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October 25, 1944. A single 5-inch shell—barely 20 pounds—strikes the Japanese heavy cruiser Chokai. Within seconds, the 13,000-ton warship explodes from within, torn apart by her own torpedoes. This wasn't luck. This was precision engineering. Discover the untold story of American naval shells that revolutionized warfare in the Pacific. While the world focused on massive battleship guns, U.S. Navy engineers perfected something far deadlier: shells with delayed fuzes that could penetrate deep inside enemy ships before detonating, turning their own weapons into bombs. What You'll Learn: How Mark 21 base-delay fuzes worked in milliseconds Why super-heavy 2,700-pound shells changed everything The Battle off Samar's explosive secrets Japanese Long Lance torpedoes' fatal vulnerability Real combat footage analysis from Leyte Gulf From the desperate charge of destroyer Johnston to the catastrophic loss of three Japanese cruisers in hours, this is the story of how microscopic delays—measured in thousandths of a second—determined which ships survived and which became underwater tombs. Every fact verified through U.S. Naval archives, Japanese war records, and post-war technical analysis. Subscribe for more untold WWII stories. Hit the bell for notifications. #WWIIHistory #NavalWarfare #PacificWar #BattleOffSamar #LeyteGulf #NavalGuns #MilitaryHistory #USSJohnston #JapaneseNavy #USNavy #NavalBattle #WWII #SecretWeapons #WarEngineering #NavalTechnology