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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII

 
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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 5:19:15 PM   
Historiker


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus

The H-Battleships were not good designs either, but probably somewhat better than the Bismark. They incorporated underwater torpedo tubes, for one thing, something that ALL other navies in the world had dispensed with at this time. Their aircraft facilities were misplaced as well.

Which is sign of total misunderstand of the intended use for the ship...

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 5:23:17 PM   
Nikademus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Prince

Problem with the Bismarck was the armor distribution. It was taken from the WWI Designs without taking into account the changes in warfare (Torpedoes etc.) .




Well she was designed, like her prior bretheren mainly for fighting in the more restricted conditions of the North Sea (and to a lesser degree, the Atlantic) where ranges would tend to be more limited. With that in mind the weight of her protection was faced to the vertical and in that area she was very stoutly protected. Thats because her primary armor deck sloped behind the primary armor belt providing additional protection against veritical strikes. It made a penetration into the vitals from that quarter very difficult and unlikely at the expected battle ranges. (Tironu can correct me but Nathan Okun once said it was virtually impossible) She did prove hard to sink in the end though as with any BB or ship. Soft-kill disablement could still be acomplished quickly enough if the battering is severe. Her deck protection can be faulted though to be fair.....if any ship is hit by a TallBoy.....its going to be penetrated in most cases if not all. Even if detonated prior to penetration of the main armor deck, its not nice to have an Earthquake bomb detonate within a warship. Messy.


< Message edited by Nikademus -- 6/27/2008 5:24:56 PM >


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Post #: 92
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 5:23:40 PM   
Dili

 

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I am sorry but i dont understand why only contrast presented is "Garantee" Vs "flawed". There is no garantees or perfect solutions like everyone knows but there many degrees towards it.

quote:

One might point out that one 16" shell from Nelson took out both forward turrets of the Bismarck during her final battle - destroying one turret and jamming the other in train. So twice as many turrets does not guarantee that one shell won't take out half your main armament won't happen.


And?. What is the size of the area where that problems can happen?

quote:

I don't believe it was possible to rectify it to any serious degree. Secondary rudders sound great but didn't prove to work very well if the main rudder went out or worse, was jammed. Four screws, well seperated is no gurantee.


Well main rudder jammed when there is secundary rudders is easy it is just dropping the jammed rudder (i know the might not work in some situations like i said there are no certainities), but Bismark wasnt not even designed with that.


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Post #: 93
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 5:29:38 PM   
Nikademus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Dili
Well main rudder jammed when there is secundary rudders is easy it is just dropping the jammed rudder (i know the might not work in some situations like i said there are no certainities), but Bismark wasnt not even designed with that.



They wanted too. That was part of the problem. Sea conditions prevented divers from going overboard and blowing away the debris that was jaming the main rudder. Had they been able to clear the debris.....they might have gotten enough steering back to keep from a steadier course.

< Message edited by Nikademus -- 6/27/2008 5:30:42 PM >


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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 5:33:35 PM   
Dili

 

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That is a different issue, it is not dropping the rudder to the bottom of ocean. Bismarck could not do that because she will be without any rudder, and her propeller arrangement was flawed to do the steering.




< Message edited by Dili -- 6/27/2008 5:35:44 PM >

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Post #: 95
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 5:37:21 PM   
Historiker


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Nikademus

quote:

ORIGINAL: Dili
Well main rudder jammed when there is secundary rudders is easy it is just dropping the jammed rudder (i know the might not work in some situations like i said there are no certainities), but Bismark wasnt not even designed with that.



They wanted too. That was part of the problem. Sea conditions prevented divers from going overboard and blowing away the debris that was jaming the main rudder. Had they been able to clear the debris.....they might have gotten enough steering back to keep from a steadier course.

There were divers in the water but they tried to repair it - not to drop it or blast it.

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 5:42:02 PM   
Nikademus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Dili

That is a different issue, it is not dropping the rudder to the bottom of ocean. Bismarck could not do that because she will be without any rudder, and her propeller arrangement was flawed to do the steering.



