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Yamato-class battleship

The Yamato-class battleships (大和型戦艦, Yamato-gata senkan) were two battleships of the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN), Yamato and Musashi, laid down leading up to World War II and completed as designed. A third hull laid down in 1940 was converted to an aircraft carrier, Shinano, during construction.

Yamato undergoing trials in 1941
Class overview
NameYamato class
Builders
Operators Imperial Japanese Navy
Preceded by
Succeeded byA-150 class (planned)
Subclasses2 (Shinano- and No. 797-class)
Cost250,000,897 JPY[1]
Built1937–1942
In commission1941–1945
Planned5
Completed3 (2 battleships, 1 converted to aircraft carrier)
Cancelled2 (one subclass)
Lost3
General characteristics (as built)
TypeBattleship
Displacement
Length
Beam38.9 m (128 ft)[2]
Draught10.4 m (34 ft)
Installed power
Propulsion4 shafts; 4 steam turbines
Speed27 knots (50 km/h; 31 mph)[2]
Range7,200 nmi (13,300 km; 8,300 mi) at 16 knots (30 km/h; 18 mph)[2]
Complement2,767[4]
Armament
Armor
  • 650 mm (26 in) on face of main turrets[5]
  • 410 mm (16 in) side armor (400 mm (16 in) planned on Shinano and No. 111),[5] inclined 20 degrees
  • 200 mm (8 in) armored deck (75%)
  • 230 mm (9 in) armored deck (25%)[5]
Aircraft carried

Displacing nearly 72,000 long tons (73,000 t) at full load, the completed battleships were the heaviest ever constructed. The class carried the largest naval artillery ever fitted to a warship, nine 460-mm (18.1 in) naval guns, each capable of firing 1,460 kg (3,220 lb) shells over 42 km (26 mi).

Due to the threat of U.S. submarines and aircraft carriers, both Yamato and Musashi spent the majority of their careers in naval bases at Brunei, Truk, and Kure—deploying on several occasions in response to U.S. raids on Japanese bases.

All three ships were sunk by the U.S. Navy; Musashi while participating in the Battle of Leyte Gulf in October 1944, the Shinano while under way from Yokosuka to Kure for fitting out in November 1944, and the Yamato while en route from Japan to Okinawa as part of Operation Ten-Go in April 1945.

Background

The design of the Yamato-class battleships was shaped by expansionist movements within the Japanese government, Japanese industrial power, and the need for a fleet powerful enough to intimidate likely adversaries.[6] Most importantly, the latter, in the form of the Kantai Kessen (“Decisive Battle Doctrine”), a naval strategy adopted by the Imperial Japanese Navy prior to the Second World War, in which the Japanese navy would win a war by fighting and winning a single, decisive naval action.

 
Musashi, August 1942, taken from the bow

After the end of the First World War, many navies—including those of the United States, the United Kingdom, and Imperial Japan—continued and expanded construction programs that had begun during the conflict. The enormous costs associated with these programs pressured their government leaders to begin a disarmament conference. On 8 July 1921, the United States' Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes invited delegations from the other major maritime powers—France, Italy, Japan, and the United Kingdom—to come to Washington, D.C. and discuss a possible end to the naval arms race. The subsequent Washington Naval Conference resulted in the Washington Naval Treaty. Along with many other provisions, it limited all future battleships to a standard displacement of 35,000 long tons (35,562 t; 39,200 short tons) and a maximum gun caliber of 16 inches (406 mm). It also agreed that the five countries would not construct more capital ships for ten years and would not replace any ship that survived the treaty until it was at least twenty years old.[7][8]

In the 1930s, the Japanese government began a shift towards ultranationalist militancy.[9] This movement called for the expansion of the Japanese Empire to include much of the Pacific Ocean and Southeast Asia. The maintenance of such an empire—spanning 3,000 miles (4,800 km) from China to Midway Island—required a sizable fleet capable of sustained control of territory.[10] Although all of Japan's battleships built prior to the Yamato class had been completed before 1921—as the Washington Treaty had prevented any more from being completed—all had been either reconstructed or significantly modernized, or both, in the 1930s.[11] This modernization included, among other things, additional speed and firepower, which the Japanese intended to use to conquer and defend their aspired-to empire.[12] When Japan withdrew from the League of Nations in 1934 over the Mukden Incident, it also renounced all treaty obligations,[13] freeing it to build warships larger than those of the other major maritime powers.[14]

Japan's intention to acquire resource-producing colonies in the Pacific and Southeast Asia would likely lead to confrontation with the United States,[15] thus the U.S. became Japan's primary potential enemy. The U.S. possessed significantly greater industrial power than Japan, with 32.2% of worldwide industrial production compared to Japan's 3.5%.[16] Furthermore, several leading members of the United States Congress had pledged "to outbuild Japan three to one in a naval race."[17] Consequently, as Japanese industrial output could not compete with American industrial power,[6] Japanese ship designers developed plans for new battleships individually superior to their counterparts in the United States Navy.[18] Each of these battleships would be capable of engaging multiple enemy capital ships simultaneously, eliminating the need to expend as much industrial effort as the U.S. on battleship construction.[6]

Design

 
The bridge of Musashi

Preliminary studies for a new class of battleships began after Japan's departure from the League of Nations and its renunciation of the Washington and London naval treaties; from 1934 to 1936, 24 initial designs were put forth. These early plans varied greatly in armament, propulsion, endurance, and armor. Main batteries fluctuated between 460 mm (18.1 in) and 406 mm (16 in) guns, while the secondary armaments were composed of differing numbers of 155 mm (6.1 in), 127 mm (5 in), and 25 mm (1 in) guns. Propulsion in most of the designs was a hybrid diesel-turbine combination, though one relied solely on diesel and another planned for only turbines. The maximum range of the various designs was between 6,000 nautical miles (11,000 km; 6,900 mi) in design A-140-J2 to a high of 9,200 nmi (17,000 km; 10,600 mi) in designs A-140A and A-140-B2, at a speed of 18 knots (33 km/h; 21 mph). Armor varied between providing protection from the fire of 406 mm guns to enough protection against 460 mm guns.[19]

After these had been reviewed, two of the original twenty-four were finalized as possibilities, A-140-F3 and A-140-F4. Differing primarily in their range (4,900 nmi (9,100 km; 5,600 mi) versus 7,200 nmi (13,300 km; 8,300 mi) at 16 knots (30 km/h; 18 mph)), they were used in the formation of the final preliminary study, which was finished on 20 July 1936. Tweaks to that design resulted in the definitive design of March 1937,[20] which was put forth by Rear-Admiral Fukuda Keiji;[21] a range of 7,200 nmi was finally decided upon, and the hybrid diesel-turbine propulsion was abandoned in favor of turbines. The diesel engines were removed from the design because of problems with the engines aboard the submarine tender Taigei.[20] Their engines, which were similar to the ones that were going to be mounted in the new battleships, required a "major repair and maintenance effort"[22] to keep them running due to a "fundamental design defect".[22] In addition, if the engines failed entirely, the 200 mm (7.9 in) armored citadel deck roof that protected the proposed diesel engine rooms and attendant machinery spaces, would severely hamper any attempt to remove and replace them.[23]

The final design called for a standard displacement of 64,000 long tons (65,000 t) and a full-load displacement of 69,988 long tons (71,111 t),[24] making the ships of the class the largest battleships yet designed, and the largest battleships ever constructed. The design called for a main armament of nine 460 mm naval guns, mounted in three three-gun turrets—each of which weighed more than a 1930s-era destroyer.[21] The designs were quickly approved by the Japanese Naval high command,[25] over the objections of naval aviators, who argued for the construction of aircraft carriers rather than battleships.[26][A 1] In all, five Yamato-class battleships were planned.[6]

Ships

 
Yamato and Musashi anchored in the waters off of the Truk Islands in 1943

Although five Yamato-class vessels had been planned in 1937, only three—two battleships and a converted aircraft carrier—were completed. All three vessels were built in extreme secrecy, to prevent American intelligence officials from learning of their existence and specifications;[6] indeed, the United States' Office of Naval Intelligence only became aware of Yamato and Musashi by name in late 1942. At this early time, their assumptions on the class's specifications were quite far off; while they were correct on their length, the class was given as having a beam of 110 ft (34 m)—in actuality, it was about 127 ft (39 m) and a displacement of 40,000–57,000 tons (actually, 69,000 tons). In addition, the main armament of Yamato class was given as nine 16 in (410 mm) guns as late as July 1945, four months after Yamato was sunk.[27][28] Both Jane's Fighting Ships and the Western media also misreported the specifications of the ships. In September 1944, Jane's Fighting Ships listed the displacement of both Yamato and Musashi as 45,000 tons.[29] Similarly, both the New York Times and the Associated Press reported that the two ships displaced 45,000 tons with a speed of 30 knots,[30] and even after the sinking of Yamato in April 1945, The Times of London continued to give 45,000 tons as the ship's displacement.[31] Nevertheless, the existence of the ships—and their supposed violation of naval treaties—heavily influenced American naval engineers in the design of the 60,500-ton Montana-class battleships, though they were not designed specifically to counter the Yamato class.[32]

Construction data
Name Namesake Builder Laid down Launched Commissioned Fate
Yamato Yamato Province (Great Harmony) Kure Naval Arsenal 4 November 1937 8 August 1940 16 December 1941 Sunk by aircraft during Operation Ten-Go, 7 April 1945
Musashi Musashi Province Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Nagasaki 29 March 1938 1 November 1940 5 August 1942 Sunk by aircraft during the Battle of the Sibuyan Sea, 24 October 1944
Shinano Shinano Province Yokosuka Naval Arsenal 4 May 1940 8 October 1944 19 November 1944 Converted into aircraft carrier, July 1942; Torpedoed and sunk by USS Archerfish, 28 November 1944
Warship Number 111 Kure Naval Arsenal 7 November 1940 Cancelled March 1942 when 30% complete; Scrapped in place
Warship Number 797 Cancelled during planning

