The British Covenanter tank looks way ahead of its time like someone took a prototype Abrams and photographed it with an old camera. But the old cruiser rushed into production with World War I designers working at the outbreak of World War II. It ended up too slow and hard-to-cool for North Africa. By the time the war moved back to Europe where it could fight, it found itself outgunned, out-armored and out of time.
It never saw combat and ended up on historians’ lists of the worst weapons of the war.
Author: Michael
During WWII, aircraft carriers overtook battleships as the dominant warship, both in size and naval importance. However, it was a Baltimore-class heavy cruiser that became known as “The Longest Ship in the World.” Officially, the Baltimore classes measured 673 feet and 5 inches in overall length. In contrast, the late-war Iowa-class battleships were nearly 900 feet long and the Midway-class carriers measured 968 feet long. So, how did a cruiser become the longest ship?
Pittsburgh in her original dazzle camouflage (U.S.
The most populous class of escort carriers in history was the Casablanca Class. Builders cranked out 50 ships of the class in record time to escort convoys, assist in amphibious assaults, and more. But while the ships were popular with government buyers and planners, design compromises made them risky for crews.
The need for escort carriers
World War II brought on the modern era of naval combat, with planes fighting beyond visual range. Navies of the world adjusted to the new reality differently. In America, a slow transition between the wars became a quick turn after Pearl Harbor.
Located in the South Atlantic, the British overseas territory of Saint Helena is over 1,200 miles from the nearest major land mass, making it extremely remote. The island is serviced by a single airport with just one runway that measures 6,398 feet in length. At over 1,000 feet in elevation, with rocky outcrops and strong wind shear, landing at Saint Helena calls for a steep approach and an experienced pilot. Regular commercial flights utilize small aircraft like the Embraer 190. However, the British Royal Air Force managed to land a massive Boeing C-17A Globemaster III on Saint Helena.
The United Kingdom’s Defense of the Realm Act 1914 was originally a small, simple law. It just banned people from leaking information to the Central Powers. Then it got, um, let’s say larger. It eventually banned “bonfires, whistling in the street, and flying kites!”
Oh, and screwing British service members if you have venereal disease, even if you didn’t know you had it.
Which was very uncomfortable for the women who were very, very publicly prosecuted under the relevant section of the law, Regulation 40D.
In theory, quantum computing has the explosive potential to rewrite the principles of classical physics as we know them. This potential brings possibilities that we have believed to be impossible.
The US Department of Defense (DoD) recognises this and wants to use quantum for military applications.
On the 14 June, the DoD announced it will back a project that will advance quantum technology applications to kinetic weapon systems.
This quantum-based capability will “enable greater precision at longer range, lower collateral damage and more agile platforms,” the DoD stated.
A soldier outfitted with an exoskeleton during a a technical touchpoint in 2018. (U.S. Army photo).
After more than six decades of pursuing the dream of a heavily-armored infantryman ripped from the pages of Starship Troopers or a real-life ‘Iron Man’ suit, the U.S. military is once again taking a crack at building a suit of powered armor to support the soldier of the future. Eventually.
Bloomberg
The USS Connecticut, a premier submarine that struck an underwater mountain in the South China Sea 19 months ago, won’t be back in service until early 2026 at the soonest,…
Defense N.
Army Times
An Army private first class has pleaded guilty to plotting the murder of U.S.