to do that. And even then im sure the other ships wont have too many issues with Yamato in my opinion.
They skipped over the only Japanese battleship to survive the war because they don’t care. At this rate I’ll be surprised if we ever see a Takao or Oyodo before the game shuts down.
I mean, all good things must come to an end. And like War Thunder all bad things must also come to an end. In 15 years or so Gaijin will inevitably have to close down the game. There’ll probably be a War Thunder 2 or something like that in the future to replace it.
Learning more about Yamato since im not an expert in ww2 naval some things ive learned so far is that even tho its large size and weight it was actually pretty maneuverable. And USN pilots that attacked it commented on its tight turning.
Its gun were pretty accurate and had great range. One notable example being the near miss at USS White Plains, the ship escaped because she was at extreme range, the near miss was at a range of 34,000 yards which would have been the longest ranged hit if those shells hit which somehow still managed to damage the carrier.
Nah White Plains had one of her engines knocked out from the shot and was an example of Japanese diving shells working exactly as intended in their “mining effect” functionality. It would be one thing if it was a chance thing, but IJN diving shells were designed with the mining effect in mind, so there is no reason for it not to be considered a hit.
Yamato had other very accurate shots at Leyte Gulf when hitting Hoel and Johnston. Iirc Yamato shot a single Salvo at Johnston at 18.6km with ~40% accuracy which is insane when most battleships would have single digit accuracy at those ranges against much larger targets.
Most of the documents I’ve seen so far have listed it as 33.85kg. The fact that the content has been corrected on navweaps means that someone has discovered new facts? And can anyone edit the content on navweaps?