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30-05-2012, 08:11 PM | #1 | ||
Geelong FC 07, 09 & 2011
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Melbourne Vic
Posts: 1,552
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http://www.seattlepi.com/news/articl...me-3588477.php
Don't know how many will find this interesting but personally im just amazed by these ships. Good to see a piece of history being preserved for future generations. And some fantastic photos of her passing under the golden gate bridge.
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30-05-2012, 08:56 PM | #2 | ||
2004 TX Territory
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Perth
Posts: 1,250
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I'm a navel buff also, these ships are just wow. The size of the projectile they could fire.... Damn... Nice to see it preserved.
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Sadly the EB is dead.... Now a AWD TX Territory Daily P6 Silver Monarch Weekender And on 2 Wheels, ZZR 250 Can do mixer shaft replacement on BA-BF Falcon and SX-SY, fix your heater Today. PM For more details For sale: Heaps of Territory bits and bobs including front brembo doglegs, NOS I-design territory body kit painted offshore, also FPV 290 engine bits. FS thread here http://www.fordforums.com.au/showthread.php?t=11397826 Pm for more details. |
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30-05-2012, 09:57 PM | #3 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Hervey Bay
Posts: 4,198
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Quote:
So you contemplate your navel? Glad to see you're a naval enthusiast as well. Sorry ... couldn't resist. LOL |
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30-05-2012, 10:05 PM | #4 | ||
Pity the fool
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Wait Awhile
Posts: 8,997
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Excellent, finally the big stick finds a home.
I was in awe of these ships the first time I went over one (USS Missouri in 1991) and I'm still in awe today.
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Fords I own or have owned: 1970 XW Falcon GT replica | 1970 XW Falcon | 1971 XY Fairmont | 1973 ZG Fairlane | 1986 XF Falcon panel van | 1987 XFII Falcon S-Pack | 1988 XF Falcon GLS ute | 1993 EBII Fairmont V8 | 1996 XG Falcon ute | 2000 AU Falcon wagon | 2004 BA Falcon XT | 2012 SZ Territory Titanium AWD Proud to buy Australian and support Ford Australia through thick and thin |
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30-05-2012, 11:09 PM | #5 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: On The Footplate.
Posts: 5,086
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Beautiful ships, still just about the best conventional stand-off weapon, and the origin of the term "gunboat diplomacy"...you park your battleship or dreadnaught (much cooler name than battleship) off the coast and start negotiating with the government, casually throwing in a comment like "by the way...have you looked out your window...?"
Also, you can sit over the horizon and comfortably lob 16 inch shells at your target. They're amazing ships, that get mothballed every decade or so, before being dragged out and refitted when they realise you can't really replace them with any other modern ship, even ignoring the fact you simply couldn't build more today...imagine how many tens of billions it would take to build something like a WW2 design battleship? |
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30-05-2012, 11:33 PM | #6 | |||
Banned
Join Date: Nov 2011
Posts: 144
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uh you would never use an outdated thing like that ever now adays. we have things called guided weapons and missiles. pretty neat things can fly a lot further and carry more of a precise impact.
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31-05-2012, 08:29 AM | #7 | |||
Pity the fool
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Wait Awhile
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Quote:
Cost was another reason they didnt continue in service, they cost a bomb to run, chew fuel like a battleship would, and need roughly 2000 people to run one.
