RevRick
Posts: 2617
Joined: 9/16/2000 From: Thomasville, GA Status: offline
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Just as a reply to that, Japan, and I really don't have a dog in this hunt, I think that may have had more to do with the rapid proliferation of CIC on USN capital ships between 1942 and 1944 than with a gamer designers built-in bias for sales. In fact, CIC spaces were almost ubiquitous in all new construction and most refits by the beginning of 1944 from tin cans on up, let alone CV/CVL, BB, and CA/CLs. With the rapid improvements in RADAR, the understanding of how they could be most effectively employed, and the capacity to coordinate multiple ship CAPs from one station in the TF/TG, as well as the deck handling of aircraft, it would be well nigh impossible to get an undetected strike even close to a CV TF. Similarly, the odds of the IJN getting an unengaged strike off against a USN CV TG would be almost the same as sneaking up on a snowball in hell, since the results were usually that the CAP, because of early detection and launching, and better fighter direction, would have the 'bounce' on incoming raids. IIRC, the IJN did not have a nearly similar capacity in their carriers and other escort ships.
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"Action springs not from thought, but from a readiness for responsibility.” ― Dietrich Bonhoeffer
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