Yamato

 
Yamato on trials in 1941

Yamato was ordered in March 1937, laid down 4 November 1937, launched 8 August 1940, and commissioned 16 December 1941.[21] She underwent training exercises until 27 May 1942, when the vessel was deemed "operable" by Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto.[21] Joining the 1st Battleship Division, Yamato served as the flagship of the Japanese Combined Fleet during the Battle of Midway in June 1942, yet did not engage enemy forces during the battle.[33] The next two years were spent intermittently between Truk and Kure naval bases, with her sister ship Musashi replacing Yamato as the flagship of the Combined Fleet.[21] During this time period, Yamato, as part of the 1st Battleship Division, deployed on multiple occasions to counteract American carrier-raids on Japanese island bases. On 25 December 1943, she suffered major torpedo damage at the hands of USS Skate and was forced to return to Kure for repairs and structural upgrades.[21]

In 1944—following extensive anti-aircraft and secondary battery upgrades—Yamato joined the Second Fleet in the Battle of the Philippine Sea, serving as an escort to a Japanese Carrier Division.[34] In October 1944, as part of Vice-Admiral Takeo Kurita's Center Force for the Battle of Leyte Gulf, she used her naval artillery against an enemy vessel for the only time, helping sink the American escort carrier Gambier Bay and the destroyer Johnston before she was forced away by torpedoes from Heermann, which put her out of combat.[35] Lightly damaged at Kure in March 1945, the ship was then rearmed in preparation for operations.[21] Yamato was deliberately expended in a suicide mission as part of Operation Ten-Go, sent to use her big guns to provide relief to Japanese forces engaged in the Battle of Okinawa. She never came close, sunk en-route on 7 April 1945 by 386 American carrier aircraft. After receiving 10 torpedo and 7 bomb hits she capsized, taking 2,498 of the 2,700 crew-members with her, including Vice-Admiral Seiichi Itō.[28] The sinking of Yamato was seen as a major American victory, and Hanson W. Baldwin, the military editor of The New York Times, wrote that "the sinking of the new Japanese battleship Yamato ... is striking proof—if any were needed—of the fatal weakness of Japan in the air and at sea".[36]

Musashi

 
Musashi departing Brunei in October 1944

Musashi was ordered in March 1937, laid down 29 March 1938, launched 1 November 1940, and commissioned 5 August 1942. From September to December 1942, she was involved in surface and air-combat training exercises at Hashirajima. On 11 February 1943, Musashi relieved her sister ship Yamato as the flagship of the Combined Fleet. Until July 1944, Musashi shifted between the naval bases of Truk, Yokosuka, Brunei, and Kure. On 29 March 1944, she sustained moderate damage near the bow from one torpedo fired by the American submarine Tunny. After repairs and refitting throughout April 1944, Musashi joined the 1st Battleship Division in Okinawa.[37]

In June 1944, as part of the Second Fleet, the ship escorted Japanese aircraft carriers during the Battle of the Philippine Sea.[37] In October 1944, she left Brunei as part of Admiral Takeo Kurita's Center Force during the Battle of Leyte Gulf.[38] Musashi was sunk 24 October during the Battle of the Sibuyan Sea, taking 17 bomb and 19 torpedo hits, with the loss of 1,023 of her 2,399-man crew.[39]

Shinano

 
Shinano in November 1944

Shinano, originally Warship Number 110, was laid down as the third member of the Yamato class, albeit with a slightly modified design. Most of the original armor values were slightly reduced, including the belt, deck, and turrets. The savings in weight this entailed meant that improvements could be made in other areas, including added protection for fire-control and lookout positions. In addition, the 12.7 cm (5.0 in) secondary armament on the first two Yamatos was to have been replaced by the 10 cm (3.9 in)/65 caliber Type 98 gun. Although smaller, this gun was superior to the 127 mm, possessing a significantly greater muzzle velocity, maximum range, anti-aircraft ceiling, and rate of fire.[40]

In June 1942, following the Japanese defeat at Midway, construction of Shinano was suspended, and the hull was gradually rebuilt as an aircraft carrier.[41] She was designed as a 64,800-ton support vessel that would be capable of ferrying, repairing and replenishing the air fleets of other carriers.[42][43] Although she was originally scheduled for commissioning in early 1945,[44] the construction of the ship was accelerated after the Battle of the Philippine Sea;[45] this resulted in Shinano being launched on 5 October 1944 and commissioned a little more than a month later on 19 November. Shinano departed Yokosuka for Kure nine days later. In the early morning on 29 November, Shinano was hit by four torpedoes from USS Archerfish.[41] Although the damage seemed manageable, poor flooding control caused the vessel to list to starboard. Shortly before midday, she capsized and sank, taking 1,435 of her 2,400-man crew with her.[41] To this day, Shinano is the largest naval vessel to have been sunk by a submarine.[46][47]

Warships Number 111 and 797

Warship Number 111, never named, was planned as the fourth member of the Yamato class and the second ship to incorporate the improvements of Shinano. The ship's keel was laid after Yamato's launch in August 1940 and construction continued until December 1941, when the Japanese began to question their ambitious capital ship building program—with the coming of war, the resources essential in constructing the ship would become much harder to obtain. As a result, the hull of the fourth vessel, only about 30% complete, was taken apart and scrapped in 1942; materials from this were used in the conversions of Ise and Hyūga to hybrid battleship/aircraft carriers.[48][49][A 2]

The fifth vessel, Warship Number 797, was planned as an improved Shinano but was never laid down. In addition to the modifications made to that ship, 797 would have removed the two 155 mm (6.1 in) wing turrets in favor of additional 100 mm guns; authors William Garzke and Robert Dulin estimate that this would have allowed for 24 of these weapons. Yamato was eventually modified in 1944 to something akin to this.[50]

Specifications

Armaments

Primary armament

 
Yamato's port-side anti-aircraft armament as depicted on the model of the ship at the 'Yamato Museum' in Kure

The Yamato-class battleships had primary armaments consisting of three 3-gun turrets mounting 46 cm (18.1 in)/45 caliber Type 94 naval guns – the largest guns ever fitted to a warship,[6] although they were officially designated as the 40 cm/45 caliber (15.9 in) Type 94[51] – each of which weighed 2,774 tonnes for the complete mount.[52] Each gun was 21.13 m (69.3 ft) long and weighed 147.3 metric tons (145.0 long tons),[53] and could fire 1,460 kg (3,220 lb) armor-piercing shells and 1,360 kg (3,000 lb) high explosive shells out to 42.0 km (26.1 mi) at a rate of 1½ to 2 shells per minute.[6][51]

The main guns were also capable of firing 1,360 kg (3,000 lb) 3 Shiki tsûjôdan ("Common Type 3") anti-aircraft shells.[A 3] A time fuze was used to set how far away the shells would explode (although they were commonly set to go off 1,000 m (1,100 yd) away). Upon detonation, each of these shells would release 900 incendiary-filled tubes in a 20° cone facing towards incoming aircraft; a bursting charge was then used to explode the shell itself to create more steel splinters, finally, the tubes would ignite. The tubes would burn for five seconds at about 3,000 °C (5,430 °F) and would start a flame that was around 5 m (16 ft) long. Even though they comprised 40% of the total main ammunition load by 1944,[51] 3 Shiki tsûjôdan were rarely used in combat against enemy aircraft due to the severe damage the firing of these shells inflicted on the barrels of the main guns;[54] indeed, one of the shells may have exploded early and disabled one of Musashi's guns during the Battle of the Sibuyan Sea.[51] The shells were intended to put up a barrage of flame that any aircraft attempting to attack would have to navigate through. However, U.S. pilots considered these shells to be more of a pyrotechnics display than a competent anti-aircraft weapon.[51]

 
Musashi as she appeared in 1942; compare to the 1944 and 1945 configurations of the class, which removed the amidship 15.5 cm turrets to make way for additional anti-aircraft guns of 12.7 cm/40 Type 89 and 25 mm Type 96 varieties
 
Musashi as she appeared in mid-1944

Secondary armament

 
Yamato as she appeared c. 1945 (specific configuration from 7 April 1945)

In the original design, the Yamato class' secondary armament comprised twelve 15.5 cm/60 Type 3 guns mounted in four 3-gun turrets (one forward, two amidships, one aft),[52] and twelve 12.7 cm/40 Type 89 guns in six double turrets (three on each side amidships).[52] These had become available once the Mogami-class cruisers were rearmed with 20.3 cm (8.0 in) guns.[55] With a 55.87 kg (123.2 lb) AP shell, the guns had a maximum range of 27,400 metres (30,000 yd) at an elevation of 45 degrees. Their rate of fire was five rounds per minute.[56] The two midships turrets were removed in 1944 in favor of additional 127 mm (5.0 in) heavy and 25 mm (0.98 in) light anti-aircraft guns.

