Author Topic: Montana Class Battleship!  (Read 1925 times)

Offline Hamish

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Montana Class Battleship!
« on: October 14, 2000, 01:07:00 PM »
I read a long long time ago, that the Montana class Battleship was supposed to be the next class after the Iowa Class. She had been partially built by the end of WW2, and had been scrapped at the end of the war. Bring it in as a "Perk Battleship" !!

Hamish!

Offline Sancho

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« Reply #1 on: October 14, 2000, 03:52:00 PM »
Hmm... perk battleship?  How bout a Nimitz-class CVN?  Perk only of course.  

Seriously, having a battleship would be cool.  But one thing that would be extremely beneficial would be the ability to call for fire from the BB's guns.  Use battleship to bombard bases and targets near shore, not just enemy ships.  I thought HTC was working on a self-propelled arty piece... this could work in a similar way.  Thoughts?

Offline RAM

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« Reply #2 on: October 14, 2000, 04:15:00 PM »
   
Quote
Originally posted by Hamish:
I read a long long time ago, that the Montana class Battleship was supposed to be the next class after the Iowa Class.

True.

   
Quote
She had been partially built by the end of WW2, and had been scrapped at the end of the war.

False. No Montana class BB had ever its keel laid.

Some stats on the Montana, and line drawing:

Length(O/A) 925'  
Length(W/L) 890'
Beam 121' 2"
Draft(max) 40' 5"


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Displacement


Maximum 73,500 tons
Full Load 70,965 tons
Design 60,500 tons
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Propulsion


Turbines:4 sets Westinghouse geared turbines
Horsepower:172,000 forward
43,000 reverse
Ships Generators:10 x 1,250 KW turbo generators
2 x 500 KW diesels
Shafts:4
Speed:28.0 knts @ 166 rpm
Endurance:15,000 NM @ 15 knts
Bunkerage:7,500 tons oil
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Armor:


Main Side Belt 16.1" STS plate inclined 19 degrees
Inner Side Belt 7.2" inclined 10 degrees
Bulkheads 18" forward,15.25" aft
Deck:total 10.454"
Barbettes:21.3"
18":rear
Turrets:face 18"+4.5"
sides:10"
back:12"
roof:9.15"
Conning Tower 18" sides
7.25" roof
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Armament


Main guns:12 x 16"/50 cal (Mk 7) in 4 triple turrets
2 forward 2 aft
Secondary:20 x 5"/54 cal (Mk 16) in ten twin turrets
5 port 5 starboard
Heavy A/A:80+ x 40mm/56 cal Bofors in 15 quad gun mounts
Light: A/A 60+ x 20mm/70 cal Oerlikons
-----------------------------------------
 


But it was only a design. I like Yamatos the most    

Or a Bismarck    


[This message has been edited by RAM (edited 10-14-2000).]

[This message has been edited by RAM (edited 10-14-2000).]

Offline Hamish

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Montana Class Battleship!
« Reply #3 on: October 14, 2000, 05:44:00 PM »
Beautiful RAM! thx for the drawing, i'm gonna go recheck my site on the internet, i could have sworn i read that her keel had been laid and she'd been at least started before the end of WW2. but Come on now, The Yamato? Granted she had 18" guns, but they didn't have quite the range of U.S. 16" guns (if i remeber right, i could be wrong) And those 4, count em, 4 tri-turrets would eat a yamato for Lunch  

Offline RAM

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« Reply #4 on: October 14, 2000, 06:37:00 PM »
   

I like more the Yamato because they look better, but still beware about them...

Yamato's armor was more than impressive:

Side:
16.14" (410mm)

Deck:
1.3"-1.9" (33-48.3mm) superstructure deck
7.87" (200mm) MNC main deck
7.48" (190mm) MNC main deck (hull #110 & 111)
3.5" (89mm) second deck

Turrets:
25.6" (650mm) faces
15" (381mm) sides

Barbettes:
21.5" (546mm) sides

Conning Tower:
19.5" (495.3mm) sides

WOW :eeks:

Those 18.1'/45 guns had better range than the 16'/50 american guns. Both guns were mounted in triple turrets with a maximum elevation of 45º. At that elevation Yamato's guns had a range of 45,960 yards (42,030 m), while Iowa's guns had a range of  42,345 yards (38,720 m).

Moot point, as none of both were going to strike anything at such distances   .

