chuck wrote:
Blucher stands little chance of being able to run, and even less chance of being able to pervail in a fight.
Certainly true except perhaps under the most exceptional circumstances.
At Dogger Bank, the German RF equipment was quite outclassed and the British shells devastating, the way they would appear on paper.
The German after action comments for this battle speak of British shells being most effective when they passed over the armor and entered the decks above, thus speaking to the very long range of this engagement (beyond German RF markings on the spotting scopes in many cases) and the relatively low striking velocities of the very large and steady 13.5" gun. The same comments would obviously not apply to 12-inch guns of
Invincible, whose shells tended to tumble in flight and therefore were limited in effective range. Perhaps these characteristics explain the near-exhaustion of shells at Falklands against Spee.
British after-action reports speak to the relative uselessness of the Dreyer Table and the huge manual corrections applied, especially at long ranges. Like most battles, the loser adopted lessons learned, but the winner was less eager for expensive refits.
It seems like Dogger Bank and Falklands were fought in exceptional conditions of weather. Ranges of 20,000 yards were certainly not to be expected in the North Sea. I believe the Kaiser's ships were designed for realistic battle at ranges of 10,000 to 15,000 yards. At the lower ranges,
Blucher's rate of fire may have canceled the smaller size of her shells when facing
Invincible.