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Ship Photo of the Day

nittany03

Recovering NFO. Herder of Programmers.
pilot
None
Super Moderator
Contributor
The internets seem to be completely convinced that this is a rail gun based off of the few pics available. I’m not sure how much of the open source analysis is based on a firm technical analysis and how much is because the internet seems to really excited about the prospect of a Chinese rail gun. Which says nothing about the fact that what is likely a test installation isn’t the same thing as a fleet capability.
Internet military fanboy 101: The Russians have the best jets and SAMs, the Chinese have DF-21s and railguns, and America sucks and is a paper tiger because I read Jane's the other day and Mommy and Daddy made me stand for the Pledge of Allegiance.
 

Randy Daytona

Cold War Relic
pilot
Super Moderator
Some new photos of HMS Queen Elizabeth which has put to sea for tests.
http://www.businessinsider.com/phot...-2018-2/#heres-another-view-of-the-choppers-8

Length: 920 ft, Beam: 128 ft (waterline), 240 ft (overall), Displacement: 65,000 tons. 2 gas turbines and 4 diesels gives 26+ knots
Armament: 50 aircraft
Commissioned: 7 December 2017

this-is-hms-queen-elizabeth-making-its-first-voyage-as-an-official-member-of-the-royal-navy-tugboats-steered-her-past-the-round-tower-which-guards-the-mouth-of-portsmouth-harbour-at-56m-tall-the-carrier-dwarfed-it.jpg


heres-the-carrier-heading-past-portsmouths-spinnaker-tower-with-tugboats-and-a-police-escort.jpg


this-is-the-view-of-the-queen-elizabeth-and-the-other-ships-from-behind.jpg


ahead-of-the-departure-two-twin-engine-chinook-transporter-helicopters-landed-on-board-and-will-take-part-in-the-trials.jpg


heres-another-view-of-the-choppers.jpg
 

Hopeful Hoya

Well-Known Member
pilot
Contributor
So apparently the CO is a RN Commodore (equivalent to Rear Admiral Lower Half) but he wears the rank of Captain when in command of the ship while retaining the rank of Commodore. Is that something unique to the Royal Navy (or even the Queen Elizabeth) or is that something that can happen in the US Navy as well?
 

HAL Pilot

Well-Known Member
None
Contributor
In 1996, TR had a CO named Christensen that continued to wear Captain for 5 weeks until his CoC after he was promoted to RADM.

During that 5 weeks, he managed back down into / collide with the YSS Leyte Gulf while doing engineering drills. Since he’d already been promoted, he just changed his collar devices after he was relieved for cause.

He managed to hang on long enough to retire as an O7 without ever being given a real O7 job.
 
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Renegade One

Well-Known Member
None
Internet military fanboy 101: The Russians have the best jets and SAMs, the Chinese have DF-21s and railguns, and America sucks and is a paper tiger because I read Jane's the other day and Mommy and Daddy made me stand for the Pledge of Allegiance.
Screen Shot 2018-02-07 at 10.20.10 PM.png
 

Randy Daytona

Cold War Relic
pilot
Super Moderator
SM U-9 of the Kaiser's Navy. Along with raider SMS Emden, they were the only ships the Kaiser awarded the Iron Cross.

On 22 September 1914, U-9 sighted a squadron of 3 obsolete Royal Navy Cressy class 12,000 ton armored cruisers. Within 1 hour, the 6 torpedoes carried by U-9 had sunk all 3 ships, killing 1,450 British sailors.

Wenman "Kit" Wykeham-Musgrave (1899–1989) survived being torpedoed on all three ships.[14] His daughter recalled:

He went overboard when the HMS Aboukir was going down and he swam like mad to get away from the suction. He was then just getting on board the HMS Hogue and she was torpedoed. He then went and swam to the HMS Cressy and she was also torpedoed. He eventually found a bit of driftwood, became unconscious and was eventually picked up by a Dutch trawler.

Remember that the next time you think you are having a bad day...

U-9 eventually sunk another British armored cruiser, 3 British steamers, 10 British fishing vessels and a Russian minesweeper.

Length: 188 ft, Beam: 20 ft, Displacement: 493 tons (surfaced), 611 tons submerged, max depth: 160 ft.
2 x 6 cylinder and 2 x 8 cylinder engines gave 1,000 HP on the surface and 14 knots
2 x electric motors gave 1,140 HP submerged and 8 knots
Armament: 4 x 17.7" torpedo tubes (2 fwd, 2 aft), 1 x 2" gun, 1 x 1.5" gun.
Commissioned: 18 April 1910, Surrendered 26 November 1918 and subsequently broken up.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Action_of_22_September_1914

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59cf51ccf468fe782dd7f66d541a1bcdab087ef7.jpg

U-12

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Illustration by Hans Bohrdt depicting the sinking of HMS Cressy, HMS Hogue and HMS Aboukir by U-9 on 22 September 1914 off the Dutch coast.
 
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