It wasn't necessarily an attempt to blow off the rudder but to free it. And i've not seen anything conclusive that suggests that any ship under those conditions would have had adequate control without a main rudder under those sea conditions. I thus, don't think her screw arrangement was a *major* flaw.


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Post #: 97
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 5:43:56 PM   
rtrapasso


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Historiker


quote:

ORIGINAL: Nikademus

quote:

ORIGINAL: Dili
Well main rudder jammed when there is secundary rudders is easy it is just dropping the jammed rudder (i know the might not work in some situations like i said there are no certainities), but Bismark wasnt not even designed with that.



They wanted too. That was part of the problem. Sea conditions prevented divers from going overboard and blowing away the debris that was jaming the main rudder. Had they been able to clear the debris.....they might have gotten enough steering back to keep from a steadier course.

There were divers in the water but they tried to repair it - not to drop it or blast it.

i've read in a couple of places they tried to place charges to blow off the rudder, but conditions were such that they could not do so.

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 5:46:58 PM   
Dili

 

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As you can see KGV was also flawed. With much more concentrated back end where propellers mix with rudder and one propeller is side by side with the other one so there is not advantage in KGV if a hit goes there. That doesnt happen with Littorio/Vittorio Veneto.




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Post #: 99
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 5:56:09 PM   
Shark7


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus

The I-400 was a horrible waste of time and resources. The aircraft-carrying submarine was a cul-de-sac in submarine design, and the I-400 was the worst of the bunch. Huge, lumbering and ungainly, and only capable of carrying 3 aircraft, even though it was meant to be capable of strike operations. Just awful.

The Shimakaze was probably too fast to be useful. I'd nominate the Akitsukis instead.

As for the Brooklyns, those would get my vote too, even though they were Treaty cruisers.

The British carriers get lots of praise for their armour, but they were critically deficient in the one thing that aircraft carriers have to be able to do (carry aircraft). I like the Essex better.


He didn't ask what we thought were the best all around, rather what we thought was one of three. I will state my reasoning.

I-400: Far ahead of its time in concept. While the actual production models might have been unmitigated disasters, the general idea behind it was brilliant. It made transporting of aircraft using stealth possible. Imagine an airstrike appearing out of nowhere, and how do you defend against it when the enemy can strike in your rear areas?

Shimakaze: Wrong ship at the time. But no one can deny it was a very good design for its intended use. Sure a few more Akitzuki's would have been a better deal, but the design of Shimakaze was in no way flawed, only built about 20 years too late.

British Carriers: Again, those heavily armored flight decks were revolutionary at the time. While it limited the ships in other ways, it did allow those ships to remain operational and able to launch aircraft in situations where other carriers would be badly damamged. Not to mention that the armored flight decks were much less likely to catch on fire.

True innovation doesn't come often though. BBs were last truly innovative with the launch of HMS Dreadnaught. Most designs have simply been a variation since then. Such is the way with ships, you rarely have a wholescale jump in design improvement, but rather a whole bunch of smaller improvements over time.

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 5:56:47 PM   
Dili

 

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quote:

And i've not seen anything conclusive that suggests that any ship under those conditions would have had adequate control without a main rudder under those sea conditions. I thus, don't think her screw arrangement was a *major* flaw.


I dont think so. With propellers and auxiliary rudders why would not work?
I find strange that specific Sea conditions are enough for you to not consider the arrangement flawed.

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 5:57:17 PM   
rtrapasso


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Dili

quote:

One might point out that one 16" shell from Nelson took out both forward turrets of the Bismarck during her final battle - destroying one turret and jamming the other in train. So twice as many turrets does not guarantee that one shell won't take out half your main armament won't happen.


And?. What is the size of the area where that problems can happen?




i've never seen an analysis of this... i am not suggesting the 4 x 2 gun arrangement is a design flaw (although i've seen some authors who think it was a poor arrangement that wasted armor and space).


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Post #: 102
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 6:01:44 PM   
Nikademus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Dili

I dont think so. With propellers and auxiliary rudders why would not work?
I find strange that specific Sea conditions are enough for you to not consider the arrangement flawed.


