Sie sehen gerade die Germany Version der Website.
Möchten Sie zu Ihrer lokalen Seite wechseln?
Neueste Ausgabe

World of Ships Magazine British Aircraft Carriers of WW2 Zurück Ausgabe

English
7 Bewertungen   •  English   •   Leisure Interest (Sailing & Shipping)
Only €9,99
It has not been possible to compile this history of British Aircraft
Carriers of World War 2 without including the pioneering days of
WW1. Whilst the Royal Navy recognised how useful it was to have
aircraft ranging high above the Fleet, the concept of actually taking
them to sea in numbers remained firmly the domain of the seaplane
carrier for the majority of WW1. It was not until the progressive conversion
of HMS Furious, which was originally laid down as a battlecruiser, and
the historic landing upon her by Cdr Dunning in a Sopwith Pup in 1917,
that ‘traditional’ carrier design in Britain began to gain pace. Dunning’s
achievement in landing an aircraft on a short flying-off deck was a highly
dangerous manoeuvre just in avoiding the original superstructure
alone, and it would ultimately cost him his life. The idea of a completely
uninterrupted flight deck was first presented on HMS Argus in 1918
although the idea had originally been muted back in 1912.
However, the end of WW1 saw massive cuts in all military orders
and, like the Army and the RAF, the Royal Navy had to ‘make do’. On
paper, it was in a state of limbo throughout the 1920s although plans
to convert further battlecruiser hulls seem to have continued within
strict international guidelines. As a result, when war broke out across
Europe again in September 1939, the Royal Navy only had one modern
carrier, in the shape of the senior service’s third HMS Ark Royal, the first
of which served as a flagship during the 16th Century and the second of
which had begun the long association with aviation, having served as a
seaplane carrier during WW1. Of the remaining six carriers that went to
war, all of them were of WW1 vintage and it was these early ships that
would take the brunt of the Royal Navy’s losses with Courageous (the
second Royal Navy ship of the war to be sunk on September 17, 1939),
Glorious, Hermes, Eagle and even the ‘lucky’ Ark Royal all being sunk by
mid-1942.
read more read less
World of Ships Preview Pages World of Ships Preview Pages World of Ships Preview Pages World of Ships Preview Pages World of Ships Preview Pages World of Ships Preview Pages World of Ships Preview Pages World of Ships Preview Pages

World of Ships

British Aircraft Carriers of WW2 It has not been possible to compile this history of British Aircraft Carriers of World War 2 without including the pioneering days of WW1. Whilst the Royal Navy recognised how useful it was to have aircraft ranging high above the Fleet, the concept of actually taking them to sea in numbers remained firmly the domain of the seaplane carrier for the majority of WW1. It was not until the progressive conversion of HMS Furious, which was originally laid down as a battlecruiser, and the historic landing upon her by Cdr Dunning in a Sopwith Pup in 1917, that ‘traditional’ carrier design in Britain began to gain pace. Dunning’s achievement in landing an aircraft on a short flying-off deck was a highly dangerous manoeuvre just in avoiding the original superstructure alone, and it would ultimately cost him his life. The idea of a completely uninterrupted flight deck was first presented on HMS Argus in 1918 although the idea had originally been muted back in 1912. However, the end of WW1 saw massive cuts in all military orders and, like the Army and the RAF, the Royal Navy had to ‘make do’. On paper, it was in a state of limbo throughout the 1920s although plans to convert further battlecruiser hulls seem to have continued within strict international guidelines. As a result, when war broke out across Europe again in September 1939, the Royal Navy only had one modern carrier, in the shape of the senior service’s third HMS Ark Royal, the first of which served as a flagship during the 16th Century and the second of which had begun the long association with aviation, having served as a seaplane carrier during WW1. Of the remaining six carriers that went to war, all of them were of WW1 vintage and it was these early ships that would take the brunt of the Royal Navy’s losses with Courageous (the second Royal Navy ship of the war to be sunk on September 17, 1939), Glorious, Hermes, Eagle and even the ‘lucky’ Ark Royal all being sunk by mid-1942.


FORMAT AUSWÄHLEN:
Sofortiger Zugang

Verfügbare digitale Angebote:

Einzelne digitale Back Issue British Aircraft Carriers of WW2
 
9,99 / issue
Verfügbar mit
Pocketmags Plus
Unbegrenztes Leseabonnement
 
€1.09
Erhalten Sie unbegrenzten Zugang zu World of Ships und mehr als 600 weitere großartige Titel. Verlängert um €11,99 / Monat nach 30 Tagen. Jederzeit kündbar. Weitere Informationen
Diese Ausgabe und andere ältere Ausgaben sind nicht in einem World of Ships Abonnement. Das Abonnement enthält die letzte reguläre Ausgabe und die während des Abonnements erscheinenden neuen Ausgaben und ist bereits ab einem Betrag von €7,25 pro Ausgabe . Wenn Sie ein Abonnement abschließen möchten, sehen Sie sich bitte unsere Abonnement-Optionen
Die Ersparnisse werden auf der Grundlage eines vergleichbaren Kaufs von Einzelausgaben über einen annualisierten Abonnementzeitraum berechnet und können von den angegebenen Beträgen abweichen. Die Berechnungen dienen nur zu Illustrationszwecken. Digitale Abonnements beinhalten die letzte Ausgabe und alle regulären Ausgaben, die während Ihres Abonnements erscheinen, sofern nicht anders angegeben. Das von Ihnen gewählte Abonnement verlängert sich automatisch, wenn es nicht bis zu 24 Stunden vor Ablauf des laufenden Abonnements im Bereich Mein Konto gekündigt wird.

Issue Cover

World of Ships  |  British Aircraft Carriers of WW2  


It has not been possible to compile this history of British Aircraft
Carriers of World War 2 without including the pioneering days of
WW1. Whilst the Royal Navy recognised how useful it was to have
aircraft ranging high above the Fleet, the concept of actually taking
them to sea in numbers remained firmly the domain of the seaplane
carrier for the majority of WW1. It was not until the progressive conversion
of HMS Furious, which was originally laid down as a battlecruiser, and
the historic landing upon her by Cdr Dunning in a Sopwith Pup in 1917,
that ‘traditional’ carrier design in Britain began to gain pace. Dunning’s
achievement in landing an aircraft on a short flying-off deck was a highly
dangerous manoeuvre just in avoiding the original superstructure
alone, and it would ultimately cost him his life. The idea of a completely
uninterrupted flight deck was first presented on HMS Argus in 1918
although the idea had originally been muted back in 1912.
However, the end of WW1 saw massive cuts in all military orders
and, like the Army and the RAF, the Royal Navy had to ‘make do’. On
paper, it was in a state of limbo throughout the 1920s although plans
to convert further battlecruiser hulls seem to have continued within
strict international guidelines. As a result, when war broke out across
Europe again in September 1939, the Royal Navy only had one modern
carrier, in the shape of the senior service’s third HMS Ark Royal, the first
of which served as a flagship during the 16th Century and the second of
which had begun the long association with aviation, having served as a
seaplane carrier during WW1. Of the remaining six carriers that went to
war, all of them were of WW1 vintage and it was these early ships that
would take the brunt of the Royal Navy’s losses with Courageous (the
second Royal Navy ship of the war to be sunk on September 17, 1939),
Glorious, Hermes, Eagle and even the ‘lucky’ Ark Royal all being sunk by
mid-1942.
mehr lesen weniger lesen
Each issue focuses on a theme or significant historic ship, their stories complemented with archive photography and artwork. A real collectors item and great read for anyone with an interest in the development of naval, passenger and transportation shipping.

Als Abonnent erhalten Sie die folgenden Vorteile:


•  Ein Rabatt auf den UVP Ihrer Zeitschrift
•  Ihr Magazin wird jeden Monat auf Ihr Gerät geliefert
•  Sie werden keine Ausgabe verpassen
•  Sie sind vor Preiserhöhungen geschützt, die später im Jahr eintreten können

Sie erhalten 4 Ausgaben während eines 1-Jahres World of Ships Zeitschriftenabonnement.

Hinweis: Die digitalen Ausgaben enthalten nicht die in den gedruckten Exemplaren enthaltenen Umschlagseiten oder Beilagen.

Ihr Kauf hier bei Pocketmags.com kann auf jeder der folgenden Plattformen gelesen werden.


Sie können hier auf der Website lesen oder die App für Ihre Plattform herunterladen. Vergessen Sie nicht, sich mit Ihrem Pocketmags-Benutzernamen und Passwort anzumelden.

Apple Pocketmags Online Pocketmags Google Pocketmags
Die Pocketmags App läuft auf allen iPad und iPhone Geräten mit iOS 13.0 oder höher, Android 8.0 oder höher und Fire Tablet (Gen 3) oder höher. Unser Webreader funktioniert mit jedem HTML5-kompatiblen Browser, für PC und Mac empfehlen wir Chrome oder Firefox.

Für iOS empfehlen wir jedes Gerät, auf dem das neueste iOS für bessere Leistung und Stabilität läuft. Bei älteren Modellen mit niedrigeren Prozessor- und RAM-Spezifikationen kann es zu einer langsameren Seitenwiedergabe und gelegentlichen App-Abstürzen kommen, die außerhalb unserer Kontrolle liegen.
4,4
/5
Basierend auf 7 Kundenrezensionen
5
6
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
1
Rezensionen ansehen

Artikel in dieser Ausgabe


Im Folgenden finden Sie eine Auswahl von Artikeln aus World of Ships British Aircraft Carriers of WW2.