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Re: Nihon Kaigun 1946

Posted: March 18th, 2014, 3:20 pm
by Syzmo
There is not, only a description. Alvama drew John Watson's battleship Stalin with only a description so I remain hopeful that I will see Yonaga one day.

Re: Nihon Kaigun 1946

Posted: March 18th, 2014, 4:25 pm
by emperor_andreas
I've seen a few hypothetical drawings of her...one had Akagi's hull and hangar with Shinano's island on the port side. Weird.

Re: Nihon Kaigun 1946

Posted: March 19th, 2014, 12:59 pm
by emperor_andreas
As promised, I re-uploaded the drawing of Tsushima, with all four aircraft types.

Re: Nihon Kaigun 1946

Posted: March 20th, 2014, 1:40 am
by klagldsf
emperor_andreas wrote:I've seen a few hypothetical drawings of her...one had Akagi's hull and hangar with Shinano's island on the port side. Weird.
Probably because that artist is very, very lazy.

Re: Nihon Kaigun 1946

Posted: March 20th, 2014, 2:06 am
by CanisD
It was the late Craig Burke, Admiral Furashita, who created the picture of Yonaga based on a combination of Shinano and Akagi.
http://www.combinedfleet.com/furashita/yonaga_f.htm
The original novel just had a silhouette of Midway encased in an iceberg and later books in the series seemed to use images of existing carriers. Haven't read the book since the premise seems rather silly.

Re: Nihon Kaigun 1946

Posted: March 20th, 2014, 3:11 am
by emperor_andreas
klagldsf wrote:
emperor_andreas wrote:I've seen a few hypothetical drawings of her...one had Akagi's hull and hangar with Shinano's island on the port side. Weird.
Probably because that artist is very, very lazy.
Not to mention, wouldn't an island of that size have put the ship seriously off-balance?

Re: Nihon Kaigun 1946

Posted: March 20th, 2014, 3:20 am
by Rodondo
The model lacks an offset flight deck which would be the ideal solution, still the Japanese naval architects would have been no strangers to stability issues

Re: Nihon Kaigun 1946

Posted: March 20th, 2014, 4:35 am
by emperor_andreas
Indeed, but if they can construct bridge pagodas like those of Fuso and Yamashiro and have them stay upright, then they probably could've overcome anything! :D

Re: Nihon Kaigun 1946

Posted: March 20th, 2014, 4:54 am
by Rodondo
The Ryujo creeps into mind as well, how that thing stayed upright in a blow must have been partly a miracle that no freak waves hit her beam on

Re: Nihon Kaigun 1946

Posted: March 21st, 2014, 1:42 am
by klagldsf
I'm going to further add that what Adm. Furashita did was a little more complex than a simple shop job. He at least knew a little bit what he was doing.