Because one, you are assuming that only Littorio's main rudder will be disabled or jammed. Second, a hit in that area might well damage multiple devices in close proximity as with Prince of Wales. Third, Sea conditions are CRITICAL to such an argument, especially when considering an ersatz class designed for calmer waters. A ship in calm seas has a far better chance for controlled maneuvers on props alone vs. heavy swells. Fourth, aux rudders are not unique to the Littorio. On other designs they did not work so well which is why the feature was far from universal.


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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 6:08:54 PM   
Terminus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Shark7


quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus

The I-400 was a horrible waste of time and resources. The aircraft-carrying submarine was a cul-de-sac in submarine design, and the I-400 was the worst of the bunch. Huge, lumbering and ungainly, and only capable of carrying 3 aircraft, even though it was meant to be capable of strike operations. Just awful.

The Shimakaze was probably too fast to be useful. I'd nominate the Akitsukis instead.

As for the Brooklyns, those would get my vote too, even though they were Treaty cruisers.

The British carriers get lots of praise for their armour, but they were critically deficient in the one thing that aircraft carriers have to be able to do (carry aircraft). I like the Essex better.


He didn't ask what we thought were the best all around, rather what we thought was one of three. I will state my reasoning.

I-400: Far ahead of its time in concept. While the actual production models might have been unmitigated disasters, the general idea behind it was brilliant. It made transporting of aircraft using stealth possible. Imagine an airstrike appearing out of nowhere, and how do you defend against it when the enemy can strike in your rear areas?

Shimakaze: Wrong ship at the time. But no one can deny it was a very good design for its intended use. Sure a few more Akitzuki's would have been a better deal, but the design of Shimakaze was in no way flawed, only built about 20 years too late.

British Carriers: Again, those heavily armored flight decks were revolutionary at the time. While it limited the ships in other ways, it did allow those ships to remain operational and able to launch aircraft in situations where other carriers would be badly damamged. Not to mention that the armored flight decks were much less likely to catch on fire.

True innovation doesn't come often though. BBs were last truly innovative with the launch of HMS Dreadnaught. Most designs have simply been a variation since then. Such is the way with ships, you rarely have a wholescale jump in design improvement, but rather a whole bunch of smaller improvements over time.


I still maintain that the aircraft-carrying submarine was a dead-end. 3 aircraft carrying one bomb or torpedo each are useless, and the submarine lying stock still on the surface getting ready to launch them is a death trap, especially one as big as the Sen Toku/I-400, which would take forever to dive.

Submarines are for submarine operations and the I-400 was not far ahead of its time, but rather behind the times, trying to make a flawed concept operational. They were specifically designed to carry aircraft to attack the Panama Canal, and SO many resources were wasted in design and production that could have been used so much better elsewhere.

The only good thing in that whole debacle was the Seiran attack floatplane. Fine aircraft, that one.

As for the RN carriers, aircraft carriers are for carrying aircraft; you may have an operational ship, but if you've got no aircraft, what good are you? Also, it was easier to repair damaged US carriers than their RN counterparts.

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 6:46:02 PM   
Shark7


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus


quote:

ORIGINAL: Shark7


quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus

The I-400 was a horrible waste of time and resources. The aircraft-carrying submarine was a cul-de-sac in submarine design, and the I-400 was the worst of the bunch. Huge, lumbering and ungainly, and only capable of carrying 3 aircraft, even though it was meant to be capable of strike operations. Just awful.

The Shimakaze was probably too fast to be useful. I'd nominate the Akitsukis instead.

As for the Brooklyns, those would get my vote too, even though they were Treaty cruisers.

The British carriers get lots of praise for their armour, but they were critically deficient in the one thing that aircraft carriers have to be able to do (carry aircraft). I like the Essex better.


He didn't ask what we thought were the best all around, rather what we thought was one of three. I will state my reasoning.

I-400: Far ahead of its time in concept. While the actual production models might have been unmitigated disasters, the general idea behind it was brilliant. It made transporting of aircraft using stealth possible. Imagine an airstrike appearing out of nowhere, and how do you defend against it when the enemy can strike in your rear areas?

