hull depth = height between the keel and the strength deck. important for strength. draft and depth are separate things
I added 3/4 a meter so that should help.
bobbly: your funnels have weird shading going on, like they are not going straight up but rather like they have bubbles on them or something. that is what I meant with bobbly.
Shrug. That is dazzle. That's my story and I'm sticking to it.
You do realise that without an angled deck, you cannot have aircraft parked amidships while recovering them, right?
The guys on the Princetons trapped planes with fouled decks full of parked planes amidships as did the CVEs. Apparently plow ins were an accepted operational hazard as the land-ons were rolled forward during massed recovery ops.. In addition, if the plane handlers do their jobs right, the amidships park is only where the risers receive fuel and flight deck maintenance before being rolled forward to the catapults.
In addition, the B-25 of the doolittle raid cannot be counted as normal carrier operations, as they did not even fit on the elevators or in the hangars. They had literally nowhere else to go.
B-25 Mitchell = 16.5 x 21 x 5 meters
TBF Avenger = 13 x 17 x 5 meters.
That Mitchell would have to have folding wings and lose about 7 feet of tail.
It could still hog the deck as long as you can pass planes
under it. Again this plane handling is based on common WW II practice for
the Bogue airgroups when they operated Avengers and Wildcats off those C-3 merchant hulls. Only in their case, the trapped plane was rolled forward to be struck below by using the forward centerline elevator--centipede fashion. The plane then moved backwards through the hanger under all those parked planes above it and was lifted onto the flight deck into the rear of the plane park to await its turn at the catapult. It was a conveyor type system that operated in conjunction with the plane yo-yo; where the deck crews rolled the massed planes forward to the stem to allow trap space and then rolled them back astern so they could clear the catapult and/or c lear a takeoff run. It appears that was the only way they mechanically could get more than thirty planes off a 550 foot flight deck. Weird isn't it? My respects to those guys.
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