What is true is that the 16' projectile had the same penetration as the 18.1', due for better AP shape (Japanese shells were optimized to diving underwater hits, damaging its normal AP power).

Anyway, with same penetrations, 16' superheavy AP projectile weighted 2,700 lbs. (1,225 kg), while 18.1' AP projectile weighed 3,219 lb (1,460 kg), and those 500 Lbs are quite a difference   .

As you see...be careful...   Yamatos were SERIOUS problems for a Montana, had the latter have existed.



[This message has been edited by RAM (edited 10-14-2000).]

Offline Dune

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« Reply #5 on: October 14, 2000, 08:03:00 PM »
Actually Ram, if you read the detailed comparison at the Imperial Japanese Navy Page, the Iowa class were actually better and more potent battleships than the Yamoto's.  The page actually has a detailed comparison between all the major BB classes of WW2.  The author's findings show the Iowa to be the best BB of WW2

For instance:

Armor
 
Quote
Suffice it to say that I am surprised as you that Iowa has the most effective belt armor of the lot; I would have bet on Yamato any day. But Iowa's combination of an inclined belt, and a highly effective STS-steel shell plate outboard of the belt (which has just enough resistance to strip the AP cap off of an incoming shell) tips the score in her favor. Richelieu also had this same design, and very good protection as a result. Bismarck, despite the reputation of her side armor, fares very poorly in this category. From a deck armor perspective, Yamato comes out on top, followed closely again by Richelieu and Iowa. Vittorio Veneto is very vulnerable to high-angle fire, and Bismarck is as well. Yamato thus emerges as the best armored of the lot, followed closely by Iowa and Richelieu. This makes perfect sense to me, as Yamato also had the distinction of carrying the only armor plates which were completely impervious to any battleship weapon ever mounted afloat -- her 660mm turret faceplates. She was, indeed, an awesome beast. It makes the American and French feats of achieving protection within a hair as good, on much smaller displacements (particularly the South Dakota, which has the second smallest displacement of the seven warships detailed here), a very impressive feat as well. On the bottom of the heap, Vittorio Veneto and Bismarck were both penalized for their inability to cope with a long-range gun duel. Bismarck also suffered from the poorest belt armor of the lot.

Guns
 
Quote
The Japanese 18.1"/45 reigned supreme as the most destructive piece of naval ordnance ever mounted afloat. However, its ballistic performance was not particularly inspiring, and the performance of its Type 91 shells was inferior to the norm, partly because they were optimized for underwater trajectories 7. Immediately below it in terms of power is the US 16"/50. Good ballistics, and superb shells, give this gun a tremendous whallop, and in combat terms I rate it as the equal of the Japanese weapon, largely because of its shells. Below that, in an upset, comes Richelieu's 15"/45, as the best all-around 15" gun, and feel the most useful in an actual combat situation. The Italian 15"/50 was an enormously potent weapon from a raw power perspective, but it sacrificed a lot in order to achieve that performance, and had decidedly inferior shells. I should note, though, that I am still investigating this particular gun and her shells in more detail; the information available on her shells is rather spotty. Bismarck's 15"/47 shell is 10% lighter than the French and Italian, although her cyclic rate is attractive, and her guns were very accurate. At the bottom of the spectrum, King George V's 14" gun clearly doesn't have nearly the oomph necessary to compete with the rest of these guys.

Fire Control
 
Quote
The bottom line is that, after 1943 or so, having the world's best optical fire-control systems was largely irrelevant. The night battle between Washington and Kirishima near Savo pretty much settled the point; good radar usually beats good optics in a stand-up fight. And the radar used by Washington off of Guadalcanal was not as good as the sets fitted aboard Iowa.6

Then there's the fact that all radar fire-control is not created equal. Radar operating at meter or decimeter wavelengths is useful for ranging, but lacks the angular accuracy necessary for training. In practical terms, this means that a decimetric set can develop a range solution via radar, but must rely on an optical director to supply training information for the battery. This hybrid fire-control solution is, of course, limited by the quality of the optics available, and also by the visual horizon (which is closer than the radar horizon), and weather conditions. Only with the advent of 10cm and (later) 3cm wavelength sets was true 'blindfire' radar fire-control achievable, wherein the firing ship need never come into visual range of the opposing vessel. The Germans, Japanese, and Italians never developed sets of this capability (both the Japanese (despite its 10cm wavelength) and German sets were usable for fire control against a battleship-sized target only out to a range of about 27,000 yards.) The bottom line is, then, that the Allied vessels, and particularly Iowa and South Dakota, would enjoy an enormous advantage in gunfire control over their adversaries. She would have the ability to lob shells over the visual horizon, and would also perform better in complete darkness or adverse weather conditions.

