by Guest » Sun Jun 03, 2007 1:16 am
ar wrote:I have to disagree with you disagreement on Vanguard. The only battleship to FULLY exploit lessons learned in ACTUAL COMBAT, of which the RN had the most, and that is what matters the most.
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Vanguard was started too early to fully incorporate the fundamental lessons of the war. She mostly incorporated only the superficial lessons that are also incorporated into the latter units of KGV class. She still had the same sorry torpedo protection inherited from KGV, which proved devastatingly inadequate, making the POW the modern battleship that took the fewest torpedos to actually sink.
Incidentally, the slopiness of KGV torpedo defense design can be measured from the discrepency between the performance claimed by the designers, and the performance that can realistically be expected due to overall inadequacies of fundamental design, even if all minor technical and implementations problems were ironed out. The KGV designers expected the ship's torpedo defenses to fully absorb a 1000 lb TNT contact explosion. No other WWII design actually built claimed even 75% of that resistance. Yet in all material aspects, such as depth midship, depth abreast of the magazines, bulkhead thickness, etc, KGV's torpedo defenses were the weakest of any WWII battleship. Only the Italian ships, which uses a different, unique and appearently deeply flawed concept, can claim to show evidence of being as weak or weaker than the torpedo defenses of KGV.
level of performance that KGV's designers
expected from that sorry system was by far the highest of any WWII battleship. The British expected KGV's torpedo defenses to be able to resist torpedo warheads 33% heavier than what Yamato's designers had believed their system to be capable of resisting, despite the fact that fundamentally KGV's torpedo defenses were materially the weakest of any WWII battleship other than Littorio.
[quote="ar"]I have to disagree with you disagreement on Vanguard. The only battleship to FULLY exploit lessons learned in ACTUAL COMBAT, of which the RN had the most, and that is what matters the most.
.[/quote]
Vanguard was started too early to fully incorporate the fundamental lessons of the war. She mostly incorporated only the superficial lessons that are also incorporated into the latter units of KGV class. She still had the same sorry torpedo protection inherited from KGV, which proved devastatingly inadequate, making the POW the modern battleship that took the fewest torpedos to actually sink.
Incidentally, the slopiness of KGV torpedo defense design can be measured from the discrepency between the performance claimed by the designers, and the performance that can realistically be expected due to overall inadequacies of fundamental design, even if all minor technical and implementations problems were ironed out. The KGV designers expected the ship's torpedo defenses to fully absorb a 1000 lb TNT contact explosion. No other WWII design actually built claimed even 75% of that resistance. Yet in all material aspects, such as depth midship, depth abreast of the magazines, bulkhead thickness, etc, KGV's torpedo defenses were the weakest of any WWII battleship. Only the Italian ships, which uses a different, unique and appearently deeply flawed concept, can claim to show evidence of being as weak or weaker than the torpedo defenses of KGV.
level of performance that KGV's designers [i]expected[/i] from that sorry system was by far the highest of any WWII battleship. The British expected KGV's torpedo defenses to be able to resist torpedo warheads 33% heavier than what Yamato's designers had believed their system to be capable of resisting, despite the fact that fundamentally KGV's torpedo defenses were materially the weakest of any WWII battleship other than Littorio.