Shimakaze: Wrong ship at the time. But no one can deny it was a very good design for its intended use. Sure a few more Akitzuki's would have been a better deal, but the design of Shimakaze was in no way flawed, only built about 20 years too late.

British Carriers: Again, those heavily armored flight decks were revolutionary at the time. While it limited the ships in other ways, it did allow those ships to remain operational and able to launch aircraft in situations where other carriers would be badly damamged. Not to mention that the armored flight decks were much less likely to catch on fire.

True innovation doesn't come often though. BBs were last truly innovative with the launch of HMS Dreadnaught. Most designs have simply been a variation since then. Such is the way with ships, you rarely have a wholescale jump in design improvement, but rather a whole bunch of smaller improvements over time.


I still maintain that the aircraft-carrying submarine was a dead-end. 3 aircraft carrying one bomb or torpedo each are useless, and the submarine lying stock still on the surface getting ready to launch them is a death trap, especially one as big as the Sen Toku/I-400, which would take forever to dive.

Submarines are for submarine operations and the I-400 was not far ahead of its time, but rather behind the times, trying to make a flawed concept operational. They were specifically designed to carry aircraft to attack the Panama Canal, and SO many resources were wasted in design and production that could have been used so much better elsewhere.

The only good thing in that whole debacle was the Seiran attack floatplane. Fine aircraft, that one.

As for the RN carriers, aircraft carriers are for carrying aircraft; you may have an operational ship, but if you've got no aircraft, what good are you? Also, it was easier to repair damaged US carriers than their RN counterparts.


I-400: The idea did come to a very successfull result later on, when the aircraft were replaced by cruise missiles and ICBMs. The cruise missile/ICBM launching submarine is the same basic idea, only now we have the proper weapons systems to make it work. Far from a dead-end, it just needed more time to find the systems to make it work. The idea was the same though, using a submarine to make long range strikes at targets behind enemy lines with low probability of intercept. Only modern submarines can actually carry out the mission, unlike the I-400s.

And that is the real reason why I feel the I-400 was ahead of its time. Given ICBMs or cruise missiles, the Japanese I-400 could have worked, and worked well. They had the right idea (using submarines to get into airstrike launching positions), just not the tools to make it work.


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Post #: 105
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 6:51:48 PM   
Dili

 

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quote:

Because one, you are assuming that only Littorio's main rudder will be disabled or jammed.


Well that hapened to Bismarck isnt it? The hit in rear of Littorio at Taranto also only affected the rudder.

quote:

Second, a hit in that area might well damage multiple devices in close proximity as with Prince of Wales.


Well i also pointed out that KGV was a flawed design because it was all concentrated. The propellers are much more near the rudder than even in Bismarck. That was what doomed the Prince of Wales. Does not happens in Littorios.


quote:

Third, Sea conditions are CRITICAL to such an argument, especially when considering an ersatz class designed for calmer waters.


Well sea conditions are critical IF it it impossible to steer a ship with propellers and auxiliary rudders and IF that kind of Sea conditions are prevalecent in many days of the year. Something you didnt supported with. I have read many instance with ships using the propellers only not even taking in account auxiliary rudders. Littorios have 2 one in each side, in surface area they are near 1 single rudder.


quote:

Fourth, aux rudders are not unique to the Littorio. On other designs they did not work so well which is why the feature was far from universal.


Not only that. Littorios had the hangars and aircraft instalation at back so they had a more gentle rear with much more space to "waste".

< Message edited by Dili -- 6/27/2008 6:56:03 PM >

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Post #: 106
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 6:57:18 PM   
Historiker


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quote:

I-400: The idea did come to a very successfull result later on, when the aircraft were replaced by cruise missiles and ICBMs. The cruise missile/ICBM launching submarine is the same basic idea, only now we have the proper weapons systems to make it work. Far from a dead-end, it just needed more time to find the systems to make it work. The idea was the same though, using a submarine to make long range strikes at targets behind enemy lines with low probability of intercept. Only modern submarines can actually carry out the mission, unlike the I-400s.

