Thanks poconopundit.
Yeah, great idea, largest-ever battleship, was present at some battles but didn’t fire its guns (it sez here) until Leyte Gulf (1944), which is where its sister ship was sunk. Yamato had its armament beefed up, in time to head to Okinawa, but never got there for some reason. :^)
The biggest blunder of WWII, and possibly the biggest military blunder of all time, was Japan’s attack on the US, which brought us lock stock and barrel into the war. It eclipses even Op Barbarossa, and by a large margin.
Sounds like an ad for “Starbalzers”.
Yamato engaged enemy surface forces for the first and only time at Samar, entering the battle two meters down by the bow and limited to 26 knots due to 3,000 tons of flooding caused by three armor-piercing bombs during the Battle of the Sibuyan Sea.
Yamato opened the battle at 06:59, firing on USS White Plains at an estimated range of 19.616 mi (17.046 nmi; 31.569 km), severely damaging USS White Plains with a near miss from her third salvo. The resulting gout of smoke from the stricken carrier obscured the target and convinced Yamato she was destroyed, so they ceased fire at 07:09. At 07:27, Yamato reported main and secondary battery hits on an "enemy cruiser" at 11.541 mi (10.029 nmi; 18.574 km), the time, range and bearing of which all correspond with the hits on the destroyer Johnston.
At 07:51, she turned her secondary battery on USS Raymond at a range of 5.736 mi (4.985 nmi; 9.232 km) before steering hard to port to avoid a torpedo salvo from the charging USS Hoel at 07:54. At 07:55, Yamato opened fire on Hoel with her 5 in (127 mm) anti-aircraft guns and was struck by an American 5 in (127 mm) shell in return.
Hemmed in by Haruna to starboard and her destroyers to port Yamato was forced to run due North away from the battle until the torpedoes ran out of fuel, finally turning back at 08:12.
Taffy 3 sez:
Thank you for the film recommendation, poconopundit...much appreciated.
The Yamato and her sister ship were indeed brutes but poorly constructed as the Armor was made using a inferior process which left it brittle due to contamination as post war tests proved it would shatter if hit even by 12in rounds and a 16 in round would go right though it. But the biggest and most telling weakness was Damage Control on both Battleships and overall for the entire Japanese Navy. The lack of Damage Control procedures and practices doomed both ships years before they ever sailed.