Bullwinkle58
Posts: 11302
Joined: 2/24/2009 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: EUBanana I'm not saying anything against Mush Morton, he was clearly a sub skipper of the very highest calibre (and extreme aggression alright ), and quite possibly unequalled, but it's not like the RN was a sea of grey average. That said I notice that Truant's crew have a skill of 70 so I guess she's not hard done by at all really, it's just the skippers are somewhat average. Of course not all were 60; as others have said, I suspect that's a factor of developer time and relative fame. There should be some 70-80s, and there should be some 25-40s. As I think you said up-thread, a 60 with working torpedoes in 1941 beats a 90 with non-working fish any day of the week. But I get touchy when Brits claim their subs did anything CLOSE to what USN subs did in the PTO. Our subs, as Nimitz said, essentially beat Japan. They took the highest percentage casualties of any part of the USN. They dealt with long ranges, lack of advanced bases, crap weapons, old designs, short-sighted tactics, and diversion of resources to naval air. They produced seven Medal of Honor winners. They sank the Japanese merchant marine (and several fleet carriers.) Men like Sam Dealey, Donc Donahoe, Red Ramage, Dick O'Kane, and old Mush formed the cultural backbone of the USN submarine force that's still there today. Gene Fluckey, by then a Vice-Admiral, presided at the commissioning of my boat. Ned Beach . . . well, what can you say about Ned Beach? Not only "Run Silent, Run Deep" but around the world, submerged? USS Barb's run into Chinese coastal waters was a post-graduate seminar on seamanship, deck-plate engineering, and risk analysis. These guys were legends during the war, and after. If that's the case in the RN submariners, educate me.
< Message edited by Bullwinkle58 -- 11/18/2009 9:37:34 PM >
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