Related changes

Jump to navigation Jump to search

Enter a page name to see changes on pages linked to or from that page. (To see members of a category, enter Category:Name of category). Changes to pages on your Watchlist are in bold.

Recent changes options Show last 50 | 100 | 250 | 500 changes in last 1 | 3 | 7 | 14 | 30 days
Hide registered users | Hide anonymous users | Hide my edits | Show bots | Hide minor edits
Show new changes starting from 17:26, 3 May 2024
   
Page name:
List of abbreviations:
N
This edit created a new page (also see list of new pages)
m
This is a minor edit
b
This edit was performed by a bot
(±123)
The page size changed by this number of bytes

7 April 2024

     16:52  (Deletion log) [John Leach‎ (3×)]
     
16:52 John Leach talk contribs deleted page Anti-air warfare(content was: "{{PropDel}}<br><br>{{subpages}} In naval warfare, '''anti-air warfare (AAW)''' is the intelligent coordination of detecting, avoiding if appropriate, neutralizing, and protecting against hostile air units. AAW is generally assumed to defend against fixed-wing aircraft, helicopters, air-to-surface missiles and cruise missiles, but not ballistic missiles. ==Detection== The heart of detection is radar, but it is possible to sense the existence of a radar before it can identify a...")
     
16:34 John Leach talk contribs deleted page Autocannon(content was: "{{PropDel}}<br><br>{{subpages}} An '''autocannon''' is any artillery piece that is loaded from a magazine of shells, and can continuously fire and reload until the magazine is empty. Historically, autocannon have been of fairly small caliber, but it is quite common to find automatic naval guns of 5"/127mm caliber. The original driver for autocannon was anti-aircraft artillery, as aircraft speeds became too fast, for conventional artillery to fire fast enough to have a significa...")
     
16:05 John Leach talk contribs deleted page Burke-class(content was: "{{PropDel}}<br><br>{{subpages}} United States Navy '''Burke-class''' destroyers are one of the few ship classes named for a living individual, Admiral Arleigh Burke. Burke (1901 - 1996) was a legendary World War II destroyer commander, who rose to become the youngest Chief of Naval Operations. He attended the dedication of the first ship of the class. Somewhat ironically given Burke's record against the Japanese in WWII, Japanese ''Kongo-class'' destroyers are authorized copies...")

6 April 2024

     17:46  Destroyer‎‎ 2 changes history −8 [John Leach‎ (2×)]
     
17:46 (cur | prev) −12 John Leach talk contribs
     
17:44 (cur | prev) +4 John Leach talk contribs
     17:33  (Deletion log) [John Leach‎ (2×)]
     
17:33 John Leach talk contribs deleted page Anti-submarine warfare(content was: "{{PropDel}}<br><br>{{subpages}} '''Anti-submarine warfare (ASW)''' comprises the set of techniques, sensors, and weapons used to locate submarines and destroy them. The discipline emerged in the First World War, when submarines first became a significant military threat. Until the development of nuclear propulsion, ASW was easier because submarines had to spend substantial time on the surface, where they could be spotted on radar or even visually. With the shift from blue-wate...")
     
17:32 John Leach talk contribs deleted page Anti-surface warfare(content was: "{{PropDel}}<br><br>{{subpages}} '''Anti-surface warfare (ASuW)''' is the term, in current naval usage, for attacking surface ships from submarines, aircraft, land-based defenses, and warships. The most common weapons for this mission is the anti-shipping missile from ships, land launchers, aircraft and submarines. Naval guns and gunnery|Naval guns were the historic shipkillers through the early 20th century and to a lesser extent in the Second World War, remain useful against...")

5 April 2024

     21:08  Phalanx close-in weapons system diffhist −14 John Leach talk contribs
     14:03  (Deletion log) [John Leach‎ (2×)]
     
14:03 John Leach talk contribs deleted page AGM-84 Harpoon(content was: "{{PropDel}}<br><br>{{subpages}} The U.S. '''Harpoon''' missile has many variants. To begin with, the prefix is AGM/RGM/UGM-84 Harpoon depending if the missile is, respectively, air-launched, ship-launched or submarine-launched. Originally, the Harpoon was a dedicated anti-shipping missile, but now has a land attack variant, AGM-84 SLAM, which itself has variants.<ref name=DS-SLAM>{{citation | title = Boeing (McDonnell Douglas) AGM/RGM/UGM-84 Harpoon | first = Andreas | last...")
     
08:09 John Leach talk contribs deleted page AEGIS battle management system(content was: "{{PropDel}}<br><br>{{subpages}} {{TOC|right}} Developed for U.S. Navy Ticonderoga-class cruisers and Burke-class destroyers, and used by several foreign navies, the '''AEGIS battle management system''' is an integrated complex of sensors, weapons controllers, missiles, computers and human interfaces that lets a ship control an air battle with a radius of over 200 miles. One of the key aspects of the system is that it can orchestrate the efforts of several ships and radar aircr...")

4 April 2024

     08:13 Deletion log John Leach talk contribs deleted page 5"-54 caliber gun(content was: "{{PropDel}}<br><br>{{subpages}} {{slashtitle|5"/54 caliber gun}} For many years, the primary medium dual-purpose gun on U.S. warships was the '''5"-54 caliber''', first the Mark 42 and then the lightweight Mark 45. It is usable against land, sea and air targets. It is full-automatic (military)|full-automatic and has a range of 13 nmi (14.9 mi). The Mark 45 is controlled either by the Mk 86 Gun Fire Control System or the Mk 160 Gun Computing System; the Mk. 160 is upwardly...")

3 April 2024

     17:43 Deletion log John Leach talk contribs deleted page Surface-to-air missile(content was: "{{PropDel}}<br><br>{{subpages}} '''Surface-to-air missile''' (SAM) defines a wide range of guided missiles, usually rocket-powered, fired from land or sea against aircraft. The lightest SAMs can be fired from a soldier's shoulder; the class is called a man-portable air defense system (MANPADS). Larger SAMs vary from short-range systems intended to protect a small area such as an individual ship or ground headquarters, which is called "point defense". "Area defense" SAMs cover...")