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Fords I own or have owned: 1970 XW Falcon GT replica | 1970 XW Falcon | 1971 XY Fairmont | 1973 ZG Fairlane | 1986 XF Falcon panel van | 1987 XFII Falcon S-Pack | 1988 XF Falcon GLS ute | 1993 EBII Fairmont V8 | 1996 XG Falcon ute | 2000 AU Falcon wagon | 2004 BA Falcon XT | 2012 SZ Territory Titanium AWD Proud to buy Australian and support Ford Australia through thick and thin |
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04-06-2012, 10:57 PM | #8 | |||
Regular Member
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 487
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Quote:
Yeah totally agree. I got to see Missouri in Fremantle in 1991 after it's Desert Storm (??) deployment, the only battleship I've ever seen. I wish the British had kept Warspite or a KGV as well (unfortunately they were bankrupt), so kudos to the Americans for keeping so many as museum ships. Also agree with the frustration that you can't build any 1:350 Aussie (or British) cruisers in plastic: no Perth, no Sydney, no Canberra or Australia, no Exeter or York, no Ajax/Achillies - the stuff they went through... As for Warspite: "I think you will find that amongst warship enthusiasts all over the world the battleship is king and HMS Warspite is the king of kings due to the service this ship gave. From Jutland to the battle of Calabria, the battle of Cape Matapan, the Normandy landings. This is not a cruiser, it is a big gun super dreadnought. It is HMS Warspite. The ship that refused to die. It suffered damage from bombs, mines, shell fire and in the end it defied the scrapper man and took it's own life on the coast of Cornwall. Yes, many other ships served well and gave good service, it is just that Warspite is special." She was left with a jammed rudder at Jutland, alone, with the entire van of the High Seas Fleet firing on her and absorbed many hits, managed to correct the steering, continued firing back, and made her escape. |
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31-05-2012, 03:20 AM | #9 | |||
2004 TX Territory
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Perth
Posts: 1,250
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Quote:
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Sadly the EB is dead.... Now a AWD TX Territory Daily P6 Silver Monarch Weekender And on 2 Wheels, ZZR 250 Can do mixer shaft replacement on BA-BF Falcon and SX-SY, fix your heater Today. PM For more details For sale: Heaps of Territory bits and bobs including front brembo doglegs, NOS I-design territory body kit painted offshore, also FPV 290 engine bits. FS thread here http://www.fordforums.com.au/showthread.php?t=11397826 Pm for more details. |
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30-05-2012, 11:28 PM | #10 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Yass River, NSW
Posts: 253
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Fantastic. I wish Australia would preserve more of its naval history.
I had the opportunity to visit Spectacle Island which is stocked full of RAN history. You could get lost for days. |
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31-05-2012, 12:13 PM | #11 | |||
Pity the fool
Join Date: Jan 2007
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Quote:
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Fords I own or have owned: 1970 XW Falcon GT replica | 1970 XW Falcon | 1971 XY Fairmont | 1973 ZG Fairlane | 1986 XF Falcon panel van | 1987 XFII Falcon S-Pack | 1988 XF Falcon GLS ute | 1993 EBII Fairmont V8 | 1996 XG Falcon ute | 2000 AU Falcon wagon | 2004 BA Falcon XT | 2012 SZ Territory Titanium AWD Proud to buy Australian and support Ford Australia through thick and thin |
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31-05-2012, 12:47 PM | #12 | |||
Geelong FC 07, 09 & 2011
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Melbourne Vic
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Quote:
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31-05-2012, 03:06 PM | #13 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Location: Gisborne Victoria
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http://www.google.co.uk/products/cat...ed=0CGEQ8wIwAA http://www.modelshipgallery.com/gall.../mg-index.html http://www.modelwarships.com/reviews...ix/suffolk.htm http://www.shipmodels.info/mws_forum...6188&start=100 You might also like this http://www.modelshipgallery.com/gall.../mg-index.html Last edited by JG66ME; 31-05-2012 at 03:23 PM. |
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31-05-2012, 03:34 PM | #14 | |||
Geelong FC 07, 09 & 2011
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Melbourne Vic
Posts: 1,552
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Quote:
I prefer to build in 1:350, hoping for anything Australian in that scale.
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02-06-2012, 08:39 AM | #15 | |||
Bolt Nerd
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Ojochal, Costa Rica (Pura Vida!)
