Darn it.
The warnings should come before the spells not after them.
Darn it.
A proper 8" gun cruiser is not a 10,000 ton one. All heavy cruisers were by their nature very imbalanced by the restrictions. The Des Moines and the Sverdlovs displacements point towards what their natural displacement would be like.McAvoy wrote: ↑Tue Mar 30, 2021 4:03 am Interestingly heavy cruisers even the improved ones were not that far off from the 10,000 ton limit. It wasn't until the Des Moines class with the automatic 8" guns that they grew to battleship size. Hell the Alaska class wasn't that far off from a treaty battleship.
Missiles changed everything though.
So pulling the my father card again. Sorry. But you might want to add a decade or two on the missile embryonic stage. As Terrier missiles were no where near as reliable as people really wanted them to be. (If I recorded him talking about it you would have three hours of story. Trust me I have heard it several times.)Beastro wrote: ↑Tue Mar 30, 2021 9:30 pmA proper 8" gun cruiser is not a 10,000 ton one. All heavy cruisers were by their nature very imbalanced by the restrictions. The Des Moines and the Sverdlovs displacements point towards what their natural displacement would be like.McAvoy wrote: ↑Tue Mar 30, 2021 4:03 am Interestingly heavy cruisers even the improved ones were not that far off from the 10,000 ton limit. It wasn't until the Des Moines class with the automatic 8" guns that they grew to battleship size. Hell the Alaska class wasn't that far off from a treaty battleship.
Missiles changed everything though.
Missiles did, but not overnight. The late 40s and 50s became a grey area in naval warfare where aircraft dominated fielding bombs no amount of armour could keep out while guns could no longer properly counter them and missiles remained too embryonic to be properly used by either to counter the other (all before the paradigm shift nuke subs would produce, too).
It's for that reason that the USN looked on nukes as the proper weapon to attack warships with at the time.
I'm speaking relatively. From the dawn of jets to the early 60s missiles really couldn't do anything to counter aircraft and ASMs were just as bad against warships. Do not how Tartar was much improved arriving later despite being just a shortened Terrier in design.Nealithi wrote: ↑Tue Mar 30, 2021 10:40 pmSo pulling the my father card again. Sorry. But you might want to add a decade or two on the missile embryonic stage. As Terrier missiles were no where near as reliable as people really wanted them to be. (If I recorded him talking about it you would have three hours of story. Trust me I have heard it several times.)Beastro wrote: ↑Tue Mar 30, 2021 9:30 pmA proper 8" gun cruiser is not a 10,000 ton one. All heavy cruisers were by their nature very imbalanced by the restrictions. The Des Moines and the Sverdlovs displacements point towards what their natural displacement would be like.McAvoy wrote: ↑Tue Mar 30, 2021 4:03 am Interestingly heavy cruisers even the improved ones were not that far off from the 10,000 ton limit. It wasn't until the Des Moines class with the automatic 8" guns that they grew to battleship size. Hell the Alaska class wasn't that far off from a treaty battleship.
Missiles changed everything though.
Missiles did, but not overnight. The late 40s and 50s became a grey area in naval warfare where aircraft dominated fielding bombs no amount of armour could keep out while guns could no longer properly counter them and missiles remained too embryonic to be properly used by either to counter the other (all before the paradigm shift nuke subs would produce, too).
It's for that reason that the USN looked on nukes as the proper weapon to attack warships with at the time.
All ships built during that time had some sort restrictions and there was a balance between speed, armor, weapons, sea keeping and top weight. For example the best heavy cruisers in WW2 were the Baltimore class and similar offshoots the US built. They had all of the above but they had a top heavy concern. They were well armed, well armored (US battleship armor at the time wasn't as good as the British or German counterparts due to a mistake or intentional metallurgy design. But applied proportionally to heavy cruiser level armor they made them much better armored inch for inch), and they had a comparable fleet speed. Growth in displacement was only to correct certain aspects of the class.Beastro wrote: ↑Tue Mar 30, 2021 9:30 pmA proper 8" gun cruiser is not a 10,000 ton one. All heavy cruisers were by their nature very imbalanced by the restrictions. The Des Moines and the Sverdlovs displacements point towards what their natural displacement would be like.McAvoy wrote: ↑Tue Mar 30, 2021 4:03 am Interestingly heavy cruisers even the improved ones were not that far off from the 10,000 ton limit. It wasn't until the Des Moines class with the automatic 8" guns that they grew to battleship size. Hell the Alaska class wasn't that far off from a treaty battleship.
Missiles changed everything though.
Missiles did, but not overnight. The late 40s and 50s became a grey area in naval warfare where aircraft dominated fielding bombs no amount of armour could keep out while guns could no longer properly counter them and missiles remained too embryonic to be properly used by either to counter the other (all before the paradigm shift nuke subs would produce, too).
It's for that reason that the USN looked on nukes as the proper weapon to attack warships with at the time.
I have a further question along this line. Where do you put torpedoes?
Five and six inch guns were nominally effective into the 50s, even as anti-missile defence weapons. AA suites modeled around those size gun were perfected by the end of WWII. The trouble was that jet engines had increased aircraft speed enough that reaction time simply wasn't quick enough to properly counter them. A ship might get one salvo off before a jet could pass over head dropping bombs that, combined with the dive speed of a jet that might exceed the speed of sound, couldn't be kept out (The less said about a nuke dropped, the better).
Battleships weren't disposed of in the 50s due to cost or relative obsolescence, they were due to lack of proper role. The largest surface threat NATO faced were the Sverdlov cruisers (which they took seriously), that were overkill for navies to field battleships against when they had a profusion of wartime cruisers to still make use of.Armor is interesting because you can armor a ship for most missiles. But such a ship like a battleship were too expensive for the post war and Cold War to use. You could argue the growth in damage control during the war lead to the de-armoring of later ships.
I can't say for certain, but I'd suspect it comes down to ship size and structural reinforcement to withstand. Armour would have no use what little it might add to the latter. The potency of modern anti-ship torpedoes would probably render a surviving warship a constructive total loss (not worth the time or money to repair) if it survived anyway.I have a further question along this line. Where do you put torpedoes?
I ask because my understanding is modern torpedoes don't impact the hull. They detonate under the keep as a spine breaking effect.
Yes there are torpedoes that can do that. Hell there were missiles powerful enough even in WW2 late in the war. Armor specifically anything thicker than let's say 2 inch can actually be worse than no armor at all. The development of the torpedo protection on battleships found that a hard immovable surface where a torpedo explosive force makes it worse where as a flexible series of bulkheads could absorb the explosion.