Japan - Aoba Class Heavy Cruiser
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Re: Japan - Aoba Class Heavy Cruiser
Outstanding!
is that a torpedo I see just being held in the open?
is that a torpedo I see just being held in the open?
Projects:
Zealandia AU
John Company AU
References and feedback is always welcome!
Zealandia AU
John Company AU
References and feedback is always welcome!
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Re: Japan - Aoba Class Heavy Cruiser
I believe those were where the reloads were kept. Although reloading in battle would probably be extraordinarily dangerous.
-Matt
-Matt
Re: Japan - Aoba Class Heavy Cruiser
I was seriously hoping that wasn't where the reloads were kept. That is just a plain lack of common sense
Projects:
Zealandia AU
John Company AU
References and feedback is always welcome!
Zealandia AU
John Company AU
References and feedback is always welcome!
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- Joined: November 17th, 2010, 8:03 am
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Re: Japan - Aoba Class Heavy Cruiser
I agree...and especially during service in Chinese waters. If someone of the Flying Tigers decided to do a strafing run and scored a lucky hit...ow. Ooh, just got an idea for my AU!
Last edited by emperor_andreas on October 18th, 2012, 9:35 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Japan - Aoba Class Heavy Cruiser
Great work!
Re: Japan - Aoba Class Heavy Cruiser
Actually i have found a couple of drawings showing a torpedo stored that way (wartime pictures are usually too blurredto help in that way), and i agree about the potential danger wich a long lance exposed to fire poses, so my assumption is that the one showed outside the reload boxes (the feature visible behind the railings just below the torpedo itself) could be a spare one with no warhead fitted that could be used for parts when other long lances needs repairs while the ships is underway.
but i could obviously beign wrong.
Anyway, here they are Aoba in 1927 and Kinugasa in 1932
Added the ventilation slits to all turrets, and all drawings updated in the first page and argumented with some text for their history.
With this, The Aoba Class project is completed.
but i could obviously beign wrong.
Anyway, here they are Aoba in 1927 and Kinugasa in 1932
Added the ventilation slits to all turrets, and all drawings updated in the first page and argumented with some text for their history.
With this, The Aoba Class project is completed.
My Worklist
Sources and documentations are the most welcome.
-Koko Kyouwakoku (Republic of Koko)
-Koko's carrier-based aircrafts of WWII
-Koko Kaiun Yuso Kaisha - KoKaYu Line (Koko AU spinoff)
-Koko - Civil Aviation
Sources and documentations are the most welcome.
-Koko Kyouwakoku (Republic of Koko)
-Koko's carrier-based aircrafts of WWII
-Koko Kaiun Yuso Kaisha - KoKaYu Line (Koko AU spinoff)
-Koko - Civil Aviation
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Re: Japan - Aoba Class Heavy Cruiser
They all look GREAT! Can't wait to see what comes next from you, BB!
-Matt
-Matt
Re: Japan - Aoba Class Heavy Cruiser
BB is a true Shipbucket artist; we don't just get one ship pictured as the "Aoba class cruiser", we get a dozen drawings of each configuration of each ship in the class. This is how it should be.
Excellent work here BB1987, you are outstripping us all.
Excellent work here BB1987, you are outstripping us all.
Re: Japan - Aoba Class Heavy Cruiser
Agreed fully here!Colosseum wrote:BB is a true Shipbucket artist; we don't just get one ship pictured as the "Aoba class cruiser", we get a dozen drawings of each configuration of each ship in the class. This is how it should be.
Excellent work here BB1987, you are outstripping us all.
But you don't need many to outstripping us all
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Re: Japan - Aoba Class Heavy Cruiser
I agree completely. Therefore I hereby again nominate BB1987 for 'promotion' to Premium Member.Colosseum wrote:BB is a true Shipbucket artist; we don't just get one ship pictured as the "Aoba class cruiser", we get a dozen drawings of each configuration of each ship in the class. This is how it should be.
Excellent work here BB1987, you are outstripping us all.
-Matt