From The Depths

From The Depths

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HMS King George V battleship 1939
   
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13 Sep, 2017 @ 2:42pm
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HMS King George V battleship 1939

In 1 collection by Griffin
Realistic Aircraft, Boats, And Tanks
13 items
Description
It has A.I. and shields

The ship in game has stats that are close to the real life one

Name: King George V-class battleship
Operators: United Kingdom Royal Navy
Preceded by: Nelson class
Succeeded by:
Lion class (planned)
HMS Vanguard (actual)
Cost: £7,393,134
In commission: 1940–1951
Completed: 5
Lost: 1
Scrapped: 4
General characteristics
Class and type: King George V-class battleship
Displacement: 42,245 long tons (42,923 t) deep load
Length:
745 ft 1 in (227.1 m) (overall)
700 ft 1 in (213.4 m) (waterline)
Beam: 103 ft 2.5 in (31.5 m)
Draught: 33 ft 7.5 in (10.2 m)
Installed power: 110,000 shp (82,000 kW)
Propulsion:
8 Admiralty 3-drum small-tube boilers
4 sets Parsons geared turbines
Speed: 28.3 knots (52.4 km/h; 32.6 mph)
Range: 15,600 nmi (28,900 km; 18,000 mi) at 10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph)
Complement: 1422 (1941)
Sensors and
processing systems:
Type 281 air warning radar
Type 273 surface warning radar
Type 284 radar.
4 × Type 285 gunnery radar.
6 × Type 282 radar for "pom-pom" direction.
Armament:
10 × BL 14 in (360 mm) Mark VII guns
16 × QF 5.25 in (133 mm) Mk. I DP guns
64 × QF 2 pdr 40 mm (1.6 in) Mk.VIII AA guns
10 × 40-mm Bofors
36 × 20 mm (0.8 in) Oerlikon AA guns (1945)

A bit about the King George V:

The King George V-class battleships were the most modern British battleships in commission during World War II. Five ships of this class were built: HMS King George V (1940), HMS Prince of Wales (1941), HMS Duke of York (1941), HMS Howe (1942) and HMS Anson (1942).

The Washington Naval Treaty of 1922 limited all of the number, displacement, and armament of warships built following its ratification, and this was extended by the First London Naval Treaty but these treaties were due to expire in 1936. With increased tension between Britain, the United States, Japan, France and Italy, it was supposed by the designers of these battleships that the treaty might not be renewed and the ships of the King George V class were designed with this possibility in mind.

All five ships saw combat during World War II, with King George V and Prince of Wales being involved in the action on 24 May to 27 May that resulted in the German battleship Bismarck being sunk. Following this on 25 October 1941, Prince of Wales was sent to Singapore arriving on 2 December and becoming the flagship of Force Z. On 10 December, Prince of Wales was attacked by Japanese bombers and sank with the loss of 327 of its men. In the aftermath of the sinking, King George V, Duke of York, Howe and Anson provided escort duty to convoys bound for Russia. On 1 May 1942, King George V collided with the destroyer HMS Punjabi, resulting in King George V being sent to Gladstone docks for repairs on 9 May, before returning to escort duty on 1 July 1942. On October 1942 Duke of York was sent to Gibraltar as the new flagship of Force H and supported the Allied landings in North Africa in November. Anson and Howe would also provide cover for multiple convoys bound for Russia from late 1942 until 1 March 1943, when Howe provided convoy cover for the last time. In May 1943 King George V and Howe were moved to Gibraltar in preparation for Operation Husky. The two ships bombarded Trapani naval base and Favignana on 11–12 July and also provided cover for Operation Avalanche on 7 September to 14 September. During this time Duke of York and Anson participated in Operation Gearbox, which was designed to draw attention away from Operation Husky. Duke of York was also heavily involved in the action that sank the German battleship Scharnhorst on 25 December 1943. This battle was also the last time that British and German capital ships fought each other.

In late March 1945, King George V and Howe were sent to the Pacific as part of Task Force 57. On 4 May 1945, King George V and Howe led a forty-five-minute bombardment of Japanese air facilities in the Ryukyu Islands. King George V fired her guns in anger for the last time in a night bombardment of Hamamatsu on 29 July and 30 July 1945. Duke of York and Anson were also dispatched to the Pacific, but arrived too late to participate in hostilities. On 15 August Duke of York and Anson accepted the surrender of Japanese forces occupying Hong Kong and along with King George V were present for the official Japanese surrender in Tokyo Bay. Following the end of World War II, the ships were phased out of service and by 1957 all of the ships had been sold off for scrap; a process that was completed by 1958.
5 Comments
RandomNOOBY 13 Jun, 2018 @ 9:47am 
wp
Probert rifle musket boi Crafter 5 Jan, 2018 @ 4:39am 
nice ships, anyway, can you please help me with my leander class light cruiser, its on the work shop but its just to blocky, the name is leander class 2.0 something like that.
Dawn 26 Sep, 2017 @ 4:50pm 
"small" .... anyway the reload on the guns is realistic and this thing looks bloody amazing. keep up the good work mate
Griffin  [author] 22 Sep, 2017 @ 1:43pm 
Sure
Gunny 17 Sep, 2017 @ 5:33am 
you did a damn good job making this ship