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Thread: Perspective

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    Contributing Member CINDERS's Avatar
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    Imagine Bob dropping that door on your foot or getting one's finger jammed in it !

    WWII history ~ I am fairly sure I read in my book "Pursuit" that the Rodney scored a direct hit on Bismarck's Citadel with one of her 16" A.P.C projectiles wrecking it along with effectively killing everyone in there.
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    Quote Originally Posted by CINDERS View Post
    Imagine Bob dropping that door on your foot or getting one's finger jammed in it !
    It must weight several hundred pounds!

    WWII history ~ I am fairly sure I read in my book "Pursuit" that the Rodney scored a direct hit on Bismarck's Citadel with one of her 16" A.P.C projectiles wrecking it along with effectively killing everyone in there.[/QUOTE]Bismarck was a heavy cruiser. She achieved her speed and heavy armament at the expense of armor. Her citadel was protected by 7-8" armor, for instance.

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    Last edited by Bob Womack; 01-23-2024 at 02:16 PM.
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    [/QUOTE]Bismarck was a heavy cruiser. Her citadel was protected by 7-8" armor, for instance.[/QUOTE]

    The Bismarck was every bit a battleship with 12.5" of armor on her conning tower (citadel) and 13.8" belts and turret faces.
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    Last edited by Sapper740; 01-23-2024 at 04:16 PM.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Sapper740 View Post
    The Bismarck was every bit a battleship with 12.5" of armor on her conning tower (citadel) and 13.8" belts and turret faces.
    I'm sorry, I was quoting the figures for the transverse bulkheads at the for and aft ends of the citadel lower, which were in fact 8" thick. The upper citadel transverse bulkheads were 4"-5.71" thick. While the conning tower had thicker armor, the rest of the citadel did not. The Germanicon designers put more stock in the horizontal armor to protect from vertically-arriving shot than the vertical armor to protect from raking fire, apparently thinking her long guns would prevent her from getting into a knife fight with any other large ship.

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