This all doesn't make it a good design. It's still a bad, useless design. Just because the idea led to a good class of subs decades later, the I-400 is - as T said - useless and a wast of ressources.

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 7:12:41 PM   
Nikademus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Dili

Well that hapened to Bismarck isnt it? The hit in rear of Littorio at Taranto also only affected the rudder.


The hits at Taranto would have sank the ship had she not beached herself making a discussion of her steering gear irrelevent. Not a good example IMO.

quote:


Well i also pointed out that KGV was a flawed design because it was all concentrated. The propellers are much more near the rudder than even in Bismarck. That was what doomed the Prince of Wales. Does not happens in Littorios.


What doomed PoW was the damage to both her props and the resultant extra flooding it caused....something that could very well happen to a Littorio.


quote:



Well sea conditions are critical IF it it impossible to steer a ship with propellers and auxiliary rudders and IF that kind of Sea conditions are prevalecent in many days of the year. Something you didnt supported with. I have read many instance with ships using the propellers only not even taking in account auxiliary rudders. Littorios have 2 one in each side, in surface area they are near 1 single rudder.


Noone has shown that Littorio would have been adequately navigable under similar conditions in the sea state that Bismarck found herself in, with her primary rudder disabled by debris.

quote:


Not only that. Littorios had the hangars and aircraft instalation at back so they had a more gentle rear with much more space to "waste".


I know that her open arrangement at the stern for her aircraft would have made them more or less useless for ops in the Atlantic. I am not aware of any benefit the arrangement gave insofar as her steering gear.




< Message edited by Nikademus -- 6/27/2008 7:56:21 PM >


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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 7:19:04 PM   
Terminus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Shark7


quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus


quote:

ORIGINAL: Shark7


quote:

ORIGINAL: Terminus

The I-400 was a horrible waste of time and resources. The aircraft-carrying submarine was a cul-de-sac in submarine design, and the I-400 was the worst of the bunch. Huge, lumbering and ungainly, and only capable of carrying 3 aircraft, even though it was meant to be capable of strike operations. Just awful.

The Shimakaze was probably too fast to be useful. I'd nominate the Akitsukis instead.

As for the Brooklyns, those would get my vote too, even though they were Treaty cruisers.

The British carriers get lots of praise for their armour, but they were critically deficient in the one thing that aircraft carriers have to be able to do (carry aircraft). I like the Essex better.


He didn't ask what we thought were the best all around, rather what we thought was one of three. I will state my reasoning.

I-400: Far ahead of its time in concept. While the actual production models might have been unmitigated disasters, the general idea behind it was brilliant. It made transporting of aircraft using stealth possible. Imagine an airstrike appearing out of nowhere, and how do you defend against it when the enemy can strike in your rear areas?

Shimakaze: Wrong ship at the time. But no one can deny it was a very good design for its intended use. Sure a few more Akitzuki's would have been a better deal, but the design of Shimakaze was in no way flawed, only built about 20 years too late.

British Carriers: Again, those heavily armored flight decks were revolutionary at the time. While it limited the ships in other ways, it did allow those ships to remain operational and able to launch aircraft in situations where other carriers would be badly damamged. Not to mention that the armored flight decks were much less likely to catch on fire.

True innovation doesn't come often though. BBs were last truly innovative with the launch of HMS Dreadnaught. Most designs have simply been a variation since then. Such is the way with ships, you rarely have a wholescale jump in design improvement, but rather a whole bunch of smaller improvements over time.


I still maintain that the aircraft-carrying submarine was a dead-end. 3 aircraft carrying one bomb or torpedo each are useless, and the submarine lying stock still on the surface getting ready to launch them is a death trap, especially one as big as the Sen Toku/I-400, which would take forever to dive.

Submarines are for submarine operations and the I-400 was not far ahead of its time, but rather behind the times, trying to make a flawed concept operational. They were specifically designed to carry aircraft to attack the Panama Canal, and SO many resources were wasted in design and production that could have been used so much better elsewhere.

