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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII

 
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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 2:38:38 PM   
Apollo11


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Hi all,

quote:

ORIGINAL: Dili

Yes Italians first and then Germans and it included DD fire also it is not the same as firng in a moving ship. i have to search Morrison but it think they were only a couple of miles from Coast. Not long range.

Here is a discussion about the not glowing results of BB fire against Coastal Guns which as everybody knows it is a fixed target.

http://www.worldaffairsboard.com/battleships-forum/44677-16-guns-vs-hard-targets-reality-check.html

In short my conclusion is that at long range, the perennial luck still have a big saying in clear daytime, Radar or no Radar.


Very interesting read at the link - thanks!


Leo "Apollo11"

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Prior Preparation & Planning Prevents Pathetically Poor Performance!

A & B: WitW, WitE, WbtS, GGWaW, GGWaW2-AWD, HttR, CotA, BftB, CF
P: UV, WitP, WitP-AE

(in reply to Dili)
Post #: 421
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 2:59:35 PM   
JWE

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Tiornu
Yes, I think you must be right in that no one was going over rivets with a magnifying glass. However, there were problems matching the hull sections. If this is of sufficient interest, I can try to find a direct quote.

I would appreciate it muchly. very interested in this.
quote:

ORIGINAL: mikemike
This is a bit overstated. The workforce was experienced enough, but low on body count, which slowed construction. They may have been demoralized, but I imagine the Gestapo may have compensated for that. The air threat was considerable, of course, that is why much of the section work was shifted to bunkers. Most section yards escaped being targeted for bombing, anyway, because they had nothing showing on the slips anymore. An interesting detail in this context is that, when sections were assembled, this was done by four welders simultaneously, evenly distributed around the circumference of the hull, and that the welding process was not to be interrupted for any reason, even under air attack.

I can certainly understand that. Interruptions cause distortion. A bad thing, iirc.
quote:


Sections were, as I've said, designated for specific boats from the start. There wasn't normally any mixing/matching, except when sections were destroyed by bombing.

I also don't believe in poorly-made components on a large scale. The section yards were responsible for delivering only sections that were up to specifications, meaning they had to do extra remedial work when supplied with substandard components or the section wouldn't have been accepted by the relevant team of the War Production Ministry.

Sections were not misaligned as such on assembly, proper (longitudinal) alignment was very carefully checked by optical measuring methods. However, if the diameters of the sections differed too much, the methods used to adapt the sections to each other might well have weakened the structure.

This is the part I’m interested in. You can have two problems with cylindrical section components; lateral distortion out of the bond plane, and diameter mismatch. There’s ways of compensating for both but the integrity of the seams just ain’t quite the same. I would really like to know how they solved this; or did they?
quote:


I agree that the Type XXI program would have progressed smoother and faster if the section yards had built the whole section by themselves, but the planning called for building rates that couldn't have been achieved in that way, so some subassembly was farmed out to subcontractors. This is still a risk even today, witness the Boeing 787 troubles.

Not just Boeing. pretty common problem in modular shipbuilding today. maybe why everybody has gone to the extrusion method.


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Post #: 422
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 6:27:11 PM   
JWE

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: Nikademus
I'm still curious about the why behind the hydraulics placement. Is there any info regarding this?

I think mikemike’s comments on this are perfect.
quote:

ORIGINAL: mikemike
3) Impractical Hydraulic system.

This was the first type using hydraulics, earlier boats were mainly electric, but the higher rudder forces at higher underwater speeds could better be handled by hydraulic actuators; in addition, this saved copper. The system was overly complex at first, but was considerably simplified following trials and gave no trouble afterwards. The only essential part outside the pressure hull was the actuating system for the forward dive planes; these were, another first for German subs, retractable, and for simplicity the whole mechanism was copied from the Dutch O25 class. Rudder/Stern planes were actuated by hydraulic rams inside the pressure hull via rods. I respectfully suggest that the system may have seemed "too complex and delicate" to US crews of the time where engineering officers didn't always have engineering backgrounds but may not have posed any particular problems to German engineering staff.

You have to have a thru-hull somewhere, and it doesn’t make sense to put the mechanism outside, and thru-hull the command link. There are so many dissimilar materials in the mechanism, including the fluid itself, that it would be a corrosion nightmare.

If you have to have a thru-hull, the only thing that makes sense is a port for the actuators; mechanism stays inside the pressure hull, and actuators (electrolytically inert wrt to the hull and fitting contact surfaces) link to the blades.