The final adjusted rating also reflects the fact that American FC systems employed by far the most advanced stable vertical elements in the world. In practical terms, this meant that American vessels could keep a solution on a target even when performing radical maneuvers. In 1945 test, an American battleship (the North Carolina) was able to maintain a constant solution even when performing back to back high-speed 450-degree turns, followed by back-to-back 100-degree turns.7 This was a much better performance than other contemporary systems, and gave U.S. battleships a major tactical advantage, in that they could both shoot and maneuver, whereas their opponents could only do one or the other.

General Factors
 
Quote
This category is tremendously subjective. All I am trying to do here is put together at least a rough index of how useful the ship might be tactically (gun platform, speed), and how much raw punishment it could absorb (displacement, damage control). Gun platform is simply a rough index of the beam of the vessel (we'll deal with actual sea-keeping in a later section). In the matter of speed, I am personally of the belief that a fast ship is a nice thing to have, but that speed in general is not a critical deciding factor in the outcome of battles. For the purposes of the rating, I put Iowa at 33 knots and subtracted .5 point per knot from there on down. Damage control is very hard to quantify. American practice, by the end of the war, was simply superb. How much better than the everybody else (especially the French, about whom I don't even have anecdotal evidence) is impossible to say. So I simply took my best guess. The end result was that these ships all scored very close together in terms of an overall rating, which 'feels' right to me. All seven of these ships were large, steady gun platforms which could absorb an enormous amount of punishment. Iowa barely edges Yamato because of her speed and superb damage control. Yamato, though, has the advantage of an enormous displacement. To my mind, for all practical purposes, they are practically the same in their usefulness -- it's largely a matter of preference. All the others display a good blend of factors, but aren't quite in the same league in their ability to absorb damage, largely because of their displacement. The deciding factor in determining their real usefulness and damage-resistance ability becomes their respective protection schemes.

Final Decision
 
Quote
Some discussion is obviously in order here, because my scoring runs counter to some of the established and accepted 'battleship lore' out there. For instance, my scoring indicates that King George V was a pretty close match for Bismarck in a stand-up fight. So, if this was such an even fight, why did Prince of Wales break off her action with Bismarck, instead of just duking it out in a manly fashion? There are a few things to remember in this regard. First; this comparison shows a King George V-class battleship in a late-war configuration equipped with Type 274 radar; a luxury the Prince of Wales did not enjoy in 1940, but which would have been a huge equalizer later in the war. If one assumes British fire control to be equal or slightly inferior to the Germans in 1940, Bismarck starts looking better again. Second; the British had little idea that Bismarck was as tough a low-angle target as she was, and thus closed the range to come to grips with her (which, had she made it that far, also would have reduced Hood's exposure to high-angle deck hits - a vulnerability the British were acutely aware of, and another reason why they tried to close the range with Bismarck as quickly as possible. Unfortunately, they cut their intercept course too fine, and couldn't run the gauntlet before Hood was fatally hit). In retrospect, a ship like King George V is better off fighting Bismarck at long range, where the German ship's own vulnerability to high-angle fire would be heightened. Third, of course, is the fact that Prince of Wales was suffering from teething problems in her main mounts, to put it mildly, and was not getting nearly the output of shells she might have enjoyed in a late-war engagement when all the bugs with the British 14"/45 mount had been worked out. Late-war, at long range, with blindfire radar fire-control, and turrets working, I believe King George V was a decent match for the Bismarck.