The only good thing in that whole debacle was the Seiran attack floatplane. Fine aircraft, that one.

As for the RN carriers, aircraft carriers are for carrying aircraft; you may have an operational ship, but if you've got no aircraft, what good are you? Also, it was easier to repair damaged US carriers than their RN counterparts.


I-400: The idea did come to a very successfull result later on, when the aircraft were replaced by cruise missiles and ICBMs. The cruise missile/ICBM launching submarine is the same basic idea, only now we have the proper weapons systems to make it work. Far from a dead-end, it just needed more time to find the systems to make it work. The idea was the same though, using a submarine to make long range strikes at targets behind enemy lines with low probability of intercept. Only modern submarines can actually carry out the mission, unlike the I-400s.

And that is the real reason why I feel the I-400 was ahead of its time. Given ICBMs or cruise missiles, the Japanese I-400 could have worked, and worked well. They had the right idea (using submarines to get into airstrike launching positions), just not the tools to make it work.



But we're not talking about submarine-launched missiles. We're talking about floatplanes.

You won't win me over, Shark.

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Post #: 109
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 7:24:04 PM   
Nikademus


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since even the standard "Fleet" boats of the USN would have had a hard time in the more intensive Atlantic due in part to their big size, It would seem unlikely that the massive I-400 (Sen-Toku) would have found lived for long unless deployed in a non-active theater since by latewar, USN ASW was as dangerous in the Pacific. I don't believe they could dive much deeper than a standard sub. Thats a big "clumsy" target to use one of Clay Blair's favorite adjetives.

I'd rather take my chances in a Type XXI built by involuntary labor. I-400 is an interesting design, but not a practical one in an era of saturated air power

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 7:33:35 PM   
Terminus


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The Sen Tokus had an operating depth of about 330 feet, similar to other big IJN boats.

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 7:35:56 PM   
Nikademus


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then its a dead boat if it gets caught by a competent ASW screen.

Granted, its role was as a long range raider with it's air capacity but to what end is problematic. a few light bombs isnt' alot.

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 7:46:41 PM   
Terminus


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Hmmm, where have I heard that before? Oh yeah, I said it myself earlier today.

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Post #: 113
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 7:55:33 PM   
Nikademus


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your a stud.

To be fair, it should be evaluated as a design. So as a design.....same thing i'm afraid for Sen Toku fans. I don't see what role the ship would fill in 44-45. The Type XXI had a practical goal behind the construction. The means and time simply were not there.

I suppose I-400 wins as "best sub design to carry multiple aircraft" which is fairly easy since noone else was building them by that point. Some of the features were interesting for study post-war.



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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 8:18:27 PM   
Dili

 

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quote:

The hits at Taranto would have sank the ship had she not beached herself making a discussion of her steering gear irrelevent. Not a good example IMO.


Well an answer with the intention of changing the issue.



quote:

What doomed PoW was the damage to both her props and the resultant extra flooding it caused....something that could very well happen to a Littorio.


In POW propeller went to the hull and hit the rudder because they were so closely placed . The front and ends of the ships are the best place to contain flooding, CA Tone(or Chikuma) took torpedo hit at back without catastrophic loss. Littorios i think are the ships that comulatively took more torpedo hits in their careers, in Matapan took one at back(slighty in front of propellers and still sailed at 20kt w/ +1000t of water.





quote:

Noone has shown that Littorio would have been adequately navigable under similar conditions in the sea state that Bismarck found herself in, with her primary rudder disabled by debris.


Okay now the issue is that show that you dont know Mediterranean Sea at all.


quote:

I know that her open arrangement at the stern for her aircraft would have made them more or less useless for ops in the Atlantic. I am not aware of any benefit the arrangement gave insofar as her steering gear.


Strange how do you recover the aircraft in that horrible Atlantic or is it when it is at Sea State 3/4 at much? ...anyway that is sidestepping again. They had 2 secundary rudders. If Bismarck could have dropped the rudder(i dont know if she had a system for that) she would not have any other rudder.

