IJN Kongo in action (1920x1080) WorldOfWarships


Navalfleet Ijn kongo

Kongō's secondary battery featured 16 six-inch .50-caliber guns in single casemates, eight three-inch guns and an additional eight 21-inch submerged torpedo tubes.More firepower was added in 1929 when the cruiser was converted into a battleship, and by October 1944, the vessel's secondary armament featured eight six-inch guns, 122 Type 96 anti-aircraft rapid-fire cannons, and eight five.


IJN Kongo 1939 a super colourised photo of HIJMS Kongo aft… Flickr

The Kongo class, battle-cruisers of the Imperial Japanese Navy, are today's subject.Read more about the Kongo class here:https://www.amazon.co.uk/Warship-201.


IJN KONGO 1944finish1 Scale model ships, Model ship building, Model

Britain's new capital ships render all of the Imperial Japanese Navy's (IJN) warships, both those operational and those under design, obsolete. 1910: Naval Expansion Bill:Tokyo.


IJN Kongo War Thunder Wiki

The design of the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) Kongo class battle-cruisers originated from Great Britain. At first the new warships were to follow the Royal Navy (RN) Invincible class, but, impressed with the new RN Lion class, the IJN opted for an improved version of that design.


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The IJN Kongo's fusion of design brilliance and firepower prowess rendered it a force that dictated the outcome of engagements. A Legacy of Maritime Prowess. The legacy of the IJN Kongo reverberates through the currents of time, a testament to Japan's maritime prowess and the battleship's enduring impact on naval strategy.


Hyun Soo Kim IJN KONGO 19441/350 Another photo made... 船舶模型, 戦艦

The IJN Kongo was first of a class of four-strong 26,230 ton battlecruisers for Japan and the last major Japanese warship to be built out of the country - the other three would be built in Japan.


IJN Kongo under reconstruction, Yokosuka, Japan, 20 Jul 1931 [1200 x

They were designed by Britain's Sir George Thurston, and strongly influenced the design of the forthcoming Tiger-class battlecruisers. KongoKirishima discovered much to her cost at the hands of U.S.S. Washington off of Savo Island. Kongo: 1913 Hiei: 1914 Kirishima: 1915 Haruna: 1915 Displacement 36,601 tons 728'4" x 101'8" x 31'9"


IJN Kongo Imperial japanese navy, Battleship, Navy ships

The Imperial Japanese Navy ship Hiei was found lying upside down on the sea floor about 2,952 feet below the surface, more than 76 years after sinking in waters northwest of Savo Island in the Solomon Islands chain, according to an Instagram release from the team aboard research vessel (R/V) Petrel. Japanese Imperial Navy Ship Hiei.


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The mystery of the KONGO's loss essentially begins with the classic accounts of major works on the U.S. Submarine campaign like `Undersea Victory' by H.J. Holmes, Theodore Roscoe's `U.S. Submarine Operations in WW II', and the later and somewhat classic `Silent Victory' of Clay Blair.


[Development] Kongō battleship The Imperial Jewel News War Thunder

Kongō class Fast Battleships (1912) Complete story of the four battlecruisers of WW1, IJN Kongo, Hiei, Haruna and Kirishima, rebuilt during the interwar and very active in WW2.


IJN Kongo Unknown scale Scale model ships, Model warships, Warship

Kongō (金剛, named for Mount Kongō) was a warship of the Imperial Japanese Navy during World War I and World War II. She was the first battlecruiser of the Kongō class, among the most heavily armed ships in any navy when built.


IJN Kongo in action (1920x1080) WorldOfWarships

The Loss of Battleship KONGO: As told in Chapter "November Woes" of "Total Eclipse: The Last Battles of the IJN - Leyte to Kure 1944 to 1945". @ Anthony P. Tully 1998 During the ongoing struggle to reinforce and preserve Suzuki's 35th Army on Leyte, the First Striking Force had spent all it's time hovering at Brunei Bay.


The IJN Kongo — Historia Militaris

IJN Kongo IJN Ikoma Japan VI Rank Battle rating: Class: Battleship Research: 390 000 Purchase: 1 050 000 Show in game Contents 1 Description 2 General info 2.1 Survivability and armour 2.2 Mobility 2.3 Modifications and economy 3 Armament 3.1 Primary armament 3.2 Secondary armament 3.3 Anti-aircraft armament 3.4 Scout plane 4 Usage in battles


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The Kongō-class battlecruiser (金剛型巡洋戦艦 Kongō-gata jun'yōsenkan?) was a class of four battlecruisers built for the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) immediately before World War I. Designed by British naval architect George Thurston, the lead ship of the class was the last Japanese capital ship constructed outside of Japan as the latter three were bui.


IJN Kongo 1944

The Kongō-class battlecruisers included Kongō, Hiei, Kirishima, and Haruna. Laid down January 17, 1911 as the lead ship of the Kongō-class Battlecruiser. Launched May 18, 1912 as Kongō named after Mount Kongō meaning "Indestructible Diamond" in Osaka Prefecture in Japan. In English sources often spelled Kongo.


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Japanese ironclad Kongō Kongō (金剛, Kongō) was the lead ship of the Kongō -class ironclad corvettes built for the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) in the 1870s. The class was built in the United Kingdom because such ships could not yet be constructed in Japan.