Initially, heavy anti-aircraft defence was provided by a dozen 40-caliber 127-mm Type 89 dual-purpose guns in six double turrets, three on each side of the superstructure. In 1944, the two amidship 15.5 cm turrets were removed to make room for three additional 127-mm mounts on each side of Yamato, bringing the total number of these guns to twenty-four .[57] When firing at surface targets, the guns had a range of 14,700 m (16,100 yd); they had a maximum ceiling of 9,440 m (30,970 ft) at their maximum elevation of 90 degrees. Their maximum rate of fire was 14 rounds a minute; their sustained rate of fire was around eight rounds per minute.[58]

Anti-aircraft armament

The Yamato class originally carried twenty-four 25 mm Type 96 anti-aircraft guns, primarily mounted amidships.[52] In 1944, both Yamato and Musashi underwent significant anti-aircraft upgrades in preparation for operations in Leyte Gulf[59] using the space freed up by the removal of both midships 15.5 cm (6.1 in) secondary battery turrets,[60] and ended up with a complement of twenty-four 12.7 cm (5.0 in) guns,[60] and one hundred and sixty-two 25 mm (0.98 in) antiaircraft guns,[60] The 25 mm anti-aircraft guns could tilt at 90-degree angles to aim at planes directly overhead, but their mountings' lack of protection made their gunnery crews extremely vulnerable to direct enemy fire.[61] These 25 mm (0.98 in) guns had an effective range of 1,500–3,000 m (1,600–3,300 yd), and an effective ceiling of 5,500 m (18,000 ft) at an elevation of +85 degrees. The maximum effective rate of fire was only between 110 and 120 rounds per minute because of the frequent need to change the fifteen-round magazines.[62] This was the standard Japanese light AA gun during World War II; it suffered from severe design shortcomings that rendered it a largely ineffective weapon. According to historian Mark Stille, the twin and triple mounts "lacked sufficient speed in train or elevation; the gun sights were unable to handle fast targets; the gun exhibited excessive vibration; the magazine was too small, and ... the gun produced excessive muzzle blast".[63]

The class was also provided with two twin mounts for the licence-built 13.2 mm Type 93 anti-aircraft machine guns, one on each side of the bridge. The maximum range of these guns was 6,500 m (7,100 yd), but the effective range against aircraft was only 1,000 m (1,100 yd). The cyclic rate was adjustable between 425 and 475 rounds per minute; the need to change 30-round magazines reduced the effective rate to 250 rounds per minute.[64]

The armament on Shinano was quite different from that of her sister vessels due to her conversion. As the carrier was designed for a support role, significant anti-aircraft weaponry was installed on the vessel: sixteen 12.7 cm (5.0 in) guns,[65] one hundred and twenty-five 25 mm (0.98 in) anti-aircraft guns,[65] and three hundred and thirty-six 5 in (13 cm) anti-aircraft rocket launchers in twelve twenty-eight barrel turrets.[66] None of these guns were ever used against an enemy vessel or aircraft.[66]

Armor

 
Protection schematic at the rear turret; amidships schematic here

Designed to engage multiple enemy battleships simultaneously,[4] the Yamatos were fitted with heavy armor plating described by naval historian Mark Stille as providing "an unparalleled degree of protection in surface combat".[67] The main belt of armor along the side of the vessel was up to 410 mm (16 in) thick,[6] with transverse bulkheads of the armoured citadel up to 355 mm (14.0 in) thick.[6] A lower belt armor 200 millimetres (7.9 in) thick extending below the main belt was included in the ships as a response to gunnery experiments upon Tosa and the new Japanese Type 91 shell which could travel great lengths underwater.[68] Furthermore, the top hull shape was very advanced, the peculiar sideways curving effectively maximizing armor protection and structural rigidity while optimizing weight. The armor on the main turrets surpassed even that of the main belt, with turret face plating 650 mm (26 in) thick.[6] Armor plates in both the main belt and main turrets were made of Vickers Hardened steel, which was a face-hardened steel armor.[69] Main armored deck—200 mm (7.9 in) thick—was composed of a nickel-chromium-molybdenum alloy. Ballistics tests at the proving ground at Kamegakubi demonstrated the deck alloy to be superior to the homogeneous Vickers plates by 10–15%.[69] Additional plating was designed by manipulating the chromium and nickel composition of the alloy. Higher contents of nickel allowed the plate to be rolled and bent without developing fracture properties.[69]

For torpedo protection, a multiple bulkhead side protection system was used which consisted of several void spaces as well as the lower belt armor; the system has a depth of 5.1 m (17 ft) and was designed to withstand a 400 kg (880 lb) TNT charge. No torpedo defense system compartments were liquid loaded, despite the known benefits. This may have been the result of overestimating the effectiveness of the lower belt armor against torpedoes, an effort to decrease draft, and provision of additional counter-flooding spaces.[70][71][72]

The relatively new procedure of arc welding was used extensively throughout the ship, strengthening the durability of the armor plating.[73] Through this technique, the lower-side belt armor was used to strengthen the hull structure of the entire vessel.[73] In total, the vessels of the Yamato class contained 1,147 watertight compartments,[73] of which 1,065 were beneath the armored deck.[73] The ships were also designed with a very large amount of reserve buoyancy to mitigate the effects of flooding.

However, despite the immense armor thickness, the protection scheme of the Yamato class still suffered from several major design flaws and shortcomings.[74] Structural weakness existed near the bow of the vessels, where the armor plating was generally thinner, as demonstrated by Musashi's damage from a torpedo hit in 1943.[54] The hull of the Shinano was subject to even greater structural weakness, being hastily constructed near the end of the war and having been equipped with incomplete armor and unsealed watertight compartments at the time of her sinking.[65] The torpedo defense system performed substantially worse than designed. In particular, very poor jointing between the upper-belt and lower-belt armor created a rupture-prone seam just below the waterline. When combined with the relatively shallow system depth and the lack of liquid loading, this caused the class to be susceptible to torpedoes. Joint failures have been attributed to the considerable damage inflicted upon Yamato from a single torpedo impact in 1943, and to the sinking of Shinano from four hits in 1944.[54][71]

Propulsion

The Yamato class was fitted with 12 Kampon boilers, which powered quadruple steam turbines,[3] with an indicated horsepower of 147,948 (110,325 kW).[6] These, in turn, drove four 6 m (20 ft) propellers. This powerplant enabled the Yamato class to achieve a top speed of 27 knots (50 km/h).[6] With this speed, the Yamato class' ability to function alongside fast carriers was limited. In addition, the fuel consumption rate of both battleships was very high.[59] As a result, neither battleship was used in combat during the Solomon Islands Campaign or the minor battles during the "island hopping" period of 1943 and early 1944.[59] The propulsion system of Shinano was slightly improved, allowing the carrier to achieve a top speed of 28 kn (52 km/h).[66]

"Super Yamato"-class battleships

Two battleships of an entirely new and larger design were planned as a part of the 1942 fleet replenishment program. Designated as Design A-150 and initially named Warship Number 178 and Warship Number 179, plans for the ships began soon after the design of the Yamato class was finished, probably in 1938–39. Everything was "essentially completed" sometime in 1941, but with war on the horizon, work on the battleships was halted to fill a need for additional warships, such as aircraft carriers and cruisers, to replace war losses of those vital ships. The Japanese loss in the Battle of Midway, where four carriers were sunk (out of ten, to date, in the entire navy), made it certain that work on the ships would never begin. In the third volume of their Battleships series, Axis and Neutral Battleships in World War II, the authors William H. Garzke and Robert O. Dulin asserted that these ships would have been the "most powerful battleships in history" because of their massive 51 cm (20 in) main battery and extensive anti-aircraft weaponry.[75][76]

Similar to the fate of papers relating to the Yamato class, most papers and all plans relating to the class were destroyed to prevent capture at the end of the war. It is known that the final design of the ships would have had an even greater firepower and size than the Yamato class—a main battery of six 51 cm (20 in) guns in three turrets and secondary dual purpose armament consisting of twenty-four 10 cm (3.9 in) dual mounted guns (similar to the Akizuki-class destroyers). The displacement was to be bigger than the Yamato's, and a side armor belt of 46 cm (18 in) was planned.[75][76]

Destruction of records

On the eve of the Allies' occupation of Japan, special-service officers of the Imperial Japanese Navy destroyed virtually all records, drawings, and photographs of or relating to the Yamato-class battleships, leaving only fragmentary records of the design characteristics and other technical matters. The destruction of these documents was so efficient that until 1948 the only known images of Yamato and Musashi were those taken by United States Navy aircraft involved in the attacks on the two battleships. Although some additional photographs and information, from documents that were not destroyed, have come to light over the years, the loss of the majority of written records for the class has made extensive research into the Yamato class somewhat difficult.[77][78] Because of the lack of written records, information on the class largely came from interviews of Japanese officers following Japan's surrender.[79]

However, in October 1942, based upon a special request from Adolf Hitler, German Admiral Paul Wenneker, attached to the German Naval Attache in Japan, was allowed to inspect a Yamato-class battleship while it was undergoing maintenance in a dockyard, at which time Admiral Wenneker cabled a detailed description of the warship to Berlin. On 22 August 1943, Erich Groner, a German naval historian, and author of the book Die Deutschen Kriegschiffe, 1815–1945, was shown the report while at the "Führer Headquarters", and was directed to make an "interpretation" and then prepare a "design sketch drawing" of the Japanese battleship. The material was preserved by Erich Groner's wife, Mrs. H. Groner, and submitted to publishers in the 1950s.[80]

Cultural significance

 
The 1:10 scale model at the Yamato Museum

From the time of their construction until the present day, Yamato and Musashi have carried a notable presence in Japanese culture, Yamato in particular. Upon completion, the battleships represented the epitome of Imperial Japanese naval engineering. In addition, the two ships, due to their size, speed, and power, visibly embodied Japan's determination and readiness to defend its interests against the western powers, especially the United States. Shigeru Fukudome, chief of the Operations Section of the Imperial Japanese Navy General Staff, described the two ships as "symbols of naval power that provided to officers and men alike a profound sense of confidence in their navy."[81]