Post Edit: The main rudder had 38m2, each of secundary rudders had 16m2.

< Message edited by Dili -- 6/27/2008 8:25:47 PM >

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 8:19:47 PM   
Shark7


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Like I've said, the idea was far ahead of its time. Keep that in mind, I am only arguing for the idea behind the subs. The subs themselves were not up to the mission they were expected to perform. The execution was lackluster at best, and more a waste of resources when looked at objectively.

Still the idea that created it lived on to be a very successfull theory, and from there to be a very successfull weapon of war. Take it for what it is.

The idea was well founded, the execution was a failure. I'm not arguing that the subs would have worked. I think we're talking apples and oranges.

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Post #: 116
RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 8:51:31 PM   
Nikademus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Dili

Well an answer with the intention of changing the issue.



Sorry. Your the one who mentioned Taranto. It was hardly a great moment for the design and talk about rudders is pretty irrelevent when the ship is in mortal danger of sinking, a situation Bismarck was not in after a similar # of hits by the same weapon.

quote:


In POW propeller went to the hull and hit the rudder because they were so closely placed . The front and ends of the ships are the best place to contain flooding, CA Tone(or Chikuma) took torpedo hit at back without catastrophic loss. Littorios i think are the ships that comulatively took more torpedo hits in their careers, in Matapan took one at back(slighty in front of propellers and still sailed at 20kt w/ +1000t of water.



If your trying to say that the spacing of Littorio's props and rudders would prevent a similar level of damage, then i don't agree. No battleship was immune to such an event, nor do I agree that the KGV class prop and rudder arrangement was a signifigant weak point in comparison to other designs. In theory one would think flooding would be minor at the ends most of time, problem is it didn't always happen that way, especially if one is talking a stern hit. PoW ultimately suffered nearly 10,000 tons of flooding in her case. A similar event involving serious flooding occured to the USS Pennsylvania which fortunately was at anchor and in condition Zebra. (hatches secured) I am aware of hits on the Littorio class. The damage and flooding were fairly extensive in most cases. I'll refresh myself on them tonight when i get home.




quote:


Okay now the issue is that show that you dont know Mediterranean Sea at all.


I thought the issue was about the statements regarding Bismarck.

quote:


Strange how do you recover the aircraft in that horrible Atlantic or is it when it is at Sea State 3/4 at much? ...anyway that is sidestepping again.


Your the one who mentioned aircraft facilities. If you don't want me to answer, don't ask the question.

quote:



They had 2 secundary rudders. If Bismarck could have dropped the rudder(i dont know if she had a system for that) she would not have any other rudder.


Thx. I know. The question, is would Littorio have been in any better position given similar location (Atlantic + current conditions) and similar hit location. I don't think it would produce a major change. Had Bismarck's crew freed the rudder, they might have saved themselves. Detached, they were probably still doomed. A hit on Littorio that jammed the main rudder with debris would probably have made the secondary rudders of little use. If one or both facing props were disabled, the problem is magnified, more so in the Atlantic for which Littorio was not designed to operate in. Then there's the question of flooding. I do think that her chances might be slightly better overall, but not to a degree that warrents the comment; "Bismarck was a seriously flawed design"

I like the Littorio class and actually tend to rate them better than the Bismarck class though as with all comparisons, it doesn't mean that the other design can't get the job done. Its even more subjective given the two classes were designed to operate under very different conditions.

< Message edited by Nikademus -- 6/27/2008 8:54:27 PM >


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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 9:57:54 PM   
John Lansford

 

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Bismarck had a badly thought out armor arrangement, over complex secondary armament system, relatively short range, and one less main gun than contemporary opponents, for deficiencies.

Positives: fast speed, heavy armor (just misplaced), accurate main gun fire control system (at initial ranges), and excellent underwater compartmentalization.

