Making Akagi and Kaga into Aircraft Carriers. (Part 1)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 18 дек 2024

Комментарии • 45

  • @centralcrossing4732
    @centralcrossing4732  Год назад +18

    Note time!
    I do not go into all of the details as the list would be endless. I focus on major points.
    This video will have a follow up. Akagi and Kaga ended up being design nightmares and it wasn't recognized until they were in service. Many of their issues were never solved. Due to how extensive their complications were, I have decided to make a separate video going over that topic.
    This video has no focus on the reconstructions of the 2 ships in the 1930s, only their initial conversions in the 1920s.

    • @Caktusdud.
      @Caktusdud. Год назад +3

      Please do a part to, I WANT THESE DETAILS!!!!!!!

    • @manilajohn0182
      @manilajohn0182 Год назад

      Would love to see those details...

    • @Kitty-CatDaddy
      @Kitty-CatDaddy Год назад +2

      A video of how all 6 Pearl Harbor IJN carriers were built and what they did just before 7 December 1941 would be informative as hell.

  • @dirkaminimo4836
    @dirkaminimo4836 Год назад +5

    Where have you been all my life? I’m suspicious of anyone who isn’t interested in history. Thank you!

    • @robertfindley921
      @robertfindley921 11 месяцев назад

      I think only simple minded people are not interested in history.

  • @martryan2060
    @martryan2060 Год назад +14

    Seaplane carriers next please
    A massively underdocumented
    Aspect of inter war Japanese naval
    Use

  • @wzrd9s
    @wzrd9s Год назад +16

    Today, the Japanese are going through another carrier design program as they adapt to modern technology. The Kaga is reborn with another 30,000 ton carrier. Lets hear about how they approach the design of the their “multi-purpose destroyers”.

  • @jayfelsberg1931
    @jayfelsberg1931 Год назад +6

    One of the more interesting discussions of the naval treaty came when young officers went to the great Admiral Toga to complain about the terms foisted on Japan. Toga heard them out, and replied, "I am not aware that the treaty limits training and drill." The old sea dog knew what he was talking about.

    • @rohanthandi4903
      @rohanthandi4903 Год назад

      So he was an idiot too then? even if you generously assume your forces are 10-20 % more "effective" it will not bridge the huge gaps between powers.

  • @tomlindsay4629
    @tomlindsay4629 Год назад

    Thanks for the early development study profiles. Freaky and wonderful looking.

  • @manilajohn0182
    @manilajohn0182 Год назад +2

    Another informative and professionally delivered video. Automatic thumbs up. Many thanks...

  • @powellmountainmike8853
    @powellmountainmike8853 Год назад

    Thanks. I found this interesting, and learned a few facts I had not learned, or had forgotten from my reading.

  • @Trojan0304
    @Trojan0304 Год назад

    Nice review, like the photos

  • @loophole9816
    @loophole9816 8 месяцев назад +1

    say what you will but akagi will always be beloved

  • @oceanmariner
    @oceanmariner Год назад

    Nice job making this video. Thumbs up!

  • @conradnelson5283
    @conradnelson5283 Год назад

    Great job very interesting

  • @Caktusdud.
    @Caktusdud. Год назад +2

    *crosser drops new video*
    Me: "WOOOOOOOOOO
    YEAAAHHHH BABY!!!!"

  • @owencrater7089
    @owencrater7089 Год назад

    Good work.

  • @The_Modeling_Underdog
    @The_Modeling_Underdog Год назад

    Excellent overview as usual, Crosser. Hiraga playing six hands at the same time with the design. What's not to love about that cantankerous old man.
    As for the comments section... Well. It keeps on doing a Tomozuru every now and then, by the looks of it.
    Keep up the good work, mate.
    Cheers.

  • @aurorajones8481
    @aurorajones8481 Год назад

    Great vids to compliment my playing HOIV

  • @takaorobinson8719
    @takaorobinson8719 Год назад +3

    Considering they were not seafaring explorers nor ship builders and the short amount of time they did a pretty good job. The first ships were British. The next generation were Japanese built off British design. The next generation is the ones I love. Aesthetically unique combined with functional designs. Like the way planes were stored on Yamato or on sub I-400. The end of the Shogun and samurai times was not that many years past.

  • @fredrickmarsiello4395
    @fredrickmarsiello4395 Год назад

    Fascinating!

  • @theswampangel3635
    @theswampangel3635 Год назад

    Great information!

  • @dcross6360
    @dcross6360 Год назад

    Good video

  • @Klyis
    @Klyis Год назад +5

    It's kind of a shame they didn't go with either of the first two designs. Akagi could have been a very elegant and streamlined ship instead of the hideous triple flight deck thing they made her into. At least she eventually got a better look after her major rebuild in the 30s.

  • @christophersnyder1532
    @christophersnyder1532 Год назад +4

    I am glad that they were discovered, along with many other warships that have succumbed to the seas.
    May I ask, have you yet watched the feature, The Great War Of Archimedes?
    I understand that you may not be widely interested in modern naval lore, however, the Japanese film Aircraft Carrier Ibuki, is interesting.
    Royal Naval Study has profiled some of his models of the Royal Navy, very nice.
    Take care, and all the best.

