MengCiao
Posts: 180
Joined: 7/7/2004 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: EUBanana quote:
ORIGINAL: madmickey quote:
ORIGINAL: Tankerace YOu mean Fisher acknowledged the submarine as a weapon? I thought that was back when the submarine "was not a gentleman's weapon, as it did not fight in plain view." Gotta love the British. Not quite as goods as Beatty saying "There is something wrong with our ships" at Jutland or the British officer complaining that the German use of the 88-mm flak gun against tanks was not very sporting. According to a documentary I saw on the BBC the other day, apparently all those battlecruiser of Beatty's that were blown away were destroyed by ammunition fires flashing from the turrets and handling rooms to the magazines. That was theorised for some time now. But a bit more interesting, apparently at the time it was thought that ships wouldn't carry enough ammunition to cause a decisive blow the enemy - ie, they would run out of ammo before the battle was conclusively decided. A bit like how the ironclads of the American Civil War emptied their magazines into each other with minimal effect, I suppose. Apparently Beatty's battlecruisers were carrying 110% or so of their designed ammunition capacity because of this, trying to squeeze in as much ammo and propellant as they could. Also, the British gunnery focused on rate of fire, to try and fire as many shells as they could in as short a time as possible. As a result of these policies, those battlecruisers had bags of cordite and shells lying around in the handling rooms, to speed reloading times and allow more ammo to be physically packed into the ships. Needless to say, a spark in the turret caused by a penetrating shell hit didn't do this arrangement much good at all. This documentary included some divers going down to the wrecks, and finding shell cases lying around in the handling rooms which shouldn't be there, which supports this theory. Precisely. Apparently what happened was a chain-reaction, low-level explosion of the propellant bags. If one bag caught fire in the turret, the fire proceeded down the line of bags being passed up from the magazine. Supposedly on HMS Lion, a crewman was able to slam the doors to the magazine for Q turret shut before the fire got there.
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The corpus of a thousand battles rises from the flood.
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