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#1
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![]() "HarryKrause" wrote in Honolulu — The wreckage of a large Second World War-era Japanese submarine has been found by researchers in waters off Hawaii. .....etc, etc., etc....... Sub-plot summary, "Black Wind" by Clive Cussler, published 2004. |
#2
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![]() Here is a link with a picture of a similar sub and notes about it. http://tinyurl.com/3u38r If that link doesn't work...papa gona buy you a....oh, wait It that link doesn't work, just use Goolge Image Search for "Toku submarine" |
#3
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On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 06:50:44 -0500, "Gary"
wrote: Here is a link with a picture of a similar sub and notes about it. http://tinyurl.com/3u38r If that link doesn't work...papa gona buy you a....oh, wait It that link doesn't work, just use Goolge Image Search for "Toku submarine" I don't mean this to sound like it is going to sound, but it somehow it figures that the Japanese could figure out a way to fit four airplanes into a small confined space folded up like origami. If you look at the stern of that sub it looks a lot like the Typhoon class Soviet subs. What a piece of machinery though. To bad they couldn't have kept them for historical purposes. Later, Tom |
#4
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![]() "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message I don't mean this to sound like it is going to sound, but it somehow it figures that the Japanese could figure out a way to fit four airplanes into a small confined space folded up like origami. What's wrong with that? Seems to me you are calling the Japanese smart & creative. Origami is cool. If you look at the stern of that sub it looks a lot like the Typhoon class Soviet subs. From the article, "The huge double hull was formed of parallel cylindrical hulls so that it had a peculiar lazy-eight cross section, and may have inspired the Soviet Typhoon-class built some 40 years later. " |
#5
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On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 07:17:55 -0500, "Gary"
wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message I don't mean this to sound like it is going to sound, but it somehow it figures that the Japanese could figure out a way to fit four airplanes into a small confined space folded up like origami. What's wrong with that? Seems to me you are calling the Japanese smart & creative. Origami is cool. Hey you never know around this NG. :) I have a child (now grown up, but I still think of them as children) who is really into origami - started in the 5th grade and kept it up all through high school and well past college into med school and still does it as a hobby. She's really good at it. Amazes me how a plain simple piece of paper can be folded, twisted and formed into a piece of art. Once did a 6 foot high origami sculpture from large pieces of construction paper. Quite kewl. If you look at the stern of that sub it looks a lot like the Typhoon class Soviet subs. From the article, "The huge double hull was formed of parallel cylindrical hulls so that it had a peculiar lazy-eight cross section, and may have inspired the Soviet Typhoon-class built some 40 years later. " Yeah I know - that's what made me look closely at it. Later, Tom |
#6
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The later German U-boats (XXXIV?) had the same 8 crosssection. Top half was
normal submarine, bottom half was all batteries. I suspect that's what influenced the Typhoons. There's another I-400 class sub on the bottom off the east coast, Chesepeake, I think. The National Air and Space Museum has one of the Serin (sp?) bombers that the I-400s carried, and has just finished restoring it. It was featured in their Air & Space mag a few months back. "Gary" wrote in message eenews.net... "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message I don't mean this to sound like it is going to sound, but it somehow it figures that the Japanese could figure out a way to fit four airplanes into a small confined space folded up like origami. What's wrong with that? Seems to me you are calling the Japanese smart & creative. Origami is cool. If you look at the stern of that sub it looks a lot like the Typhoon class Soviet subs. From the article, "The huge double hull was formed of parallel cylindrical hulls so that it had a peculiar lazy-eight cross section, and may have inspired the Soviet Typhoon-class built some 40 years later. " |
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