The Basket
Senior Master Sergeant
- 3,712
- Jun 27, 2007
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Are you asking me out on a date? I am married but a nice meal and a glass of wine and who knows where it may lead.
Is that true? Designed-in and practical damage control was rubbish, but Japanese carriers have to contend with rough seas. The Germans would have installed radar immediately, maybe selling few units and training to the IJN. I agree, Shokaku would be the better pick. Just getting her home in 1941 would be tricky. Now, if Japan can send some engineers to get Graf Zeppelin designed and executed properly.... but Germans won't think Japan has anything to tell them.The Hiryu/Soryu was made out of paper mache. It would not survive day one in European waters. Without radar our any armour or strong structure its asking for it. Yikes. Light and vulnerable.
I agree. And the timing was good too. 25 November 1936, Japan and Germany sign the Anti-Comintern Pact. Four weeks later on 28 December 1936, the carrier Graf Zeppelin is laid down by Deutsche Werke in Kiel.The Japanese could have offered their carrier expertise which the Germans sorely lacked.
The Germans might like to see the Kaidai-type submarine submarines?
I'd say yes. The launch rail of the post-war sub launched V-1 derivatives looks just like what could be fitted to an I-400.I wonder if V-1s could have been launched from the I-400 class sub.
I wonder what the Italian general staff would have thought of any Japanese tanks they were supplied. I can see it now, "See Tony, there's nothing inferior about Italian tanks"Japan has been taking western gear since the Meji Restoration. The question which has NOT been answered is did the Japanese share technology of a military nature with any other power before the Tripartite Pact?