Second, I'm saying that South Dakota would have usually whipped the Bismarck. Not only that, but if handled correctly, she ought to have had a better-than-even shot against Yamato, a statement that on the face of it seems absurd! Yamato was fully 27,000+ tons heavier, had much thicker armor, and possessed the largest naval rifles ever mounted afloat. However, the American ship had the world's best fire-control system, a fantastic armor belt, and guns which delivered very large projectiles at high-angle trajectories which could go through thicker deck plates than Yamato's 18.1" shells. Again, fire-control and the ship's fighting instructions become crucial. If the American stays at range (30,000-35,000 yards), she should be able to deliver many more hits to Yamato than she receives in return, because she can both shoot and maneuver (due to her much better stable vertical fire-control system elements). Further, Yamato's internal subdivision is not as good as SoDak's, and American hits are therefore likely to be more damaging than the Japanese. On the other hand, historically the Americans had little idea of Yamato's capabilities, and were likely to have attempted to close the range with her, not knowing the extent of her armoring, or that she was, in fact, armed with truly enormous 18.1" guns, rather than the 16" guns everyone on the American side of the lake assumed was the case. Closing the range with Yamato would likely have resulted in the American ship learning a painful lesson in gunfire supremacy. South Dakota's belt is better than Yamato's (barely), but at close range Yamato's guns have much better penetration. Further, Yamato's secondaries are very powerful, and would have begun to take a possible toll on SoDak's exposed radars and fire-control equipment, which would reduce her advantage in fire-control substantially if disabled. The bottom line is that South Dakota is a boxer, and should maintain her distance from a slugger like Yamato. Under the right circumstances, however, she was perfectly capable of dishing out critical damage to her hulking opponent.

This website also contains the most detailed info on the IJN and some of the best info on the Pacific War that I've ever seen.




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Offline RAM

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Montana Class Battleship!
« Reply #6 on: October 14, 2000, 08:23:00 PM »
The Nihon Kaigun Page, yes I know it and I know that study and comparisons. Interesting, but IMO, very subjective, and very dubious at its best.


For example I can't agree with the armor thing. A 12' belt is a 12' belt, here and in Mars. I'd rather take a 16' vertical belt than a 12' inclined one...why? because shells come upside down...and some angles the penetration will be higher with an inclined belt, bit with others it will be some less. So at some ranges the 12' belt will perform like a 16' one and at other ranges it will perform like a 10' belt!!!!!!

And that study is incomplete and wrong in some things,For instance, it says that KM Bismarck had the worse belt armor of the lot (12'5 inches, it had more than Iowas!!)...but it doesnt say that at small ranges it was virtually impenetrable due the in-depth arrangement of the armor. Remember that in her last fight ,Bismarck was being repeatedly hit with 14' and 16' shells from 2000 yards!!!!, and she refused to go down. It is true that at long ranges its deck armor was lacking (and that the armor arrangement itself left some vital equipment out of the armored citadel), but it is ,again a subjective and dubvious argument.

About guns and shells ,the study says what I said in my previous post, that the Japanese AP shells had a marked lacking in ballistic performance due their commitment in the teory of underwater shell hits. It also says what I say ,that a penetrating 2700lbs hit is a bad thing.But a 3200lbs hit is MUCH worse. And given the armor schemes of both ships, an Iowa has more chances to suffer a penetrating hit than the Yamato.

The lack of objectivity of the author can be clearly seen in this thing, as he first admits that the Yamato has a bigger shell, and then that the 16/50 shell has equal penetrating capability thanks to the excellence of the 16' shell and the defectuous ballistichs of the 18.1' shell.

Then he proceedes to range them as EQUAL?...so the heavier shell with same penetration is the equal of a lighter shell?.

Absurd.

Regarding fire control, I only can agree with this study's conclussions. Allied radar fire control outclassed anything the Axis had, by far. Iowas were considered as Yamato's equals because this feature (as it was the only thing that Iowa did better than Yamato... Iowas were better in nothing else but speed).

But again there are some things not contemplated in the study. Remember that a Radar is a weak thing, and that even a light 5' non penetrating hit can disable the radar set...even the concussion of a hit can disable the set for a while...

So making FC change to optics, where the Japanese relied in a 15metres Rangefinder!!! (the most accurate optics ever mounted on a BB) while the Americans had worse equipment!.

So RFC is a good thing...but it is a feature easy to be knocked out early in the battle. It has a lot of weight but not enough to bring up an Iowa to the Yamato's cathegory.

As I said before I disagree with most conclussions in that study. They give more points to a South Dakota class BB than to the Yamato! and sorry that isn't quite true. SD can give Yamato a hard time, but can't survive an one-on-one standard engagement. Sheesh in her first real fight in Guadalcanal, South Dakota went out of the battle because her electrical system had a breakdown!...

Neither can an Iowa compare with a Yamato. Both, SD and Iowa can get lucky, but most of the time in a one on one battle, the Yamato will be the last ship afloat...In a Bad shape, sure, but still afloat.