Yamato, and especially the story of her sinking, has appeared often in Japanese popular culture, such as the anime Space Battleship Yamato and the 2005 film Yamato.[82] The appearances in popular culture usually portray the ship's last mission as a brave, selfless, but futile, symbolic effort by the participating Japanese sailors to defend their homeland. One of the reasons that the warship may have such significance in Japanese culture is that the word "Yamato" was often used as a poetic name for Japan. Thus, the end of the battleship Yamato could serve as a metaphor for the end of the Japanese empire.[83][84]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Even as far back as 1933, Imperial Japanese Navy aviators, including Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, argued that the best defense against U.S. carrier attacks would be a carrier fleet of their own, not a battleship fleet. However, "when controversy broke into the open, the older, conservative admirals held firm to their traditional faith in the battleship as the capital ship of the fleet by supporting the construction of the ...Yamato-class superbattleships." See: Reynolds, pp. 5–6
  2. ^ Although the hull was scrapped, the double bottom was not; later construction of four large submarines took place on top of it. See: Garzke and Dulin, p. 84. Available sources do not report when the double bottom was scrapped.
  3. ^ These shells may have been nicknamed "The Beehive" while in service. See: DiGiulian, Tony (23 April 2007). "Japanese 40 cm/45 (18.1") Type 94, 46 cm/45 (18.1") Type 94". Navweaps.com. from the original on 19 May 2011. Retrieved 23 March 2009.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Kwiatkowska, K. B.; Skwiot, M. Z. "Geneza budowy japońskich pancerników typu Yamato". Morza Statki I Okręty (in Polish). Warsaw: Magnum-X. 2006 (1): 74–81. ISSN 1426-529X. OCLC 68738127.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Jackson, p. 74; Jentschura et al., p. 38
  3. ^ a b c d e f Jackson, p. 74
  4. ^ a b Schom, p. 270
  5. ^ a b c d Hackett, Robert; Kingsepp, Sander; Ahlberg, Lars. "Yamato-class Battleship". Combined Fleet. CombinedFleet.com. from the original on 16 October 2008. Retrieved 25 October 2008.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Johnston and McAuley, p. 123
  7. ^ Friedman, p. 182
  8. ^ Garzke and Dulin, pp. 4–5
  9. ^ Willmott, p. 32
  10. ^ Schom, p. 42
  11. ^ Willmott, p. 34; Gardiner and Gray, p. 229
  12. ^ Gardiner and Gray, pp. 229–231, 234
  13. ^ Garzke and Dulin, p. 44
  14. ^ Willmott, p. 35
  15. ^ Schom, p. 43
  16. ^ Willmott, p. 22
  17. ^ Thurston, Elliott (2 January 1935). "Fear is the Real Cause of Navy Treaty End". The Washington Post. p. 7.
  18. ^ Garzke and Dulin, p. 45
  19. ^ Garzke and Dulin, pp. 45–51
  20. ^ a b Garzke and Dulin, pp. 49–50
  21. ^ a b c d e f g Hackett, Robert; Kingsepp, Sander (6 June 2006). "IJN YAMATO: Tabular Record of Movement". Combined Fleet. CombinedFleet.com. from the original on 12 November 2020. Retrieved 8 January 2009.
  22. ^ a b Garzke and Dulin, p. 49
  23. ^ Garzke and Dulin, p. 50
  24. ^ Garzke and Dulin, p. 53
  25. ^ Johnston and McAuley, p. 122
  26. ^ Reynolds, pp. 5–6
  27. ^ Friedman, p. 308
  28. ^ a b Johnston and McAuley, p. 128
  29. ^ Tobin, Richard (1 October 1944). "U.S. Navy Outnumbers Jap 10 to 1". The Washington Post. p. B1.
  30. ^ Horneby, George (30 October 1944). "4 Carriers Sunk". The New York Times. p. 1.
  31. ^ "Japan's Biggest Warship Sunk". The Times. UK. 9 April 1945. p. 3C.
  32. ^ W. D. Puleston, The Armed Forces of the Pacific: A Comparison of the Military and Naval Power of the United States and Japan (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1941), pp. 208–211.
  33. ^ Willmott, p. 93
  34. ^ Willmott, p. 146
  35. ^ Reynolds, p. 156
  36. ^ Baldwin, Hanson (9 April 1945). "Okinawa's Fate Sealed: Sinking of Yamato Shows Japan's Fatal Air and Sea Weakness". The New York Times. p. 12.
  37. ^ a b Hackett, Robert; Kingsepp, Sander (6 June 2006). "IJN Musashi: Tabular Record of Movement". Combined Fleet. CombinedFleet.com. from the original on 2 March 2011. Retrieved 8 January 2009.
  38. ^ Johnston and McAuley, p. 125
  39. ^ Steinberg, p. 56
  40. ^ Garzke and Dulin, pp. 74–75
  41. ^ a b c Tully, Anthony P. (7 May 2001). "IJN Shinano: Tabular Record of Movement". Combined Fleet. CombinedFleet.com. from the original on 24 November 2010. Retrieved 8 January 2009.
  42. ^ Reynolds, p. 61
  43. ^ Preston, p. 91
  44. ^ Reynolds, p. 219
  45. ^ Reynolds, p. 284
  46. ^ Wheeler, p. 185
  47. ^ Garzke and Dulin, p. 99
  48. ^ Garzke and Dulin, p. 84
  49. ^ Johnston and McAuley, p. 124
  50. ^ Garzke and Dulin, p. 85
  51. ^ a b c d e DiGiulian, Tony (23 April 2007). "Japanese 40 cm/45 (18.1") Type 94 46 cm/45 (18.1") Type 94". Navweaps.com. from the original on 19 May 2011. Retrieved 23 March 2009.
  52. ^ a b c d Jackson, p. 75
  53. ^ Johnston and McAuley, p. 123; each of the three main turrets weighed more than a good-sized destroyer.
  54. ^ a b c Steinberg, p. 54
  55. ^ Garzke & Dulin, pp. 91–92
  56. ^ Campbell, pp. 187–88
  57. ^ Chesneau, p. 178
  58. ^ Campbell, pp. 192–93
  59. ^ a b c Jackson, p. 128
  60. ^ a b c Johnston and McAuley, p. 180
  61. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 April 2014. Retrieved 6 May 2014.
  62. ^ Campbell, p. 200
  63. ^ Stille, p. 11
  64. ^ Campbell, p. 202
  65. ^ a b c Tully, Anthony P. "Shinano". Combined Fleet. CombinedFleet.com. from the original on 2 February 2009. Retrieved 13 January 2009.
  66. ^ a b c Preston, p. 84
  67. ^ Stille, p. 37
  68. ^ Garzke and Dulin, p. 94
  69. ^ a b c Garzke and Dulin, p. 65
  70. ^ Lengerer, p. 288
  71. ^ a b U.S. Naval Technical Mission to Japan 18 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  72. ^ Thorton, Tim (1987). "Yamato: The Achilles Heel". Warship. Vol. 41. Conway Maritime Press. ISBN 0851774350.
  73. ^ a b c d Fitzsimons, Volume 24, p. 2609
  74. ^ "Best Battleship: Underwater Protection". Combined Fleet. CombinedFleet.com. from the original on 23 August 2018. Retrieved 25 October 2008.
  75. ^ a b Gardiner and Chesneau, p. 178
  76. ^ a b Garzake and Dulin, pp. 85–86
  77. ^ Muir, Malcolm (October 1990). "Rearming in a Vacuum: United States Navy Intelligence and the Japanese Capital Ship Threat, 1936–1945". The Journal of Military History. Society for Military History. 54 (4): 485. doi:10.2307/1986067. ISSN 1543-7795. JSTOR 1986067. OCLC 37032245.
  78. ^ Skulski, p. 8
  79. ^ "Warships of the World". The Times. UK. 5 November 1948. p. 2D.
  80. ^ Jentschura p. 8 (not numbered; Preface)
  81. ^ Evans and Peattie, pp. 298, 378
  82. ^ IMDB.com (1990–2009). "Uchû senkan Yamato". Internet Movie Database. from the original on 23 February 2017. Retrieved 26 March 2009.; IMDB.com (2005). "Otoko-tachi no Yamato". Internet Movie Database. from the original on 17 September 2018. Retrieved 26 March 2009.
  83. ^ Yoshida and Minear, p. xvii; Evans and Peattie, p. 378
  84. ^ Skulski, p. 7

References

  • Chesneau, Roger, ed. (1980). Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1922–1946. Greenwich, UK: Conway Maritime Press. ISBN 0-85177-146-7.
  • Evans, David C.; Peattie, Mark R. (1997). Kaigun: Strategy, Tactics, and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1887–1941. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-192-7. OCLC 36621876.
  • Fitzsimons, Bernard, ed. (1977). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of 20th Century Weapons and Warfare. London: Phoebus. OCLC 18501210.
  • Friedman, Norman (1985). U.S. Battleships: An Illustrated Design History. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-715-1. OCLC 12214729.
  • Garzke, William H.; Dulin, Robert O. (1985). Battleships: Axis and Neutral Battleships in World War II. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-101-3. OCLC 12613723.
  • Gardiner, Robert; Chesneau, Robert, eds. (1980). Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1922–1946. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-913-8. OCLC 18121784.
  • Gardiner, Robert; Gray, Randal, eds. (1985). Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1906–1921. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-907-3. OCLC 12119866.
  • Jackson, Robert (2000). The World's Great Battleships. London: Brown Books. ISBN 1-897884-60-5. OCLC 45796134.
  • Jentschura, Hansgeorg; Jung, Dieter; Mickel, Peter (1977). Warships of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1869–1945. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-893-X. OCLC 3273325.
  • Johnston, Ian; McAuley, Rob (2000). The Battleships. Osceola, Wisconsin: MBI Pub. Co. ISBN 0-7603-1018-1. OCLC 45329103.
  • Lengerer, Hans; Ahlberg, Lars (2014). Capital Ships of the Imperial Japanese Navy 1868-1945: The Yamato Class and Subsequent Planning. Nimble Books. ISBN 978-1-6088-8083-6.
  • Preston, Anthony (1999). The World's Great Aircraft Carriers: From World War I to the Present. London: Brown Books. ISBN 1-897884-58-3. OCLC 52800756.
  • Reynolds, Clark G. (1968). The Fast Carriers: The Forging of an Air Navy. New York: McGraw-Hill. OCLC 448578.
  • Schom, Alan (2004). The Eagle and the Rising Sun: The Japanese-American War, 1941–1943, Pearl Harbor through Guadalcanal. New York: W. W. Norton. ISBN 0-393-04924-8. OCLC 50737498.
  • Skulski, Janusz (1989). The Battleship Yamato. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 0-87021-019-X. OCLC 19299680.
  • Steinberg, Rafael (1980). Return to the Philippines. New York: Time-Life Books. ISBN 0-8094-2516-5. OCLC 4494158.
  • Stille, Mark (2008). Imperial Japanese Navy Battleship 1941–1945. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. ISBN 978-1-8460-3280-6. OCLC 778280806.
  • Wheeler, Keith (1980). War Under the Pacific. New York: Time-Life Books. ISBN 0-8094-3376-1.
  • Willmott, HP (1999). The Second World War in the Far East. London: Cassell & Co. ISBN 0-3043-5247-0. OCLC 59378558.
  • Yoshida, Mitsuru; Minear, Richard H. (1999) [1985]. Requiem for Battleship Yamato. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press. ISBN 1-55750-544-6. OCLC 40542935.
  • Yoshimura, Akira (2008). Battleship Musashi: The Making and Sinking of the World's Biggest Battleship. Tokyo: Kodansha International. ISBN 978-4-7700-2400-8. OCLC 43303944.

