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In 1917 the Japanese Navy began planning
a strong "Eight-Eight" squadron. This was to comprise
eight new battleships including the Nagato, Mutsu, Kaga,
Tosa, Kii and Owari, and eight new battle cruisers
including the Amagi, Akagi, Takao and Atago. In addition
four new ships as yet unnamed were to be leviathans with
a load displacement of 47,500 tons and carrying eight
46cm guns as their main armament. However, under the
Treaty of Washington signed in 1921, the possession of
capital ships was limited and the building of new ships
was prohibited for 10years. Although the Nagato and
Mutsu were completed and the Akagi and Kaga were changed
into aircraft carriers, the grand plan was never
realized. In 1929-30 when the restrictions imposed were
coming to an end, Japan planned to build battleships of
35,000 tons. However, the Washington treaty was followed
by the London Treaty in 1930, and this plan was not
realized either.
In October 1934 the Japanese Navy started plans for a
new superdreadnought battleship, and after 22 months a
proposal called A140-F5 was adopted. Substantial
modifications were made and in March 1937 the final
proposal for a 68,200 ton ship was adopted and building
started at Kure Naval Dockyard on November 4th 1937. On
August 8th 1940 the Yamato was launched and it was
completed on the 16th December 1941. The most
characteristic feature of the Yamato was the nine 46cm
guns, the biggest ever mounted on a ship. For camouflage
the guns were called 40cm guns of type 94. They had a
maximum range of 41,000 meters and could penetrate a
43cm armour plate from a distance of 30,000 meters. The
rate of fire was two rounds per minute. An armour
piercing projectile of type 91 weighed 1.4 tons. The gun
barrel weighed about 166 tons and the revolving part of
the turret was as heavy as 2,265 tons. In addition to
the powerful 46cm guns, the Yamato carried twelve 15.5
guns. The Yamato had excellent protection. Its hull was
short and broad for its displacement. The turrets,
bridge, machinery, etc. were disposed near the centre
where the armour protection was concentrated. Of nearly
43,000 tons of steel, 21,266 tons was armour plating-
more than 30% of the load displacement. The length of
the Yamato was 256 metres, the breadth 34.6 metes and it
had a draft of 10 metres. To gauge how huge the Yamato
was, the height from keel to top of bridge was more than
50 metres, the hull contained six decks and the bridge
structure thirteen decks. There were about 400 speaking
tubes, 750 telephones and eight generators with a total
output of no less than 4,800 kw, enough to supply a
small town.
The Yamato first saw service in the Battle of Midway in
June 1942, but it was not until October 25th 1944 that
the 45cms guns were first used in action. On April 6th
1945 the Yamato took part in "Operation Ten No.1"
(Operation kikusui), and on the 7th April early in the
morning the Japanese unit was spotted by an enemy plane
and in the afternoon it was attacked by more than 300
enemy aircraft. The Yamato was hit by ten torpedoes and
eight bombs and at 2.23 p.m. it sank with its crew of
2,498 without proving the worth of its huge guns.
*(Overall length 755mm) |
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