Aircraft Carriers – The Fleet Aircraft Carrier in WW2 (1939-1945)



Today we look as the second phase of carrier development, from the conversions of the Washington Treaty to the start of the Second World War.

Previous videos:
Early Types to the end of the 1920’s – https://youtu.be/DZA2NwyEdK4
1929 to 1939 – https://youtu.be/K_DEHvLvMak

Sources:
“What Value the Dark Blue Sky” – Dr Alexander Clarke
www.amazon.co.uk/Kaigun-Strategy-Technology-Imperial-1887-1941/dp/159114244X
www.amazon.co.uk/Nelson-Vanguard-Warship-Development-1923-1945/dp/1861762895
www.amazon.co.uk/British-Aircraft-Carriers-Development-Histories/dp/1848321384
www.amazon.co.uk/American-British-Aircraft-Carrier-Development/dp/1591143802
www.amazon.co.uk/Imperial-Japanese-Navy-Pacific-War/dp/1472801466
www.amazon.co.uk/Aircraft-Carrier-Victorious-Detailed-Original/dp/1526737345
www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/8364596527

Naval History books, use code ‘DRACH’ for 25% off – https://www.usni.org/press/books?f%5B0%5D=subject%3A1966

Free naval photos and more – www.drachinifel.co.uk

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‘Legionnaire’ by Scott Buckley – released under CC-BY 4.0. www.scottbuckley.com.au

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25 thoughts on “Aircraft Carriers – The Fleet Aircraft Carrier in WW2 (1939-1945)”

  1. I still think the best American carrier of WW2 was the USS Great Britain. The idea of simply converting an entire island country into a large runway & support system for the Air Corps was quite helpful. It came pre-equipped with a large crew, decent radar and the armor belt of Dover. Was even possible for it to house a large volume of troops for any sort of landing operations, and not just the Marines, the Army could even be carried on it.

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  2. Sorry for the confusion. Usually when you put the lemon name on something it means that it is bad. The Essex class had a lot of growth designed in them and was able to hang around for a long time. Sorry about that mistake.

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  3. Went out on the Lexington out of Pensacola in the early 70's. Leave on Monday, back on Friday. The Gulf of America is a hot place to be. We would go on water hours as soon as we left port. Lex needed all the fresh water she could get having gone from hydraulic to steam cats. Was NOT a pleasant training exercise.

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  4. The British navy seems to have taken ""penny wise and pound foolish" to an extreme for their carriers. Then you have the financial shenanigans on modernization, though we in the US can't crow too much (see: the Littoral combat ships). This was a very well done overview and certainly lives up to your reputation.

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  5. The Essex Class has to be one of the most robust warship designs ever built. As initially designed the fighter aircraft had a MTW of 7900lbs andca top speed of 320mph. The last fighter to serve on the ship had a MTW of 34000lbs and a top speed of Mach 1.8. The design could still carry 70+ aircraft modern jet aircraft.

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  6. I don’t know if this will be seen or not but I would love a video on the IJN Zipang, it was a crazy insane idea for an ultra dreadnought in the early 1910’s that I discovered recently, and since you did the Tillman ships a while back, this would be pretty cool too. Thanks for the great content!

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  7. The surviving Essex's like the Hornet are well worth the visit, even if that particular ship is a mess of poor funding and poorly thought out tourist alterations (eg the perenially broken full size escalator rammed through several decks to make the flight deck marginally more accessible). Midway meanwhile is in great condition. And has the Taffy 3 menorial right outside.

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