Further reading

  • Dickson, W. David (1975). "I. J. N. Yamato". Warship International. XII (4): 294–318. ISSN 0043-0374.
  • Lengerer, Hans; Ahlberg, Lars (2019). Battleship Tosa Demolition Tests to the modified Yamato Class. Capital Ships of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1868–1945. Vol. 3. Zagreb: Despot Infinitus. ISBN 9789538218576.
  • Thorne, Phil (March 2022). "Battle of the Sibuyan Sea". Warship International. LIX (1): 34–65. ISSN 0043-0374.

External links

  • Kure Yamato Museum


yamato, class, battleship, 大和型戦艦, yamato, gata, senkan, were, battleships, imperial, japanese, navy, yamato, musashi, laid, down, leading, world, completed, designed, third, hull, laid, down, 1940, converted, aircraft, carrier, shinano, during, construction, y. The Yamato class battleships 大和型戦艦 Yamato gata senkan were two battleships of the Imperial Japanese Navy IJN Yamato and Musashi laid down leading up to World War II and completed as designed A third hull laid down in 1940 was converted to an aircraft carrier Shinano during construction Yamato undergoing trials in 1941Class overviewNameYamato classBuildersKure Naval Arsenal Yokosuka Naval Arsenal Mitsubishi Shipyard NagasakiOperators Imperial Japanese NavyPreceded byNagato class actual Number 13 class planned Succeeded byA 150 class planned Subclasses2 Shinano and No 797 class Cost250 000 897 JPY 1 Built1937 1942In commission1941 1945Planned5Completed3 2 battleships 1 converted to aircraft carrier Cancelled2 one subclass Lost3General characteristics as built TypeBattleshipDisplacement69 988 long tons 71 111 t trials 3 71 659 long tons 72 809 t full load 3 Length256 m 840 ft waterline 2 263 m 862 ft 10 in o a 2 Beam38 9 m 128 ft 2 Draught10 4 m 34 ft Installed power12 water tube boilers 150 000 shp 110 MW 2 Propulsion4 shafts 4 steam turbinesSpeed27 knots 50 km h 31 mph 2 Range7 200 nmi 13 300 km 8 300 mi at 16 knots 30 km h 18 mph 2 Complement2 767 4 Armament3 3 gun 46 cm 18 1 in guns 3 4 3 gun 15 5 cm 6 1 in guns 3 6 twin 12 7 cm 5 in guns 3 8 triple 25 mm 1 in AA guns 2 twin 13 2 mm 0 52 in machine guns 5 Armor650 mm 26 in on face of main turrets 5 410 mm 16 in side armor 400 mm 16 in planned on Shinano and No 111 5 inclined 20 degrees 200 mm 8 in armored deck 75 230 mm 9 in armored deck 25 5 Aircraft carried4 Aichi E13A 3 Mitsubishi F1M 2 catapults Yamato Musashi 47 aircraft Shinano Displacing nearly 72 000 long tons 73 000 t at full load the completed battleships were the heaviest ever constructed The class carried the largest naval artillery ever fitted to a warship nine 460 mm 18 1 in naval guns each capable of firing 1 460 kg 3 220 lb shells over 42 km 26 mi Due to the threat of U S submarines and aircraft carriers both Yamato and Musashi spent the majority of their careers in naval bases at Brunei Truk and Kure deploying on several occasions in response to U S raids on Japanese bases All three ships were sunk by the U S Navy Musashi while participating in the Battle of Leyte Gulf in October 1944 the Shinano while under way from Yokosuka to Kure for fitting out in November 1944 and the Yamato while en route from Japan to Okinawa as part of Operation Ten Go in April 1945 Contents 1 Background 2 Design 3 Ships 3 1 Yamato 3 2 Musashi 3 3 Shinano 3 4 Warships Number 111 and 797 4 Specifications 4 1 Armaments 4 1 1 Primary armament 4 1 2 Secondary armament 4 1 3 Anti aircraft armament 4 2 Armor 4 3 Propulsion 5 Super Yamato class battleships 6 Destruction of records 7 Cultural significance 8 See also 9 Notes 10 Footnotes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksBackground EditThe design of the Yamato class battleships was shaped by expansionist movements within the Japanese government Japanese industrial power and the need for a fleet powerful enough to intimidate likely adversaries 6 Most importantly the latter in the form of the Kantai Kessen Decisive Battle Doctrine a naval strategy adopted by the Imperial Japanese Navy prior to the Second World War in which the Japanese navy would win a war by fighting and winning a single decisive naval action Musashi August 1942 taken from the bow After the end of the First World War many navies including those of the United States the United Kingdom and Imperial Japan continued and expanded construction programs that had begun during the conflict The enormous costs associated with these programs pressured their government leaders to begin a disarmament conference On 8 July 1921 the United States Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes invited delegations from the other major maritime powers France Italy Japan and the United Kingdom to come to Washington D C and discuss a possible end to the naval arms race The subsequent Washington Naval Conference resulted in the Washington Naval Treaty Along with many other provisions it limited all future battleships to a standard displacement of 35 000 long tons 35 562 t 39 200 short tons and a maximum gun caliber of 16 inches 406 mm It also agreed that the five countries would not construct more capital ships for ten years and would not replace any ship that survived the treaty until it was at least twenty years old 7 8 In the 1930s the Japanese government began a shift towards ultranationalist militancy 9 This movement called for the expansion of the Japanese Empire to include much of the Pacific Ocean and Southeast Asia The maintenance of such an empire spanning 3 000 miles 4 800 km from China to Midway Island required a sizable fleet capable of sustained control of territory 10 Although all of Japan s battleships built prior to the Yamato class had been completed before 1921 as the Washington Treaty had prevented any more from being completed all had been either reconstructed or significantly modernized or both in the 1930s 11 This modernization included among other things additional speed and firepower which the Japanese intended to use to conquer and defend their aspired to empire 12 When Japan withdrew from the League of Nations in 1934 over the Mukden Incident it also renounced all treaty obligations 13 freeing it to build warships larger than those of the other major maritime powers 14 Japan s intention to acquire resource producing colonies in the Pacific and Southeast Asia would likely lead to confrontation with the United States 15 thus the U S became Japan s primary potential enemy The U S possessed significantly greater industrial power than Japan with 32 2 of worldwide industrial production compared to Japan s 3 5 16 Furthermore several leading members of the United States Congress had pledged to outbuild Japan three to one in a naval race 17 Consequently as Japanese industrial output could not compete with American industrial power 6 Japanese ship designers developed plans for new battleships individually superior to their counterparts in the United States Navy 18 Each of these battleships would be capable of engaging multiple enemy capital ships simultaneously eliminating the need to expend as much industrial effort as the U S on battleship construction 6 Design Edit The bridge of Musashi Preliminary studies for a new class of battleships began after Japan s departure from the League of Nations and its renunciation of the Washington and London naval treaties from 1934 to 1936 24 initial designs were put forth These early plans varied greatly in armament propulsion endurance and armor Main batteries fluctuated between 460 mm 18 1 in and 406 mm 16 in guns while the secondary armaments were composed of differing numbers of 155 mm 6 1 in 127 mm 5 in and 25 mm 1 in guns Propulsion in most of the designs was a hybrid diesel turbine combination though one relied solely on diesel and another planned for only turbines The maximum range of the various designs was between 6 000 nautical miles 11 000 km 6 900 mi in design A 140 J2 to a high of 9 200 nmi 17 000 km 10 600 mi in designs A 140A and A 140 B2 at a speed of 18 knots 33 km h 21 mph Armor varied between providing protection from the fire of 406 mm guns to enough protection against 460 mm guns 19 After these had been reviewed two of the original twenty four were finalized as possibilities A 140 F3 and A 140 F4 Differing primarily in their range 4 900 nmi 9 100 km 5 600 mi versus 7 200 nmi 13 300 km 8 300 mi at 16 knots 30 km h 18 mph they were used in the formation of the final preliminary study which was finished on 20 July 1936 Tweaks to that design resulted in the definitive design of March 1937 20 which was put forth by Rear Admiral Fukuda Keiji 21 a range of 7 200 nmi was finally decided upon and the hybrid diesel turbine propulsion was abandoned in favor of turbines The diesel engines were removed from the design because of problems with the engines aboard the submarine tender Taigei 20 Their engines which were similar to the ones that were going to be mounted in the new battleships required a major repair and maintenance effort 22 to keep them running due to a fundamental design defect 22 In addition if the engines failed entirely the 200 mm 7 9 in armored citadel deck roof that protected the proposed diesel engine rooms and attendant machinery spaces would severely hamper any attempt to remove and replace them 23 The final design called for a standard displacement of 64 000 long tons 65 000 t and a full load displacement of 69 988 long tons 71 111 t 24 making the ships of the class the largest battleships yet designed and the largest battleships ever constructed The design called for a main armament of nine 460 mm naval guns mounted in three three gun turrets each of which weighed more than a 1930s era destroyer 21 The designs were quickly approved by the Japanese Naval high command 25 over the objections of naval aviators who argued for the construction of aircraft carriers rather than battleships 26 A 1 In all five Yamato class battleships were planned 6 Ships Edit Yamato and Musashi anchored in the waters off of the Truk Islands in 1943 Although five Yamato class vessels had been planned in 1937 only three two battleships and a converted aircraft carrier were completed All three vessels were built in extreme secrecy to prevent American intelligence officials from learning of their existence and specifications 6 indeed the United States Office of Naval Intelligence only became aware of Yamato and Musashi by name in late 1942 At this early time their assumptions on the class s specifications were quite far off while they were correct on their length the class was given as having a beam of 110 ft 34 m in actuality it was about 127 ft 39 m and a displacement of 40 000 57 000 tons actually 69 000 tons In addition the main armament of Yamato class was given as