I regard the Montanas as the historical match for the Yamatos. Iowas were near, but not in parity. And South Dakotas were an achievement for their displacements. But not near the "super BB" cathegory.

The best BB built ever, was , IMHO and with no doubt, IJN's BB Yamato and Mushashi.


[This message has been edited by RAM (edited 10-15-2000).]

Offline J_A_B

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Montana Class Battleship!
« Reply #7 on: October 14, 2000, 08:57:00 PM »
I love battleships!

That "Montana" class BB drawing looks aewsome, almost as good as the Bismarck.  (IMO Bismarck is best looking BB ever made, even though firepower poor)

I think the confusion over whether these Montana-class ships had their keel laid, is caused because several IOWA-class BB's which had been started but were cancelled and scrapped.

As for the comparison....YAMATO has really good armor...but the IOWA-class ships were faster.  Speed is important.   As for the poor showing of the Bismarck?   Of course it didn't look too good, it was an older design  intended largely for commerce raiding--which it was designed for very well.  It would have been better to compare it to North Carolina-class battleships and earlier Japanese designs.

Those Japanese superships took a LOT of punishment, particularily the Musashi (or however the heck its spelled).   Something like 20 torpedoes and several dozen bombs.  Even then, it took a long time to sink.  I am not sure that ANY single battleship could sink this mofo before being turned into a pile of slag by those 18-inchers.  Of course, most other modern battleships could simply have run away.

Bismarck was the best of its day.  Brand new, barely out of trials, and smashed up the Royal Navy in a two on one duel.  Later destroyed because of a chance torpedo hit and the fact that its gunners hadn't slept in almost a week.

IOWA-class battleships were also lethal, and FAST too.  "Fast Battleships".  Wisconsin proved to be a real asset in the gulf war.  Missle cruisers fired off their missles and had to return to port to re-arm.  Wisconsin fired its Tomahawks, then cruised up to the coast and let loose with those 16-inchers.  The Iraqis actually surrendered to the spotter plane on several occasions, rather than face those big guns.

Who said guns are obsolete?      

North Carolins-class battleship Washington turned Japenese BB Kirishima into molten junk in the pacific's only 1 on 1 BB duel.

South Dakota had the distinction of going dead in the water and still evading something like 30 torpedoes earlier in that same battle.


Come to think of it....navies are cool.

Too bad all the naval games are boring.   PT's should be fun.


J_A_B

P.S.    Will "bailing out" of a PT leave you swimming in shark-infested waters?


Offline Vosper

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« Reply #8 on: October 14, 2000, 10:06:00 PM »
 
Quote
Originally posted by J_A_B:

P.S.    Will "bailing out" of a PT leave you swimming in shark-infested waters?

Yes, but if you "open chute" in time, a life raft will appear and you get an "abandoned ship successfully" message.  

(j/k, but I sure hope the PT boats have some sort of safe abandon ship routine)

Offline flakbait

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Montana Class Battleship!
« Reply #9 on: October 14, 2000, 10:40:00 PM »
Bismark Comparison


I'm sending this page, along with a case of Chivas Regal, to Pyro. Maybe we'll get lucky and he will throw her in!



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Offline Hamish

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« Reply #10 on: October 14, 2000, 11:10:00 PM »
WoW, Love the great responses to my "fun" post, you guys are great!!
Dune: I'v got that page bookmarked too, and it is pretty good info, forgot about it when i was playing around looking for info on the "Montana"

RAM: I have to disagree with you on the "Best" bb of the war being the Yamato. It was an impressive, beautiful ship, do not get me wrong, but i think the Iowa class would have had taken her in a 1 vs.1

i found this comparing the liklihood of a 1 vs. 1 between the yamato and Montana:

 
Quote
Never-the-less, the Montanas were a magnificent design. The American 16in/50 gun was probably the best battleship gun ever produced. It threw the super heavy 2700lb armor piercing shell 42,345 yards. For comparison, the Japanese 18.1in/45 gun threw a 3200lb armor piercing shell 45,960 yards. The American gun weighed less, allowing the Montanas to carry 12 of them, for a broadside weight of 32,400lbs. The Yamatos could only carry nine of the 18.1in guns on a similar size hull with similar armor and speed. Yamato's broadside weight was 28,800lbs. The Montanas were the only battleships seriously proposed that out gunned the Yamatos.