Posts: 14,958
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Quote:
http://www.hmascastlemaine.org.au/
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Current vehicles.. Yamaha Rhino UTV, SWB 4L TJ Jeep, and boring Lhd RAV4 Bionic BF F6... UPDATE: Replaced by Shiro White 370z 7A Roadster. SOLD Workhack: FG Silhouette XR50 Turbo ute (11.63@127.44mph) SOLD 2 wheels.. 2015 103ci HD Wideglide.. SOLD SOLD THE LOT, Voted with our feet and relocated to COSTA RICA for some Pura Vida! (Ex Blood Orange #023 FPV Pursuit owner : ) |
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02-06-2012, 01:01 PM | #16 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: On The Footplate.
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Now that's a thick piece of steel where that door is...
I remember seeing a special on those ships that said you couldn't feasibly build one today, not because we can't build ships that big, but because you need to set up a steel making infrastructure that can roll and cast steel plates up to three feet thick. Ice breakers have thick steel hulls, but that's usually only at the nose where they hammer through the ice (I believe the record was a "cap" on the front a nuke powered ice breaker that was nine feet thick... ). Not only would it cost tens of billions in todays money, but steel plants aren't set up to do that any more like they were in wartime. |
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04-06-2012, 06:24 PM | #17 | |||
Pity the fool
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Wait Awhile
Posts: 8,997
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Quote:
The capacity to make armour that thick still exists, it would simply be laminated, modern supercarriers have thick armour plating in their flight and hangar decks. The advances in mettalurgy and armour design with different materials means that, like the development of Abrams and Challenger II tanks, they don't need swathes of thick metal armour to do the same job as their forebears needed in the face of weapons these days that are arguably just as potent of not moreso than a standard AP or HC shell these ships used.
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Fords I own or have owned: 1970 XW Falcon GT replica | 1970 XW Falcon | 1971 XY Fairmont | 1973 ZG Fairlane | 1986 XF Falcon panel van | 1987 XFII Falcon S-Pack | 1988 XF Falcon GLS ute | 1993 EBII Fairmont V8 | 1996 XG Falcon ute | 2000 AU Falcon wagon | 2004 BA Falcon XT | 2012 SZ Territory Titanium AWD Proud to buy Australian and support Ford Australia through thick and thin Last edited by Road_Warrior; 04-06-2012 at 06:47 PM. |
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31-05-2012, 06:05 PM | #18 | ||
Thailand Specials
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Centrefold Lounge
Posts: 49,629
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That looks awesome. |
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31-05-2012, 06:11 PM | #19 | |||
Pity the fool
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Wait Awhile
Posts: 8,997
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Quote:
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Fords I own or have owned: 1970 XW Falcon GT replica | 1970 XW Falcon | 1971 XY Fairmont | 1973 ZG Fairlane | 1986 XF Falcon panel van | 1987 XFII Falcon S-Pack | 1988 XF Falcon GLS ute | 1993 EBII Fairmont V8 | 1996 XG Falcon ute | 2000 AU Falcon wagon | 2004 BA Falcon XT | 2012 SZ Territory Titanium AWD Proud to buy Australian and support Ford Australia through thick and thin |
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31-05-2012, 06:48 PM | #20 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: On The Footplate.