Also agree with his suggestions about the lack of experience and comprehension of our investigators. The forces associated with rigging out bow planes and controlling your blades (bow planes and rudders) at high speed in 25 atmospheres of water pressure weren’t that well understood.

Just mho. Looking at this practically, don’t have any references, just gut feel.


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Post #: 423
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 6:57:04 PM   
Tiornu

 

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quote:

I'm still curious about the why behind the hydraulics placement. Is there any info regarding this?

If the writer from the NTM is to be believed, the system looked like the designers just didn't know what they were doing. I suspect haste was the culprit--initial work was bad, leading to a procession of remedial alterations that could only improve but not correct the fundamental errors.

quote:

Also are there any real examples of long range gunnery by US ships against other ships in 43,44,45?

Truk was the best example. The shooting against Nowaki was quite good, even though no hits were scored. But it is possible to get carried away with extrapolations that lack a substantial basis. The NTM report on Japanese FC is available online for everybody to see. The Americans concluded that Japanese systems were good, not quite as good as USN systems, lacking mostly in its radar capability. If radar functions properly without interference, you might get about 25% more hits. So in our inescapable Yamato-v-Iowa ramblings, can Iowa stand three 46cm hits as well as Yamato can stand four 16in hits?

(in reply to Nikademus)
Post #: 424
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:12:50 PM   
Tiornu

 

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quote:

I would appreciate it muchly. very interested in this.

All right, I found the following quotes. They're from Henry Schade, a member of the NTM in Europe. You may want to track down his article that appeared in the Transactions of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, Vol 54, 1946--in fact, I'm certain you'll want to see it because it spends several pages covering the entire Type XXI construction process. As a bonus, you'll also find articles on turbine development and ice-breaker design.
"In an effort to meet the unrealistic quotas, the section yards and the fitting yards would move assemblies along to the next yard in an uncompleted status which served only to magnify the troubles and eventually cause delays at the assembly yards waiting for the missing items. Because of difficulties of the inexperienced structural plants in producing sections within tolerance, the assembly yards tried to reshuffle sections to get a better match, and some confusion and inefficiency thereby resulted."

(in reply to JWE)
Post #: 425
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:13:01 PM   
Nikademus


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Thx to both ya'all.....(JWE/MikeMike)



quote:

ORIGINAL: JWE

quote:

ORIGINAL: Nikademus
I'm still curious about the why behind the hydraulics placement. Is there any info regarding this?

I think mikemike’s comments on this are perfect.
quote:

ORIGINAL: mikemike
3) Impractical Hydraulic system.

This was the first type using hydraulics, earlier boats were mainly electric, but the higher rudder forces at higher underwater speeds could better be handled by hydraulic actuators; in addition, this saved copper. The system was overly complex at first, but was considerably simplified following trials and gave no trouble afterwards. The only essential part outside the pressure hull was the actuating system for the forward dive planes; these were, another first for German subs, retractable, and for simplicity the whole mechanism was copied from the Dutch O25 class. Rudder/Stern planes were actuated by hydraulic rams inside the pressure hull via rods. I respectfully suggest that the system may have seemed "too complex and delicate" to US crews of the time where engineering officers didn't always have engineering backgrounds but may not have posed any particular problems to German engineering staff.

You have to have a thru-hull somewhere, and it doesn’t make sense to put the mechanism outside, and thru-hull the command link. There are so many dissimilar materials in the mechanism, including the fluid itself, that it would be a corrosion nightmare.

If you have to have a thru-hull, the only thing that makes sense is a port for the actuators; mechanism stays inside the pressure hull, and actuators (electrolytically inert wrt to the hull and fitting contact surfaces) link to the blades.

Also agree with his suggestions about the lack of experience and comprehension of our investigators. The forces associated with rigging out bow planes and controlling your blades (bow planes and rudders) at high speed in 25 atmospheres of water pressure weren’t that well understood.

Just mho. Looking at this practically, don’t have any references, just gut feel.




< Message edited by Nikademus -- 5/1/2009 7:14:15 PM >


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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:14:55 PM   
Tiornu

 

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Hey, do I get a gold watch and maybe a pension when I reach a thousand posts?

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:15:33 PM   
Nikademus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Tiornu

Hey, do I get a gold watch and maybe a pension when I reach a thousand posts?


No. you get a gold star!



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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:16:18 PM   
Nikademus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Tiornu

quote:

I would appreciate it muchly. very interested in this.

