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Warship Design and the Progress of Imperial Naval Vessels: Offprint from Reports of the Japan Scientific Association, Vol. 13, No. 2, April 1938
- AI summary (β)
- The paper, an offprint of a lecture, “Warship Design and the Progress of Imperial Naval Vessels,” is a discussion by Doctor of Engineering Hiraga Yuzuru of the basic performance and combat power of warships. It explains stability, GM, reserve buoyancy, watertight subdivision, hull strength, seakeeping, rolling and vibration, gun caliber, and treaty restrictions, and mentions Yūbari, the Furutaka class, the 10,000-ton class, Tomozuru, the Mogami class, Nelson, Rodney, the Dunkerque class, and others. Lecture delivered at the Shinkyō Manchuria District Employees’ Club on August 27, 1937; offprint from Reports of the Japan Scientific Association, Vol. 13, No. 2, April 1938. Keywords: Hiraga Yuzuru, warship design, Imperial naval vessels, stability, watertight subdivision, Furutaka class, Yūbari, London Treaty, Mogami classAuto-generated by Azure OpenAI gpt-5.5 from OCR text (which may contain errors) and image captions.
- Item ID
- c4ffc388-0f05-4743-8952-40a154439936
- Catalogue ID
- 60250201
- Card catalogue
- [Progress of Imperial Warships; Warship Design and the Progress of Imperial Naval Vessels]
- Category
- 講演・講義:一般
- Holder
- 東京大学柏図書館
- Year registered
- 2007
- Warship
- Warship
- GCV entities
- Document / Drawing
