Posts: 5,086
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Quote:
Magnificent pictures aren't they...even more impressive if you can find the ones taken from the deck when they do a broadside. As long as someone doesn't bring up the old myth of the ship "moving sideways" when they fire all nine guns. The lines you can see away from the hull are shock wave waves...think about it...the mass of the ship is below the line of fire, not much above that point, so if the cannons "pushed sideways", it would try to roll the ship over to the opposite side...there's no way it can "move the whole ship". |
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31-05-2012, 08:30 PM | #21 | |||
Pity the fool
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Wait Awhile
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Quote:
The main guns have got recoil cylinders built into them anyway so the whole story is complete B.S. Anyway, here's that pic I promised. I was wrong, it wasn't Wisconsin and Missouri, it appears to be New Jersey and possibly Missouri. Ship-spotters will also note the long-gone nuclear powered cruiser USS Long Beach astern. Uploaded with ImageShack.us
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Fords I own or have owned: 1970 XW Falcon GT replica | 1970 XW Falcon | 1971 XY Fairmont | 1973 ZG Fairlane | 1986 XF Falcon panel van | 1987 XFII Falcon S-Pack | 1988 XF Falcon GLS ute | 1993 EBII Fairmont V8 | 1996 XG Falcon ute | 2000 AU Falcon wagon | 2004 BA Falcon XT | 2012 SZ Territory Titanium AWD Proud to buy Australian and support Ford Australia through thick and thin |
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31-05-2012, 10:45 PM | #22 | |||
Geelong FC 07, 09 & 2011
Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Melbourne Vic
Posts: 1,552
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Quote:
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31-05-2012, 08:09 PM | #23 | ||
Thailand Specials
Join Date: Aug 2009
Location: Centrefold Lounge
Posts: 49,629
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Top down view:
Look at the water, would you even be able to be on deck during that? You'd have no hearing left. |
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31-05-2012, 11:12 PM | #24 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Central Q..10kms west of Rocky...
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I went on the USS Midway in San Diego..awesome aircraft carrier!!!
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01-06-2012, 12:19 PM | #25 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Location: Barossa Valley, South Australia
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Went on the USS Intrepid in New York last year. Absolutely fascinating if you're ever there. They also have one of the Concorde airplanes there and a submarine which name escapes me.
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01-06-2012, 12:53 PM | #26 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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I'd definitely be interested in going and seeing the USS Iowa if I get to go over there again! It absolutely fascinating seeing all this history in these warships. If you're in San Francisco, then there is also the submarine USS Pampanito to see as well.
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Cheers, Sam. |
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02-06-2012, 01:08 AM | #27 | ||
/[_][_]==DMC==[_][_]\
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Adelaide
Posts: 1,489
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Having been on Iowa's sister, Missouri, they are nothing short of unbelievable achievements in engineering...
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Cheers Dave - Luxobarge Enthusiast. Daily: AU series 1 Fairmont Ghia The Classic: Jan 79 ZH Fairlane, EFI'd 302 Clevo The Project: Aug 73 Ford Landau Hardtop During his lifetime, the average man will spend around 5 years behind the wheel of his car.... Make those years count... Drive a Ford. |
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04-06-2012, 05:51 PM | #28 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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great pics , not really a buff , but i like looking at the engineering and looking at the amazing numbers involved with some of these ships, for example the speed capability of some of these floating citys 30+ knots 60 kph, that is just truly amazing.
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05-06-2012, 08:45 AM | #29 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Location: Sydney
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Visited USS Wisconsin ( BB64 ) in Norfolk a few years back . So good to see the seppos value their naval heritage unlike us who cant turn ours into razor blades fast enough .
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06-06-2012, 12:06 PM | #30 | ||
2006 Focus LX Hatch
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Location: St George Area
Posts: 255
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I should visit the Bar more often. So much great reading here. One of my goals in life was to go to Pearl Harbour and I managed to get there in 2010, then the Pacific War Museum, Fredericksburg and Interpid, NYC last year. Next will be Yamato museum, Kure and the Yasukuni Shrine, Tokyo.
My favourite BB is the Yamato Class. What an awesome ship, 18" main battery, the mystique surrounding it and the achievement to get it built still astonishes. I wish one of them was saved. I had a 1:350 scale model 90% finished with a detail kit ready to apply... then we bought a kitten. I'll repair and finish it one day. Fav US ship though was the Lexington Class Carriers more so for their smooth lines, long flight deck, funnel shape and the fact they were the first serious carriers to be built and still look pretty. Last edited by Stugots; 06-06-2012 at 12:21 PM. |
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