Mind blowing, amazing stuff! One thing I've learned: the ship had a fully enclosed admiral's bridge. Always thought it remained open till the end...
_________________ My Avatar:Петр Алексеевич Безобразов (Petr Alekseevich Bezobrazov), Вице-адмирал , царская ВМФ России(1845-1906) - I sign my drawings as Ari Saarinen
Posts:2129 Joined: November 8th, 2010, 3:07 pm
Location: Norseland
You could almost say that was a proud day for Norway, the recruits at Oskarsborg had time to fire two 280mm shots before Blücher opened fire on Oskarsborg. The torpedoes at Oskarsborg were from the 1890s and had been test fired over 200 times, so there were doubts if they would even go forward. One of the largest and most modern german ships were sunk by almost 50 years old equipment used by recruits. The German flotilla pulled out because they thought that Blücher had hit a mine. This gave the royal family enough time to escape along with most of the Norwegian treasury. The flotilla was discovered by the boat Pol III, which was built in 1926 and often sailed to where I live. She is currently being scrapped, but I digress. Nice drawing. Will you also do the Lonely Queen of the North?
Another great addition to this thread and some interesting info.
I assume if the fuel bunkers were filled to maximum capacity that Blucher most of had some kind of follow-up mission further north or in the North Sea after the initial landings?
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