While I was in Norfolk for #SMH2021 I got a chance to see the Wisconsin (BB-64), because I am an absolute sucker for museum ships!
So here are some pictures.pic.twitter.com/5rQ8NGhjRh
Voit lisätä twiitteihisi sijainnin, esimerkiksi kaupungin tai tarkemman paikan, verkosta ja kolmannen osapuolen sovellusten kautta. Halutessasi voit poistaa twiittisi sijaintihistorian myöhemmin. Lue lisää
The 'inches' here refer to the diameter of the barrel (and thus the shell). For comparison, consider the (smaller) 120mm (4.72inch) main gun on an M1A2 Abrams tank. Bigger than the 105mm m119 howitzer and only slightly smaller than the 155mm m777 gun-howitzer.
Wisconsin has twelve five-inch guns (in 6 double-mounts); on its own that would be a massive amount of firepower, but the 9 16-inch main guns are the stars. That said, BB-64 had 20 5-inch guns when launched. What happened to the others? Well, Uncle Sam got some new toys:pic.twitter.com/1ZzAowHY5i
So pardon my finger in the frame, but I suck at cameras - when BB-64 was reactivated in 1986, it underwent a refit to get, among other things, eight armored box launchers for tomahawk cruise missiles. Four missiles per box. Can carry conventional or nuclear payloads.
I should note if you go you can also walk a fair portion of the interior of the ship; for whatever reason I did not take any pictures of that. It really brings home the complexity of the ship - it has its own mail room, laundry, barber, dentist, etc.pic.twitter.com/brHMCqLeqj
So that's Wisconsin (BB-64), which brings me up to, I think to having been to five of the ten surviving battleships (nine in the USA, but I also count IJN Miksasa). Halfway there!
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