00:00:00 - Intro
00:00:47 - When on peacetime operations to what percentage were ships magazines stocked?
00:06:16 - What if the Washington Naval Treaty had capped cruiser guns at 7 inches for light cruisers and 9 inches for heavy cruisers?
00:10:32 - The best seaplanes built by each navy during the second world war?
00:14:27 - Why superfire triples over twins?
00:19:01 - Of all the post-war battleship designs, which was the most realistic (or perhaps least unrealistic) for their respective navy to produce? And would this design have been useful as anything other than proof that battleships were obsolete?
00:25:42 - What could other navies have done on about 72,000 tons?
00:31:09 - In your opinion, did the US Navy need this defeat (loss of the Chesapeake) in order to reduce arrogance and possible worse tragedies later on? In other words, is there an American bright side to this event?
00:33:58 - Throughput the age of sail, was the primary limitation on innovation (for lack of a better descriptor) ideas or material?
00:37:51 - How common was it in the age of sail to voluntarily try to 1v1 (or 2v2) enemy ships of comparable size and capability?
00:41:23 - Could you build a fleet destroyer in disguise under the London Naval Treaties?
00:49:56 - What are the game changers that never were?
00:56:44 - Rapid fire escort carrier questions?
01:00:53 - How effective would a quarantine signal be at dissuading boarding?
01:02:59 - How more "effective" were certain building materials during the Age of Sail?
01:09:11 - Was it common for Japanese Navy officers to carry swords while on sea duty, and even on combat flights?
Ещё видео!