nine 16 in 410 mm guns as late as July 1945 four months after Yamato was sunk 27 28 Both Jane s Fighting Ships and the Western media also misreported the specifications of the ships In September 1944 Jane s Fighting Ships listed the displacement of both Yamato and Musashi as 45 000 tons 29 Similarly both the New York Times and the Associated Press reported that the two ships displaced 45 000 tons with a speed of 30 knots 30 and even after the sinking of Yamato in April 1945 The Times of London continued to give 45 000 tons as the ship s displacement 31 Nevertheless the existence of the ships and their supposed violation of naval treaties heavily influenced American naval engineers in the design of the 60 500 ton Montana class battleships though they were not designed specifically to counter the Yamato class 32 Construction data Name Namesake Builder Laid down Launched Commissioned FateYamato Yamato Province Great Harmony Kure Naval Arsenal 4 November 1937 8 August 1940 16 December 1941 Sunk by aircraft during Operation Ten Go 7 April 1945Musashi Musashi Province Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Nagasaki 29 March 1938 1 November 1940 5 August 1942 Sunk by aircraft during the Battle of the Sibuyan Sea 24 October 1944Shinano Shinano Province Yokosuka Naval Arsenal 4 May 1940 8 October 1944 19 November 1944 Converted into aircraft carrier July 1942 Torpedoed and sunk by USS Archerfish 28 November 1944Warship Number 111 Kure Naval Arsenal 7 November 1940 Cancelled March 1942 when 30 complete Scrapped in placeWarship Number 797 Cancelled during planningYamato Edit Main article Japanese battleship Yamato Yamato on trials in 1941 Yamato was ordered in March 1937 laid down 4 November 1937 launched 8 August 1940 and commissioned 16 December 1941 21 She underwent training exercises until 27 May 1942 when the vessel was deemed operable by Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto 21 Joining the 1st Battleship Division Yamato served as the flagship of the Japanese Combined Fleet during the Battle of Midway in June 1942 yet did not engage enemy forces during the battle 33 The next two years were spent intermittently between Truk and Kure naval bases with her sister ship Musashi replacing Yamato as the flagship of the Combined Fleet 21 During this time period Yamato as part of the 1st Battleship Division deployed on multiple occasions to counteract American carrier raids on Japanese island bases On 25 December 1943 she suffered major torpedo damage at the hands of USS Skate and was forced to return to Kure for repairs and structural upgrades 21 In 1944 following extensive anti aircraft and secondary battery upgrades Yamato joined the Second Fleet in the Battle of the Philippine Sea serving as an escort to a Japanese Carrier Division 34 In October 1944 as part of Vice Admiral Takeo Kurita s Center Force for the Battle of Leyte Gulf she used her naval artillery against an enemy vessel for the only time helping sink the American escort carrier Gambier Bay and the destroyer Johnston before she was forced away by torpedoes from Heermann which put her out of combat 35 Lightly damaged at Kure in March 1945 the ship was then rearmed in preparation for operations 21 Yamato was deliberately expended in a suicide mission as part of Operation Ten Go sent to use her big guns to provide relief to Japanese forces engaged in the Battle of Okinawa She never came close sunk en route on 7 April 1945 by 386 American carrier aircraft After receiving 10 torpedo and 7 bomb hits she capsized taking 2 498 of the 2 700 crew members with her including Vice Admiral Seiichi Itō 28 The sinking of Yamato was seen as a major American victory and Hanson W Baldwin the military editor of The New York Times wrote that the sinking of the new Japanese battleship Yamato is striking proof if any were needed of the fatal weakness of Japan in the air and at sea 36 Musashi Edit Main article Japanese battleship Musashi Musashi departing Brunei in October 1944 Musashi was ordered in March 1937 laid down 29 March 1938 launched 1 November 1940 and commissioned 5 August 1942 From September to December 1942 she was involved in surface and air combat training exercises at Hashirajima On 11 February 1943 Musashi relieved her sister ship Yamato as the flagship of the Combined Fleet Until July 1944 Musashi shifted between the naval bases of Truk Yokosuka Brunei and Kure On 29 March 1944 she sustained moderate damage near the bow from one torpedo fired by the American submarine Tunny After repairs and refitting throughout April 1944 Musashi joined the 1st Battleship Division in Okinawa 37 In June 1944 as part of the Second Fleet the ship escorted Japanese aircraft carriers during the Battle of the Philippine Sea 37 In October 1944 she left Brunei as part of Admiral Takeo Kurita s Center Force during the Battle of Leyte Gulf 38 Musashi was sunk 24 October during the Battle of the Sibuyan Sea taking 17 bomb and 19 torpedo hits with the loss of 1 023 of her 2 399 man crew 39 Shinano Edit Main article Japanese aircraft carrier Shinano Shinano in November 1944 Shinano originally Warship Number 110 was laid down as the third member of the Yamato class albeit with a slightly modified design Most of the original armor values were slightly reduced including the belt deck and turrets The savings in weight this entailed meant that improvements could be made in other areas including added protection for fire control and lookout positions In addition the 12 7 cm 5 0 in secondary armament on the first two Yamatos was to have been replaced by the 10 cm 3 9 in 65 caliber Type 98 gun Although smaller this gun was superior to the 127 mm possessing a significantly greater muzzle velocity maximum range anti aircraft ceiling and rate of fire 40 In June 1942 following the Japanese defeat at Midway construction of Shinano was suspended and the hull was gradually rebuilt as an aircraft carrier 41 She was designed as a 64 800 ton support vessel that would be capable of ferrying repairing and replenishing the air fleets of other carriers 42 43 Although she was originally scheduled for commissioning in early 1945 44 the construction of the ship was accelerated after the Battle of the Philippine Sea 45 this resulted in Shinano being launched on 5 October 1944 and commissioned a little more than a month later on 19 November Shinano departed Yokosuka for Kure nine days later In the early morning on 29 November Shinano was hit by four torpedoes from USS Archerfish 41 Although the damage seemed manageable poor flooding control caused the vessel to list to starboard Shortly before midday she capsized and sank taking 1 435 of her 2 400 man crew with her 41 To this day Shinano is the largest naval vessel to have been sunk by a submarine 46 47 Warships Number 111 and 797 Edit Warship Number 111 never named was planned as the fourth member of the Yamato class and the second ship to incorporate the improvements of Shinano The ship s keel was laid after Yamato s launch in August 1940 and construction continued until December 1941 when the Japanese began to question their ambitious capital ship building program with the coming of war the resources essential in constructing the ship would become much harder to obtain As a result the hull of the fourth vessel only about 30 complete was taken apart and scrapped in 1942 materials from this were used in the conversions of Ise and Hyuga to hybrid battleship aircraft carriers 48 49 A 2 The fifth vessel Warship Number 797 was planned as an improved Shinano but was never laid down In addition to the modifications made to that ship 797 would have removed the two 155 mm 6 1 in wing turrets in favor of additional 100 mm guns authors William Garzke and Robert Dulin estimate that this would have allowed for 24 of these weapons Yamato was eventually modified in 1944 to something akin to this 50 Specifications EditArmaments Edit Primary armament Edit Yamato s port side anti aircraft armament as depicted on the model of the ship at the Yamato Museum in Kure The Yamato class battleships had primary armaments consisting of three 3 gun turrets mounting 46 cm 18 1 in 45 caliber Type 94 naval guns the largest guns ever fitted to a warship 6 although they were officially designated as the 40 cm 45 caliber 15 9 in Type 94 51 each of which weighed 2 774 tonnes for the complete mount 52 Each gun was 21 13 m 69 3 ft long and weighed 147 3 metric tons 145 0 long tons 53 and could fire 1 460 kg 3 220 lb armor piercing shells and 1 360 kg 3 000 lb high explosive shells out to 42 0 km 26 1 mi at a rate of 1 to 2 shells per minute 6 51 The main guns were also capable of firing 1 360 kg 3 000 lb 3 Shiki tsujodan Common Type 3 anti aircraft shells A 3 A time fuze was used to set how far away the shells would explode although they were commonly set to go off 1 000 m 1 100 yd away Upon detonation each of these shells would release 900 incendiary filled tubes in a 20 cone facing towards incoming aircraft a bursting charge was then used to explode the shell itself to create more steel splinters finally the tubes would ignite The tubes would burn for five seconds at about 3 000 C 5 430 F and would start a flame that was around 5 m 16 ft long Even though they comprised 40 of the total main ammunition load by 1944 51 3 Shiki tsujodan were rarely used in combat against enemy aircraft due to the severe damage the firing of these shells inflicted on the barrels of the main guns 54 indeed one of the shells may have exploded early and disabled one of Musashi s guns during the Battle of the Sibuyan Sea 51 The shells were intended to put up a barrage of flame that any aircraft attempting to attack would have to navigate through However U S pilots considered these shells to be more of a pyrotechnics display than a competent anti aircraft weapon 51 Musashi as she appeared in 1942 compare to the 1944 and 1945 configurations of the class which removed the amidship 15 5 cm turrets to make way for additional anti aircraft guns of 12 7 cm 40 Type 89 and 25 mm Type 96 varieties Musashi as she appeared in mid 1944 Secondary armament Edit Yamato as she appeared c 1945 specific configuration from 7 April 1945 In the original design the Yamato class secondary armament comprised twelve 15 5 cm 60 Type 3 guns mounted in four 3 gun turrets one forward two amidships one aft 52 and twelve 12 7 cm 40 Type 89 guns in six double turrets three on each side amidships 52 These had become available once the Mogami class cruisers were rearmed with 20 3 cm 8 0 in guns 55 With a 55 87 kg 123 2 lb AP shell the guns had a maximum range of 27 400 metres 30 000 yd at an elevation of 45 degrees Their rate