    • @centralcrossing4732
      @centralcrossing4732  Год назад +2

      I have seen 'The great war of Archimedes.' It was actually quite interesting to watch.
      Thank you. Take care as well.

  • @Hey_MikeZeroEcho22P
    @Hey_MikeZeroEcho22P Год назад +1

    Superior historical reading!!!
    I built a 1/700 scale of IJN Kaga in the time line of the Battle of Midway...
    But, hearing your historical reading, got me into looking in building another IJN A/C, I just don't know which to build, preferably during the same battle.

  • @richardletaw4068
    @richardletaw4068 Год назад

    I am new to your channel and am both enjoying and impressed by what I hear.
    As a linguist, I want to make a constructive criticism, one which I offer to every channel I find which covers the modern Japanese navy.
    The city and shipyard which are spelled Yokosuka are, owing to a quirk in transliterating Japanese into Roman characters, are pronounced “Yoh-KOOCE-kah.”
    NOT “Yoh-koh-soo-kah.”
    It is, emphatically, “Yoh-KOOCE-kah!”
    Thank you.

  • @jeffreytan2948
    @jeffreytan2948 Год назад +3

    I'm fascinated that the Japanese created 2 hangar decks (one on top of the other) whenn constructing their aircraft carriers. This is one of the reasons why Japanese carriers look ridicoulously tall or top heavy above the water line. Did other countries use the same 2 hangar deck designs for their carriers?

    • @centralcrossing4732
      @centralcrossing4732  Год назад

      Yes, the Royal Navy had carriers with 2 hangars like Courageous and Ark Royal.
      For Japan, it didn't affect their height under normal circumstances. All of the keel up designs like Soryu and Shokaku had the lower hangar in the upper hull with the upper hanger constructed on top of the hull holding the flight deck. Akagi and Kaga in specific had both hangars above the hull because they were placing them on hulls that had already been completed for a different purpose. While Akagi and Kaga did suffer from their extreme height, it wasn't a universal problem amongst the carriers.

    • @jeffreytan2948
      @jeffreytan2948 Год назад

      @@centralcrossing4732 Ahh understood. Another carrier that was extremely tall above the water line (besides the Akagi and Kaga) was the light carrier Ryujo. What could the reason for that one be as the Ryujo I think was not a carrier conversion from a non-carrier design?

    • @centralcrossing4732
      @centralcrossing4732  Год назад

      @@jeffreytan2948 Ah yes, Ryujo was definitely an odd ball. As designed, Ryujo was an 8,000 ton standard displacement carrier with a single hangar, which would have made it Japan's first carrier with one hangar. After construction had started, it was decided to increase the aircraft capacity, the only way to achieve that was by adding another hangar. With the ship already stated and pieces fabricated, they couldn't work another hangar into the hull. So they had to put another hangar on top of the already planned hangar without major alterations occurring to the original design. As a result, the ship suffered extensively from its light construction and added hangar.

  • @Kalle7075
    @Kalle7075 Год назад

    Can you do a video about the ships in the Battle of Hampton Roads? And the Also the battle?

    • @centralcrossing4732
      @centralcrossing4732  Год назад

      Yes I can.

    • @Kalle7075
      @Kalle7075 Год назад

      @@centralcrossing4732 Thanks, but when Will it come out on RUclips then? I really like tour channel.

    • @centralcrossing4732
      @centralcrossing4732  Год назад +1

      @@Kalle7075 I am currently moving to a new house, so video making is much slower than normal. I can't make any guarantee as to when. I will say that the next video is going to be Akagi's and Kaga's design issues so I can wrap up the topic of their conversions. After that, I will be doing Monitor's construction. Not the standard financial story, but how the ship was actually built. I might follow that up with the conversion of the USS Merrimack into the CSS Virginia, but that's not for certain yet.

  • @stephennewton2223
    @stephennewton2223 Год назад

    I've wondered what did they do with the space between the girders at the stern. A lot of space and not much visible use. My reading is that these were colossally expensive ships. Purpose designed carriers would have gotten more planes on a smaller, more efficient, cheaper ship. I guess you play the cards you are dealt.

  • @chipschannel9494
    @chipschannel9494 Год назад

    I’ll be back😊!

  • @4catsnow
    @4catsnow Год назад +2

    The Navy made them into submarines in 1942. That must've been a serious transition for the emperor...And then things went downhill from there..

  • @rohanthandi4903
    @rohanthandi4903 Год назад

    These ships basically had 1 HP. All the piping and water mains shattered from being bombed.

    • @neelkanthgajarmal939
      @neelkanthgajarmal939 Год назад

      Any ship with lots airplanes on deck has 1 hp

    • @rohanthandi4903
      @rohanthandi4903 Год назад

      @@neelkanthgajarmal939 the planes were below. And that is not true at all. Countless carriers took huge damage with planes on board. The very first bombs knocked out all the electrical and piping bud. Critical hits even not counting the fire