Plans for the A-150s were finished in early 1941, for most intents and purposes. However, these were destroyed at the end of the war, along with most of the other documentation relating to the class. For these reasons the A-150's exact specifications are uncertain. and the
belt armor was probably going to be thick. This was so large that steel mills in Japan were incapable of manufacturing it. Instead, two layers of armor plates would have been used, despite its reduced effectiveness as compared to a single plate of the same total thickness.
Armament The design of the A-150s called for a
main battery of six 45-
caliber 51-centimeter guns in three twin
turrets. These would have been the largest ever fitted to a
capital ship, dwarfing the 46-centimeter guns mounted on the
Yamato class, and were a key factor in naval historians William H. Garzke and Robert O. Dulin's argument that the A-150s would have been the "most powerful battleships in history". The composition of the A-150's
secondary armament is not fully known. Historians Eric Lacroix and Linton Wells have written that Japanese designers were considering mounting a large number of 65-caliber
Type 98 dual-purpose guns, though this was not final. These guns had a maximum elevation of +90°, which gave them an effective ceiling of and a horizontal range of . They fired projectiles at a muzzle velocity of , although resulting wear on the barrels reduced their designed lifespan to only about 350
rounds. They were able to fire 15–19 rounds per minute. ==Construction==