All right, I found the following quotes. They're from Henry Schade, a member of the NTM in Europe. You may want to track down his article that appeared in the Transactions of the Society of Naval Architects and Marine Engineers, Vol 54, 1946--in fact, I'm certain you'll want to see it because it spends several pages covering the entire Type XXI construction process. As a bonus, you'll also find articles on turbine development and ice-breaker design.
"In an effort to meet the unrealistic quotas, the section yards and the fitting yards would move assemblies along to the next yard in an uncompleted status which served only to magnify the troubles and eventually cause delays at the assembly yards waiting for the missing items. Because of difficulties of the inexperienced structural plants in producing sections within tolerance, the assembly yards tried to reshuffle sections to get a better match, and some confusion and inefficiency thereby resulted."


so it would seem that the rush rush part is the primary culprit.


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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:25:54 PM   
witpqs


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Tiornu

If radar functions properly without interference, you might get about 25% more hits. So in our inescapable Yamato-v-Iowa ramblings, can Iowa stand three 46cm hits as well as Yamato can stand four 16in hits?


Does this account for any differences in rate of fire? Would you comment on penetration likelihood 46cm on Iowa versus 16in on Yamato?

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Post #: 430
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:28:48 PM   
Nikademus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: JWE

You have to have a thru-hull somewhere, and it doesn’t make sense to put the mechanism outside, and thru-hull the command link. There are so many dissimilar materials in the mechanism, including the fluid itself, that it would be a corrosion nightmare.

If you have to have a thru-hull, the only thing that makes sense is a port for the actuators; mechanism stays inside the pressure hull, and actuators (electrolytically inert wrt to the hull and fitting contact surfaces) link to the blades.

Also agree with his suggestions about the lack of experience and comprehension of our investigators. The forces associated with rigging out bow planes and controlling your blades (bow planes and rudders) at high speed in 25 atmospheres of water pressure weren’t that well understood.

Just mho. Looking at this practically, don’t have any references, just gut feel.



If we go with the above, it would seem to suggest that Blair was being a tad bit misleading as his paragraph leads the reader to believe that multiple major aspects of the H. system were all located outside the pressure hull.


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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:32:22 PM   
Apollo11


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Hi all,

quote:

ORIGINAL: Tiornu

The NTM report on Japanese FC is available online for everybody to see. The Americans concluded that Japanese systems were good, not quite as good as USN systems, lacking mostly in its radar capability. If radar functions properly without interference, you might get about 25% more hits. So in our inescapable Yamato-v-Iowa ramblings, can Iowa stand three 46cm hits as well as Yamato can stand four 16in hits?


Great to read your excellent comments here again "Tiornu"!

But I would add something more... the "on paper" capability and actual "in combat" capabilities are often very different things... we only need to look at IJN (and Yamato) performance in the "Battle of the Leyte Gulf"... absolutely terrible gunnery...


Leo "Apollo11"

_____________________________



Prior Preparation & Planning Prevents Pathetically Poor Performance!

A & B: WitW, WitE, WbtS, GGWaW, GGWaW2-AWD, HttR, CotA, BftB, CF
P: UV, WitP, WitP-AE

(in reply to Tiornu)
Post #: 432
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:34:25 PM   
Terminus


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True to a certain extent, but the force was also let down terribly by Kurita, who abandoned control of the Battle of Samar the instant it began, with his "general attack" order.

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Post #: 433
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:37:24 PM   
Terminus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Tiornu

Hey, do I get a gold watch and maybe a pension when I reach a thousand posts?


Sure you do. I've got 28 gold watches... It was 32, but Matrix made me give four of them back.

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:39:40 PM   
witpqs


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus


quote:

ORIGINAL: Tiornu

Hey, do I get a gold watch and maybe a pension when I reach a thousand posts?


Sure you do. I've got 28 gold watches... It was 32, but Matrix made me give four of them back.


Don't believe him, Tiornu. All he got was that tattoo of Dr. Phil on the back of his head!

(in reply to Terminus)
Post #: 435
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:40:31 PM   
Apollo11


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Hi all,

quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus

True to a certain extent, but the force was also let down terribly by Kurita, who abandoned control of the Battle of Samar the instant it began, with his "general attack" order.


True... but if we leave the higher command asides for now it always puzzled me that, for example, Yamato in the "Battle of the Leyte Gulf" did so poorly... the Yamato was big, stable gun platform and with tall superstructure with best possible elevation for rangefinders and fire control (and Japanese had good optics)... so... what went so terribly wrong in those hours where, by any objective analysis, the battle should have been simple "shooting the fish in the barrel" - the Yamato was, after all, made for such thing and had years to train for the event...


Leo "Apollo11"

_____________________________



Prior Preparation & Planning Prevents Pathetically Poor Performance!