Montana's new 5in/54 DP secondary guns were superior in range and striking power to the older 5in/38. Her AA battery was well laid out with good arcs of fire for the guns. And the 40mm Bofors was better than anything the Japanese Navy had. All in all, her light battery was superior to Yamato's. Naturally, more AA guns would have been added as a result of wartime experience, as they were to all battleships.

In terms of armor, Montana and Yamato were protected to similar standards. The quality of American armor was reputed to be somewhat higher than Japanese armor, but there can be no doubt that both classes were very well protected. The Montanas were protected against their own 2700 lb shells between 18,000 and 31,000 yards (these figures from Norman Friedman's book U.S. Battleships, the definitive source of information about the design of all classes of U.S. battleships). No other American battleships were adequately immune to the 16in, 2700lb shell (or the 18.1in, 3200lb shell).

For the first time, with the Montanas, modern U.S. battleships would have had adequate underwater protection. The greater beam, coupled with a reversion to a scheme similar to that of the North Carolinas, at last provided U.S. battleships with decent protection against torpedo attack. Underwater shell hits were also taken into account.

U.S. fire control was very good, and with the advent of radar control, it completely outpaced that of the axis nations. However, the great 15 meter rangefinders of the Yamato class still represented the last word in optical design afloat.

How would the Montanas have compared to their potential adversaries? I think it is clear from the information above that they would have been the best all around battleships in the world. With more and better guns than any European battleship, and equal or better armor, they would be expected to win any one on one engagement. Only the two Japanese Yamato class giants would be serious contenders.

Compared to the Yamatos, the Montanas would have been similar in size, speed and armor protection. They were slightly superior in broadside weight, and far superior in range. The Japanese optical fire control was potentially the best in the world, the American radar fire control better yet. Any duel between a Montana and a Yamato would probably have been decided by unforeseen factors or advanced technology rather than the inherent design of either ship.

Having taken all the above into consideration, I am still left with the belief that the Montanas, had they been built, would have ultimately proven to be both the best all around battleships ever built, and the heavyweight champions in any shoot out.


I really like the broadside comparison in this document, those 3 extra guns would have been telling to say the least. So, back to my original topic, we have a "late War" sim here, and with all the rumors of "X" plane that was never actually in production becoming a "perk plane" (all wishful thinking, really)

Why not the Montana as a "perk" battleship then?    


Can't wait for this:

     


[This message has been edited by Hamish (edited 10-14-2000).]

Offline RAM

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« Reply #11 on: October 15, 2000, 05:46:00 AM »
OOOOOOOOOKAY       answer time      

     
Quote
Originally posted by J_A_B:
That "Montana" class BB drawing looks aewsome, almost as good as the Bismarck.  (IMO Bismarck is best looking BB ever made, even though firepower poor)

I agree on the looks, I disagree on the firepower thing. Bismarck 14.96' gun was one of the best naval guns fielded in WWII due its accuracy and muzzle speed. They were optimized for short range encounters (as everything was in Bismarck), but it packed quite a punch.

As for the comparison....YAMATO has really good armor...but the IOWA-class ships were faster.  Speed is important.

well, Sorry, that is wrong. In history we have seen endless examples of it. Remember Jutland? three British fast battlecruisers blewed up there due the lack of armor compared with their german counterparts that sacrificed firepower for more armor...Speed is an important tactical asset, but armor is a BASSIC survability asset. There is no use in fielding the fastest ship in the world if with the first hit is going go be slowed down, or blown up.

Italian ships relied in speed instead of armor...with the result that in a battle where 2 italian CAs engaged ONE british CA and 3 DDs, one italian cruiser went down (the Bartolomeo Colleoni),for no losses in the British side.

The speed in Iowa allowed her to have the impressive career she have had, because at 30 knots she can serve well first as Carrier escort and then as fast intervention force. But it gave her nothing really serious regarging the BB's main task in WWII, that is, to engage and kill the enemy BBs.

  As for the poor showing of the Bismarck?   Of course it didn't look too good, it was an older design  intended largely for commerce raiding--which it was designed for very well.  It would have been better to compare it to North Carolina-class battleships and earlier Japanese designs.

Hummm...poor showing?...well I can go in deep here, but lets say only that it was an outdated design by any means. It was IMHO the best looking warship ever, but it had abysmal design faults.

