Sources
Used
Brown, David. Aircraft Carriers. New York: Arco Publishing, 1977.
Campbell, John. Naval Weapons of World War Two. London: Conway
Maritime Press Ltd., 1985.
Chesneau, Roger. Aircraft Carriers of the World, 1914 to the Present:
An Illustrated Encyclopedia. London: Arms and Armour Press, 1984.
Drawings of Imperial Japanese Naval VesselsAircraft Carrier,
Seaplane Carrier, Submarine. Model Art, Volume #3. Japan.
Gakken Pacific War Series, Vol. #13 (Shôkaku and Zuikaku)
and Vol. #14 (Akagi, Kaga, and Hiryu). Japan.
Jentschura, Hansgeorg; Dieter Jung; and Peter Mickel. Warships
of the Imperial Japanese Navy, 1869-1945. Annapolis, Md.: Naval
Institute Press, 1977.
Maru Special, Issue #1 (Akagi and Kaga). Japan.
Nihon no Kokubokan (Japanese Aircraft Carriers). Hasegawa / Gran
Prix Shuppan.
Random Details of Japanese Warships, Volumes I and II. Tamiya
Model Co.
Ships of the World. Japan.
Skwiot, M., A. Jarski. Akagi. Gdansk: A.J. Press, 1994.
Watts, Anthony, Gordon Watts. The Imperial Japanese Navy. New
York: Doubleday and Co., 1971.
Yuki, Takeshi. Watercolor Paintings of Imperial Japanese Navy
Ships. Tokyo: Kaijinsha Co. Ltd, 1990.
|
Comments
on Sources
In general, Jentschura and the Hasegawa carrier book were the most
useful sources from a direct visual standpoint, although the A.J.
Press book on Akagi is clearly the best set of plans available on
any of the three ships in question. It contains a very detailed
1:400 foldout plan and side elevations of the ship after her 1938
reconstruction which provided a wealth of detailed identification
information. David Browns book is light on actual drawings
but contains extremely useful technical tidbits concerning hanger
decks heights, loading characteristics and so on. Roger Chesneaus
book is also useful in this respect, but the drawings are uniformly
crude and poorly executed.
David Dickson supplied additional published and unpublished carrier
plans from various sources. These have been forwarded to Nauticos,
and include internal plans of both Kaga and Akagi. The Kaga plans
are crude, but do show general internal arrangements, which may
prove useful at a later point in time.
1:700 plastic models of both Kaga and Akagi were used to fill in
certain conceptual details, particularly in the aft AA gallery areas.
The 1:700 kit of Sôryû from the Aoshima Model Co. was
deliberately not used, as Aoshima is well known in the plastic modeling
community for producing under-detailed and indeed downright inaccurate
models. The Tamiya Model Co. Random Details of Japanese Warships
supplied many interesting and useful visual details on weapons,
fire-control systems, and hull structure.
John Campbells Naval Weapons of World War Two is the standard
English-language text on naval weapons of all kinds, and also includes
useful details on fire-control systems, ammunition, radar, and related
details.
Since the time of the December Analysis, the authors have also begun
to use two books in the Gakken Pacific War series. These volumes
not only contain useful photographic material and line drawings,
but also include color photographs of large-scale (1:100 and 1:200)
models of Japanese carriers. The models contained a wealth of useful
details which help develop spatial context around the wreckage photographs.
|