apbarog
Posts: 3769
Joined: 5/23/2002 Status: offline
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10 Jan 43 - The Battle of Noumea After many attempts to intercept the US cruiser task force when it went to Noumea to bombard, we are finally successful. However, there was a surprise. It wasn't the cruiser task force. Instead, it was a smaller task force, but led by 3 US battleships: North Carolina, Washington and Indiana. Yamato and Nagato, 7 cruisers and 5 destroyers charged into the fight. Visibility was just 3,000 yards. Allied radar detected the Japanese at 11,000 yards. Then the message: Allies open fire on surprised Japanese ships at 2,000 yards. This was an understatement. Japanese ships were pummeled. Cleveland hit Myoko causing a magazine explosion, sinking the cruiser. The US battleships started hitting with the big guns, and it was ugly. I noted that Yamato took hits to 3 guns, although I didn't note which guns hit. I am going to rewatch the replay tomorrow and see if any were the main turrets. I do know that 2 of the 3 hits were from destroyers. Getting surprise at such a close range was a bit of luck for the US. If Yamato lost a big gun or two right at the beginning of the fight, that would be some luck also. Once the first turn of surprise was over, the Japanese got to work and made a good recovery, although the ships sinking were mostly Japanese. Tenryu was quickly sunk by Indiana. Hasu had a massive explosion. Indiana was hit by 3 torpedoes and sunk quickly, while the fight was still at 2,000 yards. After that, the range slowly increased, and Yamato and Nagato got many misses and just a few hits, while Washington and North Carolina continued to get big gun hits. There were no torpedo hits after the 3 on Indiana. After the early Japanese battleship success, Yamato and Nagato got wrecked, while Washington and North Carolina took just a few hits. It was a lopsided fight and the Japanese battleships just looked outclassed. The range hovered between 8,000 and 9,000 yards for some time, and finally the task forces broke off at 9,000 yards. Night Time Surface Combat, near Noumea at 115,160, Range 2,000 Yards Japanese aircraft no flights Allied aircraft no flights Japanese aircraft losses E13A1 Jake: 1 destroyed F1M2 Pete: 3 destroyed Allied aircraft losses OS2U-3 Kingfisher: 1 destroyed Japanese Ships BB Nagato, Shell hits 19, and is sunk BB Yamato, Shell hits 39, heavy fires, heavy damage [SUNK] CA Chokai CA Myoko, Shell hits 7, and is sunk CA Haguro, Shell hits 1, on fire CA Nachi, Shell hits 3 CA Suzuya, Shell hits 13, on fire CL Kitakami, Shell hits 1 CL Oi, Shell hits 1 CL Tenryu, Shell hits 18, and is sunk DD Hasu, Shell hits 3, heavy fires, heavy damage DD Tsuga DD Hishu, Shell hits 4, heavy fires, heavy damage [SUNK] DD Susuki, Shell hits 3, on fire DD Yomogi Allied Ships BB North Carolina, Shell hits 3 BB Washington, Shell hits 15, on fire [MANY NON-PENETRATING CRUISER HITS] BB Indiana, Shell hits 18, Torpedo hits 3, and is sunk CL Cleveland, Shell hits 2 DD Meredith DD Gwin DD Grayson DD Monssen, Shell hits 5, on fire Reduced sighting due to 17% moonlight Maximum visibility in Overcast Conditions and 17% moonlight: 3,000 yards I had 9 Vals and 9 Kates at Koumac. They attacked the enemy. The Vals got one 60kg bomb hit on North Carolina. I doubt that the battleship crew knew that it happened. 6 Vals were shot down by 3 Wildcats which were apparently on a very long LRCAP from Norfolk Island. 9 Kates dropped 5 torpedoes at North Carolina but all missed, and 3 Kates were shot down. It was brutal. Today was the beginning of the Japanese losing the war. As an Allied player, I'm ok with trading ships. The Allies get replacements. The Japanese do not. This fight was a decisive win for the US, and I feel that I did not play my best, for 2 reasons. I had set a trap at Noumea last week, and my task force did not move to Noumea as I had expected, and no battle took place. My mistake was that I showed my hand. OPilot knew exactly what ships I had in the area. It had been just cruisers earlier, but he saw the 2 battleships. I don't know if he was using battleships in that earlier attempt, but he brought 3 battleships today. My second mistake was being too concerned with the minor to moderate base damage at La Foa and Koumac. I should have loaded up the bases yesterday. I could have had 40 some Bettys with torpedoes and escorts attacking. I'm set up to do so for the next turn, but the enemy may be out of range or at Norfolk Island, where there will be a very strong CAP. Should have done it yesterday. So now a change of plans. KB has formed up in Japan and is heading south. I will be using the newly trained fighter pilots, with good air to air and defense training, but poor experience. I hope to train them on the job with heavy CAP use. Zuikaku loaded the first Judys and the best of the best naval bomber pilots. All Kates got the best torpedo pilots. The rest of the Val squadrons were split between good pilots and newly trained ones that need experience. I'm revamping my dive bombing training. I've done a great job training new pilots for naval bombing and ASW and ground, but their experience is still too low to be reliable in battle. So I'm sending a Val unit to Java and another to Mindanao, and they will fly daily bombing runs against the isolated Dutch at Bandoeng and the US/Philippine units isolated in the mountains on Mindanao. I have many trained Val pilots that need experience, and will do more of that and less of training pilots from scratch for awhile. Congrats to OPilot on this battle. I think he outsmarted me this time.
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