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Capital Ships of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1868–1945: The Yamato Class and Subsequent Planning
Capital Ships of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1868–1945: The Yamato Class and Subsequent Planning
Hans Lengerer
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87 photos, 202 figures and drawings, 60 tables, and 15 maps and tracks. Recognising the impossibility of improving upon the (in)famous 5:5:3 ratio of the Washington Naval Treaty when the expected naval race would begin as the treaty expired, the Imperial Japanese Navy resorted to a strategy of qualitative superiority to overcome the American quantitative edge. The IJN succeeded, after many studies and false starts, in creating the worlds most heavily armed (nine 18.1» main guns in three triple turrets - the largest calibre ever mounted) and protected (410-mm thick VH belt armor, 660-mm thick front shields of the gun houses - the thickest armour plates ever mounted) battleships.
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