BTW Bismarcks were NOT designed with commerce raiding in mind, but for tie down RN ships in the North Sea. The Raider BB in Kriegsmarine (as seen in the Z-plan) was to be the H-class BB, that it would've had Diesel propulsion to get the best endurance possible, and was to be LESS armoured than Bismarck in some spots. Bismarcks were designed to be a continuous menace in the Nort Sea and so make the RN keep valuable ships to keep an eye on them.

Those Japanese superships took a LOT of punishment, particularily the Musashi (or however the heck its spelled).   Something like 20 torpedoes and several dozen bombs.  Even then, it took a long time to sink.  I am not sure that ANY single battleship could sink this mofo before being turned into a pile of slag by those 18-inchers.  Of course, most other modern battleships could simply have run away.

I agree on the damage. I disagree again about the speed. Musashi was attacked by Halsey's fleet air forces, and NO ship, regardless its speed can run away from a plane...even if it want to run away.

Musashi was part of a Task force aimed at Leyte gulf to destroy US invasion forces. They were pressing forward the attack against all odds. Be sure that no plane, BB, or natural force would've stopped those ships until they were all sunk.

Same happened with Yamato's last sortie. She was heading towards Okinawa even when it capsized.

Bismarck was the best of its day.  Brand new, barely out of trials, and smashed up the Royal Navy in a two on one duel.  Later destroyed because of a chance torpedo hit and the fact that its gunners hadn't slept in almost a week.

Bismarck was possibly the worse design in WWII...only comparable with Scharnhorsts. It displaced 52.000 tons at full displacement, and stil had only a 12.5' belt, while British KGV displaced some 40.000 tons ad had a 16' belt!!!.

Bismarck had a very badly designed armor layout, it had no all-or-nothing scheme, and left vital things out of the armor (VITAL electric cabling was out of the armored citadel making it vulnerable even for a 5' gun!!!).
Its main armored deck was 1.5m UNDER The waterline at full displacement, meaning that flooding because hits was going to be a SERIOUS problem in any battle.
It had good speed, yes, but a triple shaft arrangement that made impossible to steer the ship without the assistance of the rudders (leading to the final death of the ship due its incapacity to steer).
It had ,too, very weak hortizontal armor, rending her vulnerable to long range plungin fire. But she was a ship designed to fight at close ranges, not long ranges.
It was grossly overweighed, and had a serious nose heavyness. the A-turret rangefinder had to be dismantled (and was sold to the Soviets, BTW), to make the nose weight to be a bit lower. Still it was very  nose-heavy and the hit in the bows by the PoW in Denmark Straits only worsened the situation (if you have seen any photos of the ship after the battle, the bows are clearly low over the water).

BTW after Denmark straits, and after suffering "only" three 14' hits, Bismarck's top speed was reduced to 20 knots. Another proof that ships can be slowed down VERY fast    

It seems to have had, too, a very badly designed control system for the turrets, because a single 16' hit from Rodney disabled BOTH fore turrets in Bismarck early in its last engagement.
And it had bad sea endurance, its fuel comssumption was quite high for a ship used in the comerce raiding role.(even when it was NOT designed with this task in mind)

Sure, it had 8 state of the art naval guns. Sure, it blew up Hood (although there is much debate about this, there are people denying this with other plausible theories). But Hood was a Golden-twinkee hit, one in a thousand. Out of 10 engagements between Bis and P.E. with Hood and PoW, be sure that 9 out of ten are going to be in the british side.

IOWA-class battleships were also lethal, and FAST too.  "Fast Battleships".

A fast battleship is more usable in a modern environment than a "slow" one. In WWII 27 knots for a battleship was more than enough. Yamato's speed was 27 knots (N.Carolinas and S.Dakotas' were 28 knots).


North Carolins-class battleship Washington turned Japenese BB Kirishima into molten junk in the pacific's only 1 on 1 BB duel.

Ohhh come on, was a TWO on one BB encounter. Even Kirishima wasn't exactly a BB!!!!! (it had 9 inch armored belt, and its armor was that of a WWI British battlecruiser!, as it was bassicaly an enlarged and modernized Tiger).

Compare, one 1914 built BC with 9' belt, 8x14' guns and no idea that two US BBs are nearby, with TWO 1941 built BBs with 12-13' belts and 9x16/45 guns, Radar, and the exact picture of the Japanese force incoming.

