rlc27
Posts: 306
Joined: 7/21/2001 From: Connecticut, USA Status: offline
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:)[B]And now I'm about to do it again. Sorry, I guess it just comes naturally. :D The US postwar-designed CVs, from Forrestal on, are so stoutly built (even beyond what would be absolutely necessary to stand up to the massive stresses on so massive a structure) that they might as well be armored. They'd be extremely hard to kill, short of a nuke (and even that would have to be big, or close, or both, to put them under). [/B] Wow, I did not know that. I'd always thought that the planes and electronic countermeasures were considered the CV's primary protections, but I guess it makes sense that their structure itself doubles as protection. Could it also be that certain compartments are protected from fragging by kevlar (that is classified?) I knew that the ww2 era CV's were built with at least some armor, but then again, when you look at the likes of Essex-class carriers, it seems as if, with their 8" guns, the navy still wasn't quite sure whether they were building a cruiser or a new kind of ship. When I visited the Intrepid in NYC with my dad a couple of years ago, we both noticed how, if you replaced the 8"ers and cut off the flightdeck, what you have left basically stills has the profile, length, width, etc., of a cruiser. The point is, it would make sense if post-war designers designed the ships so that the structure itself served as armor--wasn't there a battleship that was famous for its pioneering design in that respect (can't remember which, but think it was US). :)
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"They couldn't hit an elephant from this dist--" --John Sedgwick, failing to reduce suppression during the Battle of the Wilderness, U.S. Civil War.
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