Search results
Search results 1-20 of 1,000. There are even more results, please redefine your search.
Quoted from "Brockpaine" Quoted from "AdmKuznetsov" Just popping in for a visit. Great to see what you've done with Russia, Brock! Privet, tovarishch! What've you been up to of late? We've missed you... And thanks; I've actually been enjoying Russia. The scale makes things a bit hilarious. "Tanks? Oh yes, Ivan, we only need ten thousand, shouldn't take too long! Get busy!" This is why I started building the Baikal-Amur rail line with IP, because I had pretty much built out armed services approp...
Quoted from "BruceDuncan" Good to hear from you! Hope all is well. Rather wondered whether it was something we said... Good heavens, no! It was teenagers... They were 9 & 6 when WesWorld started, and now they're 19 & 22, and both out of the house!
Just popping in for a visit. Great to see what you've done with Russia, Brock!
Reval class, Russian Aircraft Carrier laid down 1944 Displacement: 49,854 t light; 51,388 t standard; 58,908 t normal; 64,923 t full load Dimensions: Length overall / water x beam x draught 1,002.82 ft / 967.85 ft x 104.99 ft (Bulges 118.11 ft) x 31.92 ft (normal load) 305.66 m / 295.00 m x 32.00 m (Bulges 36.00 m) x 9.73 m Armament: 16 - 5.12" / 130 mm guns (8x2 guns), 79.37lbs / 36.00kg shells, 1944 Model Automatic rapid fire guns in deck mounts with hoists on centreline ends, evenly spread, 6...
Incorporating lessons from the construction of the Azov class, but enlarged to accomodate jets, which Russian Naval Staff clearly see as entering service during her service life. One will be laid down at each of the S4.5s at Arkhangelsk and Vladivostok. Reval class, Russian Aircraft Carrier laid down 1944 Displacement: 50,152 t light; 51,693 t standard; 59,246 t normal; 65,289 t full load Dimensions: Length overall / water x beam x draught 1,002.82 ft / 967.85 ft x 104.99 ft (Bulges 118.11 ft) x...
A few things came up but I'm back.
I suppose elements of the Black Sea Fleet could help, but BlSF naval staff assume the Marine Nationale will promptly have matters well in hand.
The Irkutsk Hydroelectric Power Station on Angara River began construction in 1940 and will have 16 75MW turbines upon completion. Planning has begun for Bratsk Hydroelectric and Metallurgical Compleks further down Angara... Major aluminum smelters are such power hogs.
Quoted Otto von Hapsburg was less concerned with financial arrangements than he was the political situation. He wished to make a positive contribution to the peaceful settlement of ancient questions in central Europe – one which he felt himself uniquely qualified to make. The future continued to offer promise. The real world has recently had a Prince Schwartzenburg as a foreign minister, so maybe some of these old warhorses still have legs, and far more so in the 1940s than now.
A. Industrial Production 1/2 factories to naval materials: 1,000 tons created for Q3/43, plus 0 tons saved from Q2/43, plus 0 tons from scrapping, plus 0 tons from transactions, for a total of 1,000 tons. 1/2 factories (committed) to infrastructure development; 0/2 factories (non-committed) to infrastructure development; B. Infrastructure Development Expand Class .5 Slip at Riga to Class 1. 0.2 IP added by Q3/43. 0.1 pts added in Q3/43. 0.2 pts remaining. C. Naval Construction At Riga Class 2 Dr...
29/33 factories to naval materials: 29,000 tons created for Q0/43, plus 1,276 tons saved from Q2/43, plus 0 tons from scrapping, plus 0 tons from transactions, for a total of 29,000 tons. 4/33 factories (committed) to infrastructure development; 0/33 factories (non-committed) to infrastructure development; B. Infrastructure Development None C. Naval Construction At Petrograd Class 4 Slip #1 - Battlecruiser Pobeda_1 laid down 1 January 1942. 12,000 tons added by Q3/43. 3,000 tons added in Q3/43. ...
at 245m/270m targets... and only 2 hits of 15? Tough umpires, lol! Or maybe, a Big Ship background?
the USSR raised ~700 divisions, including ~100 Tank/Mechanized, on a smaller population base than the WesWorld RF has...
Quoted If the French are faced with a 9-10" gunned ship, I have either carrier aircraft or the Dunkerques, which can put down an ACR like a truck running over a wayward puppy. They're actually designed to take on two ACRs at once, entertaining one with their 6x 240mm, obliterating the other with their 6x 340mm, then turning all 12 onto the survivor, who will not for long.
express Russian Federation's view in favor of Indochina joining League of Nations.
A. Industrial Production 1/2 factories to naval materials: 1,000 tons created for Q2/43, plus 0 tons saved from Q1/43, plus 0 tons from scrapping, plus 0 tons from transactions, for a total of 1,000 tons. 0/2 factories (committed) to infrastructure development; 1/2 factories (non-committed) to infrastructure development; B. Infrastructure Development Expand Class .5 Slip at Riga to Class 1. 0.1 IP added by Q2/43. 0.1 pts added in Q2/43. 0.05 pts remaining. C. Naval Construction At Riga Class 2 D...
29/33 factories to naval materials: 29,000 tons created for Q2/43, plus 1,276 tons saved from Q3/42, plus 0 tons from scrapping, plus 0 tons from transactions, for a total of 30,276 tons. 0/33 factories (committed) to infrastructure development; 4/33 factories (non-committed) to infrastructure development; B. Infrastructure Development None C. Naval Construction At Petrograd Class 4 Slip #1 - Battlecruiser Pobeda_1 laid down 1 January 1942. 9,000 tons added by Q2/43. 3,000 tons added in Q2/43. 3...
Quoted I know its off-topic but, are Treaties really just lip-service to support each other or are there any real rational benefits at all? France had a global base network and 6 capital ships. Russia had 14 capital ships with just Murmansk and Petropavlovsk with relatively free access to the World Ocean. The last two Gangut class spent time in Indochina, and the Imperator Nikolai I/Imperitritsa Marias spent several years at Brest. All are now in the Black Sea now that France has a serious batt...
Quoted Uhm, can't say I've ever heard of this chap called Stalin in WW? Whose main "underground" alias was Stalin, is a member of the Duma for Russian Social Democratic Worker's Party(Bolshevik), and one of the Russian Federation's leading experts on Russia's nationalities issues.