wdolson
Posts: 10398
Joined: 6/28/2006 From: Near Portland, OR Status: offline
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The armor made the hanger deck smaller. I believe RN carriers were also a bit smaller overall than their US and Japanese contemporaries. As some other people have said, when the pre-war carriers were designed, nobody knew for sure how they were going to be used. A lot of the admiralty of each nation believed that carriers were an adjunct to the big fleet rather than the center of it. Even the big gun admirals in the IJN weren't completely shut up by PH. The designed role for RN carriers was an operation like the hunt for the Bismark. There the carrier aircraft augmented shore based searches then a Stringbag slowed up the Bismark enough to allow the big guns to catch up and finish her off (whether scuttled or not, the RN battleships contributed significantly to her sinking). The idea that the carrier was going to replace the BB as the center piece of carrier combat was slow to evolve. It's obvious in hindsight, but at the time it was too radical a concept for many of the old school admiralty (who were the majority in all major navies). Another concept that didn't give way until the eve of the WW II was that carrier aircraft would have to be a generation or more behind their land based counterparts in capabilities. Carrier aircraft were behind the curve throughout most of the interwar period. In the US, it was the 1938 requirement that led to the TBF, SB2C, and F4U that was the first departure from this concept. The British suffered from a bureaucracy that put the FAA under RAF control. As a result, the FAA was starved even worse than other navies in the interwar period. The British went to war with badly obsolete aircraft and didn't begin to catch up until they started getting US lend lease aircraft. (Late war there were some decent British designs too, but US built aircraft were filling out most FAA squadrons at that point.) The RN was doubly handicapped between poor aircraft and choosing the wrong designs for the next war. At least the wrong design for a Pacific war. Those ships may have been the right design for the European/Med theaters where land based air was dominant. Bill
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