

Knowing how to get citadel hits in World of Warships is a key step in your journey to becoming a master captain. If you can punch through a ship’s Citadel, you can deal critical damage and put the ship out of commission for good. This concentration of fortified armor became known as the “citadel,” and as long as the citadel was intact, a ship could still fight.Īs you can imagine, having all the most important modules in one spot makes a ship’s Citadel a prime target in World of Warships. Their solution was to lump up all of the ship’s vital organs-the engines, battery magazines, crew quarters, etc.-and put all the thickest armor there. Unfortunatly on his second attempt he clipped the side of the ship, was knocked unconcious, then drowned in the cockpit.As warships became larger, their designers realized that it was too expensive to lay thick armor on the entire hull. He literally dodged the main tower and put it down on the front deck section of a cruiser. Interestingly it was a british pilot that first landed a plane on a ship.

US was the first to launch planes with the help of none other than the wright brothers :D They gave them the prototype for the catapult system, only there version dropped a big weight, not a great idea on the deck of a ship so eventually a steam piston system with many pullys was used.

If they are right the first from the ground up carrier was ark royal, they solved the issue of the offset bridge by extending the deck on the opposite side after trying all sorts to stop her listing because of the weight imbalance. Not sure how much i trust there research as it was a channel 5 documentry (channel 5 was like the poor relation here in the uk for years haha) Watched a documentry on you tube last week called biggest aircraft carrier. I don't really know what the French were doing. The British Royal Navy was the first to build a converted carrier of sorts and the Imperial Japanese Navy was the first to build a purpose built carrier from the ground up. Unless I have my history completely wrong, the USN was the first to launch a fixed wing aircraft off a ship. Would expect their name to be from one of those No idea why a French term was used to be honest. Wasnt it america and japan doing the carrier arms race first Originally posted by Ashardalon:did france even have carriers back then?
