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Featured battle : Midway
Part of Second World War
Date : 03 June 1942 - 06 June 1942
A key battle in the Pacific to turing the tide for the US forces. Japanese Adm. Nagumo's carrier force including the carriers Hiryu, Soryu, Akagi and Kaga approached Midway Island with an invasion force to secure the Japanese conquests on the Pacific. However the US forces were aware of the attack and prepared. On the night of the 3rd, Nagumo launched aircraft in a raid against Midway island itself, causing great damage and overwhelming the air defence force based there. However spotter aircraft from Adm. Spruance's Task Force 16 located the IJN's carrier forces and launched three waves of torpedo bombers against them during the morning. Little damage was done, but they delayed the Japanese preparations for a second strike against Midway. So when dive-bombers from Enterprise and Hornet arrived above the Japanese carriers around mid-day on the 4th, their decks were full of partially armed and fueled aircraft. The US aircraft scored direct hits on 3 of the 4 carriers, and Akagi, Kaga and Soryu went down. Later in the afternoon, aircraft from Hiryu located and severly damaged the Yorktown but at about the same time bombers from the Enterprise found and sank Hiryu too. On the 5th, the Japanese decided that, without aircover the invasion could not succeed so they withdrew. The following day (the 6th) the crippled Yorktown was finally sunk by Japanese submaries, and the IJN crusier Mikuma was sunk, but the war in the Pacific had turned. The Japanese navy had lost it's irreplacable carriers and more critically it's trained aircrew and was never able to recover the initiative.
Featured image :
Arbeia - The commanders house
A view from the veranda of the reconstructed Commanders House at Arbeia
Gallery updated : 2022-04-04 08:33:43
Featured review :
Lockheed SR-71 Owners Workshop Manual
Davies, Steve & Crickmore, Paul
An excellent book on one of the world's greatest aircraft! It follows in Haynes tradition of 'manual' style books on equipment we'd love to own with fascinating detail gained from people who were intimately involved with the Blackbird, or 'Habu' as it was known amongst those who flew it. As well as detail of its genesis, history and missions there is plenty of detail on equipment, engines and of particular interest to myself, what it was like to actually fly one.
The book includes a full list of the fate of each aircraft and a glossary of terms used. Full of photographs, diagrams and detail but still very readable. Highly recommended.
Haynes, 2012
Reviewed : 2013-01-29 00:00:00
