It sunk on June 4 1942
Japanese aircraft carrier Akagi was created on 1927-03-25.
US lost Yorktown; Japanese lost Kaga, Akagi, Soryu, Heryu
The U.S. sunk: The Akagi The Kaga The Soryu The Hiryu The Japanese sunk: The Yorktown
The fastest way to sink the unbelivable huge Aircraft Carrier is to aim for the most weakest spot or take the anti-ship torpedoes. Just a couple of hits, than the whole Aircraft Carrier is on it's way down to the bottom of the ocean floor.
No because aircraft carriers are so huge and it can handle lots of punishments. Aircraft carriers are incredibly strong. If you fire one missile at it, it still could float and move even up to twelve missiles and the aircraft carrier will take damages and still can move. If you fire several missiles or more, the whole aircraft carrier will sink.
The Japanese aircraft carrier Akagi was sunk during the Battle of Midway in June 1942. It was primarily targeted by American dive bombers, particularly from the USS Yorktown, which delivered devastating strikes that led to significant fires and ultimately the sinking of the ship. The loss of Akagi was a pivotal moment in the Pacific Theater of World War II, marking a turning point in naval warfare.
One sample: IJN Akagi-18 Zero Fighters, 18 Val Dive Bombers, 27 Kate Torpedo Bombers
It depends on where the carrier gets hit. On the strongest spot the aircraft carrier would handle more punishments but on the weakest spot it will sink in two or three hits with the torpedo.
The U.S. won the battle of the Midway only because the code breakers could figure out the Japanese codes. During the battle, the U.S. sunk four aircraft carriers, the Akagi, the Kaga, the Soryu, and the Hiryu. The Japanese, however, only sunk the carrier, the U.S.S Yorktown, which was later repaired and sent back into action.
Yes. 90 ft ocean waves can tip the whole entire aircraft carrier over and crush it.
aiRcraft caRRier
Only there's no one on the aircraft carrier.