A & B: WitW, WitE, WbtS, GGWaW, GGWaW2-AWD, HttR, CotA, BftB, CF
P: UV, WitP, WitP-AE

(in reply to Terminus)
Post #: 436
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:50:39 PM   
Dili

 

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quote:

Truk was the best example. The shooting against Nowaki was quite good, even though no hits were scored. But it is possible to get carried away with extrapolations that lack a substantial basis. The NTM report on Japanese FC is available online for everybody to see. The Americans concluded that Japanese systems were good, not quite as good as USN systems, lacking mostly in its radar capability. If radar functions properly without interference, you might get about 25% more hits. So in our inescapable Yamato-v-Iowa ramblings, can Iowa stand three 46cm hits as well as Yamato can stand four 16in hits?


Thanks Tiornu. No one would be confortable with that odds. Any of those 3 rounds can take out the radar(s).


I have seen instances where ships hit and instances where they just can't hit because of luck. Example Japanese Cruisers in fight against Abda cruisers hit and spent a big amount of amno to sink a merchant. That also happened with British.

(in reply to Apollo11)
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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:51:10 PM   
Nikademus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Apollo11

True... but if we leave the higher command asides for now it always puzzled me that, for example, Yamato in the "Battle of the Leyte Gulf" did so poorly... the Yamato was big, stable gun platform and with tall superstructure with best possible elevation for rangefinders and fire control (and Japanese had good optics)... so... what went so terribly wrong in those hours where, by any objective analysis, the battle should have been simple "shooting the fish in the barrel" - the Yamato was, after all, made for such thing and had years to train for the event...


Leo "Apollo11"


Battles are never "simple." Yamato was designed to fight a traditional surface battle between her opposites which would be steaming in such a way as to attempt to do onto her as she would do in return. Taffy 3 was running away from the fight, using any cover and means to evade. Kurita's "General Chase" order caused additional problems leaving the heavy ships essentially unscreened and vulnerable to interference (which was provided in the form of surface escort and growing air attack) Add to that the fact that Kurita's force had been recently exposed to incessant attacks for Halsey's TF and the crews were no doubt exhausted from that experience. Thus you have the "paper" fight which only considers warship stats, and a real life situation. In my personal opinion, Kurita was most to blame for what transpired.


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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:51:18 PM   
Tiornu

 

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quote:

No. you get a gold star!

Hm. Can I pawn that?

quote:

so it would seem that the rush rush part is the primary culprit.

Definitely. It goes without saying that the boats were not designed to have tolerance issues.

quote:

Does this account for any differences in rate of fire?

I don't know that there would be any significant difference in RoF between Yamato and Iowa. The designed firing cycle for Yamato is available online, so I don't need to go into that. Basically Yamato can fire once every 30-45 seconds apart from any delays for spotting etc. In theory, Iowa can fire 2.5 rpm at ultra-short range, but at anything past 10,000 yards, the numbers look more like Yamato's. For example, at 30,000 yards, a rate of 1 rpm was anticipated. If we take out the need for spotting and go for rapid fire, we can up that to 1.22 rpm. In other words, the available data doesn't indicate any RoF advantage for Iowa.

quote:

Would you comment on penetration likelihood 46cm on Iowa versus 16in on Yamato?

I will say only that Iowa has no Immune Zone to 46cm fire. Yamato does have an IZ whose outer edge can be brought in as close as 30,000 yards if Iowa uses the reduced velocity that her guns were capable of (that is, firing as though they were 45cal guns). I don't know how to gauge the likelihood of Iowa's crew attempting this, but I can say it was not entirely fanciful. You can use the penetration tables at http://www.geocities.com/kop_mic/ , but these do not account for angled armor. You may want to go ahead and do your only calcuations using Nathan Okun's formulae.

(in reply to witpqs)
Post #: 439
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:52:02 PM   
Nikademus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus


quote:

ORIGINAL: Tiornu

Hey, do I get a gold watch and maybe a pension when I reach a thousand posts?


Sure you do. I've got 28 gold watches... It was 32, but Matrix made me give four of them back.


Only SPAMers like you get gold watches.


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Post #: 440
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:58:53 PM   
Terminus


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Jelous...

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 7:59:12 PM   
witpqs


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Apollo11


True... but if we leave the higher command asides for now it always puzzled me that, for example, Yamato in the "Battle of the Leyte Gulf" did so poorly... the Yamato was big, stable gun platform and with tall superstructure with best possible elevation for rangefinders and fire control (and Japanese had good optics)... so... what went so terribly wrong in those hours where, by any objective analysis, the battle should have been simple "shooting the fish in the barrel" - the Yamato was, after all, made for such thing and had years to train for the event...


