Take two:
-Enlarged elevators
-lowered turrets
-Raised single funnel
-Reduced Airwing
-More aligned between views
-More details added
-But still a WIP
Revisions will start taking a longer time for me now that school is becoming more and more time consuming, so I won't be able to get much more than that done during a week or so of time.
Also...
The Troy class carriers were designed out of the Centennial Navy's mindset of light, armored all-purpose carriers. Designed in conjunction with British firms, the specifications called for a ship that could carry the planned USA/USP/Centennial Joint Arial Naval Defense (JAND) plan, which was developed during the late 30s. The plan called for a few light (20mm) and intermediate (40mm) cannon, along with a greater number of medium (3") and heavy (Centennia chose the British 4") DP cannons. The ships were to have had the automatic 3" guns being developed by the USA and USP, but the Centennials wanted their ships quickly, just replacing the planned mounts with license-built British twin 40mm cannons. Construction of the Troy's sisters, the Babylon and Constantinople, had been halted pending design to an experimental angled-deck design. After a month of work, they were continued to the original design. However, as the Germans had began developing long range maritime bombers, the Centennial ships were hurried through the building, being completed in 1944; a span of three building years. After running trials off the coast of Brazil, the Troy deployed in company of the Constantinople, two battlecruisers, three American cruisers, and 2 flotillas of destroyers to operate off the coast of occupied Gibraltar. Heavy air raids had shown that the carriers were best used as attack carriers, being armored to the point that they could take hits from 500 kg bombs with minimal damage. But, with a maximum of 36 aircraft, the Centennial Navy long questioned the carriers' usefulness in the Pacific and out in Atlantic carrier battles. They requested that two larger carriers, with integrated angle decks, be built by 1945-46 to combat rumors of Germany having begun converting the hull of the barely started Hindenburg (H-41) to an armored carrier.
The Babylon was deployed to the Pacific, where she was soon heavily damaged by the intense carrier battles that raged against Japan. She was put with the Centennial/USP fleet that was holding the line a thousand miles outside the United States of the Pacific. She remained in the Pacific until transfer into the Indian Ocean, where she and two of her escorting cruisers were sunk by a wolfpack of German submarines.
The Constantinople operated in the Atlantic with the Troy until 1946, when she was transferred to the "Mediterranean Breach Fleet", part of Task Force 1000, a Ghost fleet tasked with breaching into the lightly guarded, although occupied, Mediterranean, trying to divert Axis naval assets away from Spain and North Africa. She was heavily damaged during her fourth raid, and was forced to be scuttled after taking 4 torpedo hits and 8 bombs.
The Troy initially operated in the Atlantic with the Constantinople, although in 1946, she was paired with the French carrier Bordeaux, which had just come out of the US port at Halifax (USA acquired Canada as states, Mexico is a US territory in this AU), where she was refurbished into a carrier after her days as the world's largest passenger liner were over. The Troy was transferred to the Pacific with the Bordeaux, where both saw combat against the Japanese until the end of the war.