of fire was five rounds per minute 56 The two midships turrets were removed in 1944 in favor of additional 127 mm 5 0 in heavy and 25 mm 0 98 in light anti aircraft guns Initially heavy anti aircraft defence was provided by a dozen 40 caliber 127 mm Type 89 dual purpose guns in six double turrets three on each side of the superstructure In 1944 the two amidship 15 5 cm turrets were removed to make room for three additional 127 mm mounts on each side of Yamato bringing the total number of these guns to twenty four 57 When firing at surface targets the guns had a range of 14 700 m 16 100 yd they had a maximum ceiling of 9 440 m 30 970 ft at their maximum elevation of 90 degrees Their maximum rate of fire was 14 rounds a minute their sustained rate of fire was around eight rounds per minute 58 Anti aircraft armament Edit The Yamato class originally carried twenty four 25 mm Type 96 anti aircraft guns primarily mounted amidships 52 In 1944 both Yamato and Musashi underwent significant anti aircraft upgrades in preparation for operations in Leyte Gulf 59 using the space freed up by the removal of both midships 15 5 cm 6 1 in secondary battery turrets 60 and ended up with a complement of twenty four 12 7 cm 5 0 in guns 60 and one hundred and sixty two 25 mm 0 98 in antiaircraft guns 60 The 25 mm anti aircraft guns could tilt at 90 degree angles to aim at planes directly overhead but their mountings lack of protection made their gunnery crews extremely vulnerable to direct enemy fire 61 These 25 mm 0 98 in guns had an effective range of 1 500 3 000 m 1 600 3 300 yd and an effective ceiling of 5 500 m 18 000 ft at an elevation of 85 degrees The maximum effective rate of fire was only between 110 and 120 rounds per minute because of the frequent need to change the fifteen round magazines 62 This was the standard Japanese light AA gun during World War II it suffered from severe design shortcomings that rendered it a largely ineffective weapon According to historian Mark Stille the twin and triple mounts lacked sufficient speed in train or elevation the gun sights were unable to handle fast targets the gun exhibited excessive vibration the magazine was too small and the gun produced excessive muzzle blast 63 The class was also provided with two twin mounts for the licence built 13 2 mm Type 93 anti aircraft machine guns one on each side of the bridge The maximum range of these guns was 6 500 m 7 100 yd but the effective range against aircraft was only 1 000 m 1 100 yd The cyclic rate was adjustable between 425 and 475 rounds per minute the need to change 30 round magazines reduced the effective rate to 250 rounds per minute 64 The armament on Shinano was quite different from that of her sister vessels due to her conversion As the carrier was designed for a support role significant anti aircraft weaponry was installed on the vessel sixteen 12 7 cm 5 0 in guns 65 one hundred and twenty five 25 mm 0 98 in anti aircraft guns 65 and three hundred and thirty six 5 in 13 cm anti aircraft rocket launchers in twelve twenty eight barrel turrets 66 None of these guns were ever used against an enemy vessel or aircraft 66 Armor Edit Further information Belt armor Protection schematic at the rear turret amidships schematic here Designed to engage multiple enemy battleships simultaneously 4 the Yamatos were fitted with heavy armor plating described by naval historian Mark Stille as providing an unparalleled degree of protection in surface combat 67 The main belt of armor along the side of the vessel was up to 410 mm 16 in thick 6 with transverse bulkheads of the armoured citadel up to 355 mm 14 0 in thick 6 A lower belt armor 200 millimetres 7 9 in thick extending below the main belt was included in the ships as a response to gunnery experiments upon Tosa and the new Japanese Type 91 shell which could travel great lengths underwater 68 Furthermore the top hull shape was very advanced the peculiar sideways curving effectively maximizing armor protection and structural rigidity while optimizing weight The armor on the main turrets surpassed even that of the main belt with turret face plating 650 mm 26 in thick 6 Armor plates in both the main belt and main turrets were made of Vickers Hardened steel which was a face hardened steel armor 69 Main armored deck 200 mm 7 9 in thick was composed of a nickel chromium molybdenum alloy Ballistics tests at the proving ground at Kamegakubi demonstrated the deck alloy to be superior to the homogeneous Vickers plates by 10 15 69 Additional plating was designed by manipulating the chromium and nickel composition of the alloy Higher contents of nickel allowed the plate to be rolled and bent without developing fracture properties 69 For torpedo protection a multiple bulkhead side protection system was used which consisted of several void spaces as well as the lower belt armor the system has a depth of 5 1 m 17 ft and was designed to withstand a 400 kg 880 lb TNT charge No torpedo defense system compartments were liquid loaded despite the known benefits This may have been the result of overestimating the effectiveness of the lower belt armor against torpedoes an effort to decrease draft and provision of additional counter flooding spaces 70 71 72 The relatively new procedure of arc welding was used extensively throughout the ship strengthening the durability of the armor plating 73 Through this technique the lower side belt armor was used to strengthen the hull structure of the entire vessel 73 In total the vessels of the Yamato class contained 1 147 watertight compartments 73 of which 1 065 were beneath the armored deck 73 The ships were also designed with a very large amount of reserve buoyancy to mitigate the effects of flooding However despite the immense armor thickness the protection scheme of the Yamato class still suffered from several major design flaws and shortcomings 74 Structural weakness existed near the bow of the vessels where the armor plating was generally thinner as demonstrated by Musashi s damage from a torpedo hit in 1943 54 The hull of the Shinano was subject to even greater structural weakness being hastily constructed near the end of the war and having been equipped with incomplete armor and unsealed watertight compartments at the time of her sinking 65 The torpedo defense system performed substantially worse than designed In particular very poor jointing between the upper belt and lower belt armor created a rupture prone seam just below the waterline When combined with the relatively shallow system depth and the lack of liquid loading this caused the class to be susceptible to torpedoes Joint failures have been attributed to the considerable damage inflicted upon Yamato from a single torpedo impact in 1943 and to the sinking of Shinano from four hits in 1944 54 71 Propulsion Edit The Yamato class was fitted with 12 Kampon boilers which powered quadruple steam turbines 3 with an indicated horsepower of 147 948 110 325 kW 6 These in turn drove four 6 m 20 ft propellers This powerplant enabled the Yamato class to achieve a top speed of 27 knots 50 km h 6 With this speed the Yamato class ability to function alongside fast carriers was limited In addition the fuel consumption rate of both battleships was very high 59 As a result neither battleship was used in combat during the Solomon Islands Campaign or the minor battles during the island hopping period of 1943 and early 1944 59 The propulsion system of Shinano was slightly improved allowing the carrier to achieve a top speed of 28 kn 52 km h 66 Super Yamato class battleships EditMain article Design A 150 battleship Two battleships of an entirely new and larger design were planned as a part of the 1942 fleet replenishment program Designated as Design A 150 and initially named Warship Number 178 and Warship Number 179 plans for the ships began soon after the design of the Yamato class was finished probably in 1938 39 Everything was essentially completed sometime in 1941 but with war on the horizon work on the battleships was halted to fill a need for additional warships such as aircraft carriers and cruisers to replace war losses of those vital ships The Japanese loss in the Battle of Midway where four carriers were sunk out of ten to date in the entire navy made it certain that work on the ships would never begin In the third volume of their Battleships series Axis and Neutral Battleships in World War II the authors William H Garzke and Robert O Dulin asserted that these ships would have been the most powerful battleships in history because of their massive 51 cm 20 in main battery and extensive anti aircraft weaponry 75 76 Similar to the fate of papers relating to the Yamato class most papers and all plans relating to the class were destroyed to prevent capture at the end of the war It is known that the final design of the ships would have had an even greater firepower and size than the Yamato class a main battery of six 51 cm 20 in guns in three turrets and secondary dual purpose armament consisting of twenty four 10 cm 3 9 in dual mounted guns similar to the Akizuki class destroyers The displacement was to be bigger than the Yamato s and a side armor belt of 46 cm 18 in was planned 75 76 Destruction of records EditOn the eve of the Allies occupation of Japan special service officers of the Imperial Japanese Navy destroyed virtually all records drawings and photographs of or relating to the Yamato class battleships leaving only fragmentary records of the design characteristics and other technical matters The destruction of these documents was so efficient that until 1948 the only known images of Yamato and Musashi were those taken by United States Navy aircraft involved in the attacks on the two battleships Although some additional photographs and information from documents that were not destroyed have come to light over the years the loss of the majority of written records for the class has made extensive research into the Yamato class somewhat difficult 77 78 Because of the lack of written records information on the class largely came from interviews of Japanese officers following Japan s surrender 79 However in October 1942 based upon a special request from Adolf Hitler German Admiral Paul Wenneker attached to the German Naval Attache in Japan was allowed to inspect a Yamato class battleship while it was undergoing maintenance in a dockyard at which time Admiral Wenneker cabled a detailed description of the warship to Berlin On 22 August 1943 Erich Groner a German naval historian and author of the book Die Deutschen Kriegschiffe 1815 1945 was shown the report while at the Fuhrer Headquarters and was directed to make