KGV class: Positives- good range, good armor, excellent secondary gun system, decent speed, ten guns vs 9 or 8 on her opponents
Negatives: Smaller guns, slower than contemporary opponents (27kts max)

South Dakota: Positives: Heavy main gun armament, excellent secondary armament, excellent armor arrangement and underwater protection, excellent range, excellent fire control system
Negatives: slower than contemporary opponents (27kts max)

Iowa: Positives: fastest of all modern BB's, same heavy main gun armament as SoDak, excellent secondary armament, excellent armor arrangement, good range, excellent fire control system
Negatives: armor thinner than on SoDak, long thin bow structure vulnerable to any hit

Vittorio: Positives: high speed, heavy armor, good main gun caliber
Negatives: terrible underwater protection, short range (not that big a deal in the Med), weak secondary, average fire control system, only 8 main guns

Comparing all five designs, I'd say that the South Dakotas are the best all-round BB design from WWII.  They're a little slower than their contemporaries, but that's their only deficiency.  The Iowas are right there with them, but their armor was thinner and a hit in the bow would have had serious consequences for them.  The Axis ships were good ships, but still had flaws that made them less capable than the USN BB's.

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 10:22:52 PM   
Tiornu

 

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quote:

Out of curiosity, what do you make of the claims that Bismarck could have "backed" into port*?

Yes, we're much smarter here in the 21st Century than the poor dolts in the age before television. I don't know whether or not the Germans tried this.

quote:

One might point out that one 16" shell from Nelson took out both forward turrets of the Bismarck during her final battle - destroying one turret and jamming the other in train.

I often get Rodney and Nelson mixed up too. The exact cause-effect of the first 16in hit(s) remains something of a mystery. One feature I don't think anyone has mentioned regarding Bismarck's "flaws" is the placement of the magazines above the shell rooms. Doesn't that bother anyone? Scharnhorst certainly seems to have suffered for having that arrangement.

quote:

Well she was designed, like her prior bretheren mainly for fighting in the more restricted conditions of the North Sea (and to a lesser degree, the Atlantic) where ranges would tend to be more limited.

I don't think it's possible to say she was intended primarily for that. Were the French scripted to come up and fight there? The German design process was such a mess at that point--who knows what they were thinking?
Yes, Nathan's position is that the belt-slope combination is almost impenetrable. The original Ship D had a belt-slope combination, and she definitely had her origins in a high-seas raider role.

quote:

Bismarck was a very flawed design

I could post a drawing of North Carolina and her skegs and say that Littorio was badly flawed. Littorio, by the way, had some of the weakest steering gear armor of any modern battleship.

quote:

Well main rudder jammed when there is secundary rudders is easy it is just dropping the jammed rudder (i know the might not work in some situations like i said there are no certainities), but Bismark wasnt not even designed with that.

Yamato's secondary rudder was virtually useless, as it was in the case of previous German ship having a secondary rudder. If not having three rudders is a flaw, then all battleships were flawed except the Littorios.

quote:

As for the RN carriers, aircraft carriers are for carrying aircraft; you may have an operational ship, but if you've got no aircraft, what good are you?

Stop making sense, I tell you!

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RE: Best Designed Ship of WWII - 6/27/2008 10:37:04 PM   
Nikademus


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Tiornu

I often get Rodney and Nelson mixed up too. The exact cause-effect of the first 16in hit(s) remains something of a mystery. One feature I don't think anyone has mentioned regarding Bismarck's "flaws" is the placement of the magazines above the shell rooms. Doesn't that bother anyone? Scharnhorst certainly seems to have suffered for having that arrangement.


I remember the big discussion about that. It was, and remains a head scratcher.

Refresh my memory on the consequence to Scharnhorst. I'm at work and bored.


quote:


I don't think it's possible to say she was intended primarily for that. Were the French scripted to come up and fight there? The German design process was such a mess at that point--who knows what they were thinking?


How dare you! where's my cement filled glove...... Well on further thought, i can see where it would be confusing given some of the parameters. I should probably say in terms of her protection scheme, the designers were thinking more along the lines of expected local conditions in the NS and Atlantic in similar vein to the earlier conflict, with visibility conditions similar hence the emphasis against flatter trajectory shellfire. Thats at least the Gazrke view for the most part.



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