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- Hobbs, David, 1946- author.
- Barnsley, South Yorkshire : Seaforth Publishing, 2019.
- Description
- Book — xiv, 386 pages : illustrations, portraits ; 25 cm
- Summary
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Among all the celebrations of the RAF's centenary, it was largely forgotten that the establishment of an independent air force came at a cost - and it was the Royal Navy that paid the price. In 1918 it had been pre-eminent in the technology and tactics of employing aircraft at sea, but once it lost control of its own air power, it struggled to make the RAF prioritise naval interests, in the process losing ground to the rival naval air forces of Japan and the United States. This book documents that struggle through the cash-strapped 1920s and '30s, culminating in the Navy regaining control of its aviation in 1937, but too late to properly prepare for the impending war. However, despite the lack of resources, British naval flying had made progress, especially in the advancement of carrier strike doctrine. These developments are neatly illustrated by the experiences of Lieutenant William Lucy, who was to become Britain's first accredited air 'ace' of the war and to lead the world's first successful dive-bombing of a major warship. Making extensive use of the family archive, this book also reproduces many previously unseen photographs from Lucy's album, showing many aspects of life in the Fleet Air Arm up to the end of the Norway campaign. Although it is beyond the scope of this book, in November 1940 the inter-war concentration on carrier strike was to be spectacularly vindicated by the air attack on the Italian fleet at Taranto - it inspired the Japanese to a far larger effort at Pearl Harbor the following year, but the Royal Navy had shown the way.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
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VG95 .G7 H63 2019 | Available |
- Hobbs, David, 1946- author.
- Barnsley, South Yorkshire : Seaforth Publishing, 2018.
- Description
- Book — 160 pages : color illustrations ; 30 cm
- Summary
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The technical details of British warships were recorded in a set of plans produced by the builders on completion of every ship. Known as the 'as fitted' general arrangements, these drawings represented the exact appearance and fitting of the ship as it entered service. Intended to provide a permanent reference for the Admiralty and the dockyards, these highly detailed plans were drawn with exquisite skill in multi-coloured inks and washes that represent the acme of the draughtsman's art. Today they form part of the incomparable collection of the National Maritime Museum at Greenwich, which is using the latest scanning technology to make digital copies of the highest quality. This book is one of a series based entirely on these draughts which depict famous warships in an unprecedented degree of detail-complete sets in full colour, with many close-ups and enlargements that make every aspect clear and comprehensible. Extensive captions point the reader to important features to be found in the plans, and an introduction covers the background to the design. HMS _Victorious_ was a ship with two almost separate incarnations-as built in 1941 she was one of a new type of armoured carrier which saw strenuous wartime service; post-war the ship underwent a massive reconstruction lasting nearly eight years that saw her recommission in1958 as one of the best equipped carriers in the world, ready for another decade of duty. Both these phases of the ship's life are fully documented, which allows this novel form of anatomy to cover two generations of carrier design.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
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V874.5 .G7 H62 2018 F | Available |
- Hobbs, David, 1946- author.
- Barnsley : Seaforth Publishing, Pen & Sword Books Ltd., 2017.
- Description
- Book — xiii, 528 pages : illustrations, maps ; 24 cm
- Summary
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In a few short years after 1914 the Royal Navy practically invented naval air warfare, not only producing the first effective aircraft carriers, but also pioneering most of the techniques and tactics that made naval air power a reality. By 1918 the RN was so far ahead of other navies that a US Navy observer sent to study the British use of aircraft at sea concluded that any discussion of the subject must first consider their methods . Indeed, by the time the war ended the RN was training for a carrier-borne attack by torpedo-bombers on the German fleet in its bases over two decades before the first successful employment of this tactic, against the Italians at Taranto. Following two previously well-received histories of British naval aviation, David Hobbs here turns his attention to the operational and technical achievements of the Royal Naval Air Service, both at sea and ashore, from 1914 to 1918. Detailed explanations of operations, the technology that underpinned them and the people who carried them out bring into sharp focus a revolutionary period of development that changed naval warfare forever. Controversially, the RNAS was subsumed into the newly created Royal Air Force in 1918, so as the centenary of its extinction approaches, this book is a timely reminder of its true significance.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
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D581 .H423 2017 | Available |
- Hobbs, David, 1946- author.
- Barnsley, South Yorkshire : Seaforth Publishing, Pen & Sword Books Ltd., 2017.
- Description
- Book — 1 online resource (xiii, 528 pages) : illustrations, maps.
- Hobbs, David, 1946- author.
- Annapolis, Maryland : Naval Institute Press, 2015.
- Description
- Book — xvii, 622 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
- Online
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V874.5 .G7 H634 2015 | Available |
- Hobbs, David, 1946- author.
- Barnsley, S. Yorkshire : Seaforth Publishing, 2014.
- Description
- Book — 128 pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
- Summary
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The National Maritime Museum in Greenwich houses the largest collection of scale ship models in the world, many of which are official, contemporary artefacts made by the craftsmen of the navy or the shipbuilders themselves, and ranging from the mid seventeenth century to the present day. As such they represent a three-dimensional archive of unique importance and authority. Treated as historical evidence, they offer more detail than even the best plans, and demonstrate exactly what the ships looked like in a way that even the finest marine painter could not achieve. This book is one of a series that takes a selection of the best models to tell the story of specific ship types - in this case, the various classes of warship that fought in the First World War, from dreadnoughts to coastal motor boats. It reproduces a large number of model photos, all in full colour, and including many close-up and detail views. These are captioned in depth, but many are also annotated to focus attention on interesting or unusual features. Although pictorial in emphasis, the book weaves the pictures into an authoritative text, producing an unusual and attractive form of technical history.
(source: Nielsen Book Data)
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V765 .H53 2014 | Available |
- Hobbs, David, 1946- author.
- Annapolis, Maryland : Naval Institute Press, [2009]
- Description
- Book — 304 pages : illustrations ; 30 cm
- Summary
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- Beginnings
- A purpose-built ship and numerous conversions
- Take-off decks
- Take-off platforms, catapults and lighters
- HMS Furious
- HMS Argus
- USS Langley
- Progress
- Different navies, different techniques
- Flight from ships other than carriers
- HMS Implacable described and compared
- Flying from a straight-deck carrier
- Design innovation and the 'rubber deck'
- Transformation
- Flying from an angled-deck carrier
- Helicopters
- Short take-off, vertical landing
- What might have been
- Cross-deck operations
- Postscript.
- Online
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V874 .H63 2009 F | Available |
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