This is not a one on one BB scenario, this is a massacre      

     
Quote
Originally posted by Hamish:
RAM: I have to disagree with you on the "Best" bb of the war being the Yamato. It was an impressive, beautiful ship, do not get me wrong, but i think the Iowa class would have had taken her in a 1 vs.1

And I have to disagree with you      . It should be a close call, but in the end what matters is Yamato's better firepower, armor, and buoyancy. Iowa can win, say, 3 out of 10 encounters, but Yamato will win the other 7.

The only ace in the Iowa's side is its radar Fire Control...but it can go out with a single hit and then the advantage is gone, and her optics aren't that good compared with Yamato's   .

Speed is a tactical asset, but if you are going to stay and fight, what matters is pure firepower and armor. And Yamato is the ruler in both.

Sorry, Yamatos were best BBs. Iowas were more versatile, but a WWII BB's task, the task for Iowas and Yamatos were designed was to slug it out with the enemy Battleships, not to escort carriers.
And in that task, the Yamato is quite better than Iowa.

About a Montana, as I said, it is a match for Yamato. I can't range them as equal, mostly because Montanas are only drawings on papers...and usually ships end being worse than scheduled.

If Montana was to be built with the exact figures about its armor, speed and displacement, then I agree that they'd been superior than Yamatos.

But that is a what-if...Yamatos were built, Montanas weren't      


BTW, I like this pic more    

     


[This message has been edited by RAM (edited 10-15-2000).]

[This message has been edited by RAM (edited 10-16-2000).]

Offline Hamish

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Montana Class Battleship!
« Reply #12 on: October 15, 2000, 06:33:00 AM »
Wheee! i love this   Still drooling over that pic RAM, I have been looking for that particular one for a long time , thanks for "finding" it for me  
 
Okay, Sticking to my guns here on the Iowa thing, look back at Dune's post to the section on fire control, i'll quote the important section:

 
Quote
Originally posted by Dune:
The final adjusted rating also reflects the fact that American FC systems employed by far the most advanced stable vertical elements in the world. In practical terms, this meant that American vessels could keep a solution on a target even when performing radical maneuvers. In 1945 test, an American battleship (the North Carolina) was able to maintain a constant solution even when performing back to back high-speed 450-degree turns, followed by back-to-back 100-degree turns.7 This was a much better performance than other contemporary systems, and gave U.S. battleships a major tactical advantage, in that they could both shoot and maneuver, whereas their opponents could only do one or the other.

In My job in the Navy, I shoot large caliber Guns for a living, and Seriously, It doesn't matter if you have the largest size warhead in the world, if you cannot maintain a FCS (Fire Control Solution), You are useless. So, with the IOWA's Distinct advantage here, she could foul Yamato's aim with manuevers, while pounding the hell out of her  

Love my new wallpaper courtesy of RAM  

P.S. Glad your O.K. bud, just read about your accident.


Hamish!


[This message has been edited by Hamish (edited 10-15-2000).]

Offline RAM

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Montana Class Battleship!
« Reply #13 on: October 15, 2000, 07:52:00 AM »
 
Quote
Originally posted by Hamish:
In My job in the Navy, I shoot large caliber Guns for a living, and Seriously, It doesn't matter if you have the largest size warhead in the world, if you cannot maintain a FCS (Fire Control Solution), You are useless. So, with the IOWA's Distinct advantage here, she could foul Yamato's aim with manuevers, while pounding the hell out of her    

  Hamish, you'd have a point here...but happens that the test with North Carolina in 1945 happened in LATE 1945, November IIRC...and WWII was over by then.  

Before that, the tactics with Battleship were the same as allways, keep a steady course with only minor heading variations. So in WWII the advanced tracking ability of Iowas would've been only a limited advantage  .

And anyway to find a range with a 15 meter Rangefinder is not that tough   remember, Japanese optics industry was the best of its time, ever better than German's, and US optic quality was under Germany's.

With no radar control and conventional tactics, Fire Control is on Yamato's side, not Iowa's  

Love my new wallpaper courtesy of RAM    

  glad you liked it, is one of my favorite photos  

P.S. Glad your O.K. bud, just read about your accident.

Thank you a lot. I am still a bit affected by it, but I hope this will pass soon  


Offline SKurj

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Montana Class Battleship!
« Reply #14 on: October 15, 2000, 09:54:00 AM »
If HT has to worry about about ship modelling to this kinda detail, guess we can forget seeing AC updates....


SKurj