an interpretation and then prepare a design sketch drawing of the Japanese battleship The material was preserved by Erich Groner s wife Mrs H Groner and submitted to publishers in the 1950s 80 Cultural significance Edit The 1 10 scale model at the Yamato Museum From the time of their construction until the present day Yamato and Musashi have carried a notable presence in Japanese culture Yamato in particular Upon completion the battleships represented the epitome of Imperial Japanese naval engineering In addition the two ships due to their size speed and power visibly embodied Japan s determination and readiness to defend its interests against the western powers especially the United States Shigeru Fukudome chief of the Operations Section of the Imperial Japanese Navy General Staff described the two ships as symbols of naval power that provided to officers and men alike a profound sense of confidence in their navy 81 Yamato and especially the story of her sinking has appeared often in Japanese popular culture such as the anime Space Battleship Yamato and the 2005 film Yamato 82 The appearances in popular culture usually portray the ship s last mission as a brave selfless but futile symbolic effort by the participating Japanese sailors to defend their homeland One of the reasons that the warship may have such significance in Japanese culture is that the word Yamato was often used as a poetic name for Japan Thus the end of the battleship Yamato could serve as a metaphor for the end of the Japanese empire 83 84 See also Edit Battleships portalH class battleship proposals World War II German Kriegsmarine Montana class battleship U S Navy Yamato Museum Japanese munition ship Kashino Purpose built ship to carry main gun turrets and barrels of the classNotes Edit Even as far back as 1933 Imperial Japanese Navy aviators including Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto argued that the best defense against U S carrier attacks would be a carrier fleet of their own not a battleship fleet However when controversy broke into the open the older conservative admirals held firm to their traditional faith in the battleship as the capital ship of the fleet by supporting the construction of the Yamato class superbattleships See Reynolds pp 5 6 Although the hull was scrapped the double bottom was not later construction of four large submarines took place on top of it See Garzke and Dulin p 84 Available sources do not report when the double bottom was scrapped These shells may have been nicknamed The Beehive while in service See DiGiulian Tony 23 April 2007 Japanese 40 cm 45 18 1 Type 94 46 cm 45 18 1 Type 94 Navweaps com Archived from the original on 19 May 2011 Retrieved 23 March 2009 Footnotes Edit Kwiatkowska K B Skwiot M Z Geneza budowy japonskich pancernikow typu Yamato Morza Statki I Okrety in Polish Warsaw Magnum X 2006 1 74 81 ISSN 1426 529X OCLC 68738127 a b c d e f Jackson p 74 Jentschura et al p 38 a b c d e f Jackson p 74 a b Schom p 270 a b c d Hackett Robert Kingsepp Sander Ahlberg Lars Yamato class Battleship Combined Fleet CombinedFleet com Archived from the original on 16 October 2008 Retrieved 25 October 2008 a b c d e f g h i j k l Johnston and McAuley p 123 Friedman p 182 Garzke and Dulin pp 4 5 Willmott p 32 Schom p 42 Willmott p 34 Gardiner and Gray p 229 Gardiner and Gray pp 229 231 234 Garzke and Dulin p 44 Willmott p 35 Schom p 43 Willmott p 22 Thurston Elliott 2 January 1935 Fear is the Real Cause of Navy Treaty End The Washington Post p 7 Garzke and Dulin p 45 Garzke and Dulin pp 45 51 a b Garzke and Dulin pp 49 50 a b c d e f g Hackett Robert Kingsepp Sander 6 June 2006 IJN YAMATO Tabular Record of Movement Combined Fleet CombinedFleet com Archived from the original on 12 November 2020 Retrieved 8 January 2009 a b Garzke and Dulin p 49 Garzke and Dulin p 50 Garzke and Dulin p 53 Johnston and McAuley p 122 Reynolds pp 5 6 Friedman p 308 a b Johnston and McAuley p 128 Tobin Richard 1 October 1944 U S Navy Outnumbers Jap 10 to 1 The Washington Post p B1 Horneby George 30 October 1944 4 Carriers Sunk The New York Times p 1 Japan s Biggest Warship Sunk The Times UK 9 April 1945 p 3C W D Puleston The Armed Forces of the Pacific A Comparison of the Military and Naval Power of the United States and Japan New Haven Yale University Press 1941 pp 208 211 Willmott p 93 Willmott p 146 Reynolds p 156 Baldwin Hanson 9 April 1945 Okinawa s Fate Sealed Sinking of Yamato Shows Japan s Fatal Air and Sea Weakness The New York Times p 12 a b Hackett Robert Kingsepp Sander 6 June 2006 IJN Musashi Tabular Record of Movement Combined Fleet CombinedFleet com Archived from the original on 2 March 2011 Retrieved 8 January 2009 Johnston and McAuley p 125 Steinberg p 56 Garzke and Dulin pp 74 75 a b c Tully Anthony P 7 May 2001 IJN Shinano Tabular Record of Movement Combined Fleet CombinedFleet com Archived from the original on 24 November 2010 Retrieved 8 January 2009 Reynolds p 61 Preston p 91 Reynolds p 219 Reynolds p 284 Wheeler p 185 Garzke and Dulin p 99 Garzke and Dulin p 84 Johnston and McAuley p 124 Garzke and Dulin p 85 a b c d e DiGiulian Tony 23 April 2007 Japanese 40 cm 45 18 1 Type 94 46 cm 45 18 1 Type 94 Navweaps com Archived from the original on 19 May 2011 Retrieved 23 March 2009 a b c d Jackson p 75 Johnston and McAuley p 123 each of the three main turrets weighed more than a good sized destroyer a b c Steinberg p 54 Garzke amp Dulin pp 91 92 Campbell pp 187 88 Chesneau p 178 Campbell pp 192 93 a b c Jackson p 128 a b c Johnston and McAuley p 180 Weapons Archived from the original on 9 April 2014 Retrieved 6 May 2014 Campbell p 200 Stille p 11 Campbell p 202 a b c Tully Anthony P Shinano Combined Fleet CombinedFleet com Archived from the original on 2 February 2009 Retrieved 13 January 2009 a b c Preston p 84 Stille p 37 Garzke and Dulin p 94 a b c Garzke and Dulin p 65 Lengerer p 288 a b U S Naval Technical Mission to Japan Archived 18 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Thorton Tim 1987 Yamato The Achilles Heel Warship Vol 41 Conway Maritime Press ISBN 0851774350 a b c d Fitzsimons Volume 24 p 2609 Best Battleship Underwater Protection Combined Fleet CombinedFleet com Archived from the original on 23 August 2018 Retrieved 25 October 2008 a b Gardiner and Chesneau p 178 a b Garzake and Dulin pp 85 86 Muir Malcolm October 1990 Rearming in a Vacuum United States Navy Intelligence and the Japanese Capital Ship Threat 1936 1945 The Journal of Military History Society for Military History 54 4 485 doi 10 2307 1986067 ISSN 1543 7795 JSTOR 1986067 OCLC 37032245 Skulski p 8 Warships of the World The Times UK 5 November 1948 p 2D Jentschura p 8 not numbered Preface Evans and Peattie pp 298 378 IMDB com 1990 2009 Uchu senkan Yamato Internet Movie Database Archived from the original on 23 February 2017 Retrieved 26 March 2009 IMDB com 2005 Otoko tachi no Yamato Internet Movie Database Archived from the original on 17 September 2018 Retrieved 26 March 2009 Yoshida and Minear p xvii Evans and Peattie p 378 Skulski p 7References EditChesneau Roger ed 1980 Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1922 1946 Greenwich UK Conway Maritime Press ISBN 0 85177 146 7 Evans David C Peattie Mark R 1997 Kaigun Strategy Tactics and Technology in the Imperial Japanese Navy 1887 1941 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 192 7 OCLC 36621876 Fitzsimons Bernard ed 1977 The Illustrated Encyclopedia of 20th Century Weapons and Warfare London Phoebus OCLC 18501210 Friedman Norman 1985 U S Battleships An Illustrated Design History Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 715 1 OCLC 12214729 Garzke William H Dulin Robert O 1985 Battleships Axis and Neutral Battleships in World War II Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 101 3 OCLC 12613723 Gardiner Robert Chesneau Robert eds 1980 Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1922 1946 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 913 8 OCLC 18121784 Gardiner Robert Gray Randal eds 1985 Conway s All the World s Fighting Ships 1906 1921 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 907 3 OCLC 12119866 Jackson Robert 2000 The World s Great Battleships London Brown Books ISBN 1 897884 60 5 OCLC 45796134 Jentschura Hansgeorg Jung Dieter Mickel Peter 1977 Warships of the Imperial Japanese Navy 1869 1945 Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 893 X OCLC 3273325 Johnston Ian McAuley Rob 2000 The Battleships Osceola Wisconsin MBI Pub Co ISBN 0 7603 1018 1 OCLC 45329103 Lengerer Hans Ahlberg Lars 2014 Capital Ships of the Imperial Japanese Navy 1868 1945 The Yamato Class and Subsequent Planning Nimble Books ISBN 978 1 6088 8083 6 Preston Anthony 1999 The World s Great Aircraft Carriers From World War I to the Present London Brown Books ISBN 1 897884 58 3 OCLC 52800756 Reynolds Clark G 1968 The Fast Carriers The Forging of an Air Navy New York McGraw Hill OCLC 448578 Schom Alan 2004 The Eagle and the Rising Sun The Japanese American War 1941 1943 Pearl Harbor through Guadalcanal New York W W Norton ISBN 0 393 04924 8 OCLC 50737498 Skulski Janusz 1989 The Battleship Yamato Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 0 87021 019 X OCLC 19299680 Steinberg Rafael 1980 Return to the Philippines New York Time Life Books ISBN 0 8094 2516 5 OCLC 4494158 Stille Mark 2008 Imperial Japanese Navy Battleship 1941 1945 Oxford Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 1 8460 3280 6 OCLC 778280806 Wheeler Keith 1980 War Under the Pacific New York Time Life Books ISBN 0 8094 3376 1 Willmott HP 1999 The Second World War in the Far East London Cassell amp Co ISBN 0 3043 5247 0 OCLC 59378558 Yoshida Mitsuru Minear Richard H 1999 1985 Requiem for Battleship Yamato Annapolis Maryland Naval Institute Press ISBN 1 55750 544 6 OCLC 40542935 Yoshimura Akira 2008 Battleship Musashi The Making and Sinking of the World s Biggest Battleship Tokyo Kodansha International ISBN 978 4 7700 2400 8 OCLC 43303944 Further reading EditDickson W David 1975 I J N Yamato Warship International XII 4 294 318 ISSN 0043 0374 Lengerer Hans Ahlberg Lars 2019 Battleship Tosa Demolition Tests to the modified Yamato Class Capital Ships of the Imperial Japanese Navy 1868 1945 Vol 3 Zagreb Despot Infinitus ISBN 9789538218576 Thorne Phil March 2022 Battle of the Sibuyan Sea Warship International LIX 1 34 65 ISSN 0043 0374 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yamato class battleship Kure Yamato Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yamato class battleship amp oldid 1135455219, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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