thegreatwent
Posts: 3011
Joined: 8/24/2004 From: Denver, CO Status: offline
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"Mostly, the designations used in the game follow US Navy practice. The exceptions are for battlecruisers (US Navy designated them CC) and CLAA (the CLAA designation wasn't used until 1948; during WWII those cruisers were just CL). The Washington treaty set limits on aircraft carriers, but didn't make any limitations on cruisers other than defining ships over 10,000 tons or with guns larger than 8" as capital ships, which were limited. The US 8" gun cruisers were originally designated CL, for light cruiser, while the Milwaukee class were CS, for scout cruiser. The London treaty set separate limits on cruisers with guns larger than 155 mm (6.1") and for cruisers with smaller guns, so the US Navy re-designated the 8" gun cruisers as CA and used CL for 6" gun cruisers, including the Milwaukees. The Brooklyn class CLs were as large as, and better armored than the 8" gun CAs. (They were designed after most of the prewar CAs, and were only built because the US had used up its allowance for 8" gun cruisers.) The difference between the CAs and CLs was strictly in the size of gun. The RN built smaller 6" gun cruisers, since they wanted more ships. The treaty limited total tonnage for cruisers rather than number of ships." Agreed, my mistake was in referring to CAs. The games I was referring to was the various treaty cruisers that played games with displacement, capacity of turrets in terms of tube size and how nations designated their vessels. Hard to identify if your comparing apples to apples if everyone is hiding their oranges.
< Message edited by thegreatwent -- 8/18/2008 3:45:16 AM >
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