Were having nice weather here again in the UK, so I've been finishing off some of my naval reading in the garden and having a day off on this Sunday after a busy week.
I was reading again the attack by the the 26th Destroyer Flotilla on Haguro on the night 15th-16th May 1945.
What I would like to know was why was there such a disparity in radar performance between the British Destroyers? Venus made the initial radar contact of Haguro at the phenomenal range of 68,000yards. Whereas the FL Saumarez got her first contact of the enemy 'only' at 28,000 yards.
Were these 2 destroyers carrying a different radar set?
Was the range very dependant on how recently the sets had been calibrated and tested?
Was the range very much down to operators training and skill or was it largely dependant on where you were in the destroyer screen, due to interference etc?
That range disparity seems quite a margin!
Or is it just to difficult to tie it down to any single thing and merely a collection of the above?
I think crew tireness or slackness can be largely discounted as the flotilla knew from an air sighting report that 1 cruiser and 1 destroyer lay ahead.
Cheers