Leo "Apollo11"


I've always wondered that too. I know that some (maybe a bunch?) of big caliber rounds went clean through DD's and CVE's without exploding and maybe they would have been killers. Still, 4 battleships, a bunch of very fearsome cruisers...

Especially since at the battle of Savo Island a group of cruisers practically executed allied cruisers. Every account I have ever read of Samar I have always had the feeling that the IJN cruisers and BB's should have hit better.

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 8:02:54 PM   
Tiornu

 

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quote:

All he got was that tattoo of Dr. Phil on the back of his head!

Ooh, dag! Can I get one of them? It'll match the one I have on my....well, it'll match. That's all I'm saying.

quote:

Yamato in the "Battle of the Leyte Gulf" did so poorly

I caution against relying on the Samar example. First, we can't say how much the performance reflects the design, how much reflects crew performance, and how much reflects luck and the particulars of that setting. We do know that the crew sufferd from a lack of gunnery practice. What we don't know is how well Yamato actually did. Rob Lundgren is working on an analysis of the battle using Japanese sources including the action reports, and his initial impression is that Yamato actually did better than she's generally credited with. You may know Rob from his essay in the latest Warship International in which he analyzes the hits on SoDak, shows that SoDak actually scored a couple hits in the battle, etc.
On the matter of the "General Attack" order, I no longer have anything negative to say about it. Upon further review, it may well have been the right move. Was there anything else that would have forced the Americans to turn away from the wind as quickly?

(in reply to witpqs)
Post #: 443
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 8:04:06 PM   
Nikademus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus

Jelous...


Actually i think Tiornu should get a gold watch for finally learning how to use the 'quote' feature.


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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 8:05:51 PM   
Nikademus


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when and where will the article come out?



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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 8:12:03 PM   
Tiornu

 

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quote:

Actually i think Tiornu should get a gold watch for finally learning how to use the 'quote' feature.

The friendly nurse showed me how to use it when she brought me my happy calm pills.

quote:

when and where will the article come out?

It is out now in the latest issue (Vol 45, No 4) which arrived a week or two ago. By the way, if anyone wants a mound of WIs dating back to 1974 (an almost complete run from that date), I picked up a load of spares and I'm selling them.

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Post #: 446
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 8:13:16 PM   
witpqs


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Tiornu

quote:

Would you comment on penetration likelihood 46cm on Iowa versus 16in on Yamato?

I will say only that Iowa has no Immune Zone to 46cm fire. Yamato does have an IZ whose outer edge can be brought in as close as 30,000 yards if Iowa uses the reduced velocity that her guns were capable of (that is, firing as though they were 45cal guns). I don't know how to gauge the likelihood of Iowa's crew attempting this, but I can say it was not entirely fanciful. You can use the penetration tables at http://www.geocities.com/kop_mic/ , but these do not account for angled armor. You may want to go ahead and do your only calcuations using Nathan Okun's formulae.


Thanks! I was really looking for your general opinion. BTW, I never considered that an Iowa crew might 'shoot slower' in such an engagement. I know they would for bombardments and what-not. What possible advantage would it confer vs a Yamato (thinking of motivation for the crew to do it)? [EDIT: Poor wording to say 'shoot slower' - I meant at lower velocity.]

< Message edited by witpqs -- 5/1/2009 8:14:19 PM >

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 8:19:52 PM   
Terminus


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Whilst on the subject of Samar, I've seen theories that a contributing factor to the IJN's poor performance was fatigue. Kuritas force had been under constant air and submarine attack for many, many hours before sighting Taffy 3, and the crews must have been tired. Thoughts?

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Post #: 448
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 8:25:05 PM   
Nikademus


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i believe it was a major factor. Fair is fair too when you think about it. High fatigue is often used to help explain away the poor Allied preformance at Savo.

With respect to what Tiornu wrote, i still believe that the General Chase order was a mistake and led to a disorderly mob like pursuit which left the major hitters too vulnerable to interference and damage from Taffy's escort.

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(in reply to Terminus)
Post #: 449
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 5/1/2009 8:34:10 PM   
witpqs


Posts: 26087
Joined: 10/4/2004
From: Argleton
Status: offline
At least some and perhaps a lot of fatigue makes sense when considering that after the incessant air attacks they passed through restricted waters at night, with every expectation of being met at outlet by half a dozen US battleships.

I assume they were at battle stations most or all of the time.

(in reply to Nikademus)
Post #: 450
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