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-   -   Should the US reactivate battleships? (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=230998)

em2nought 04-23-17 03:57 PM

We should be fighting with nukes, better that Islam is wiped of the face of the earth than one US soldier needlessly give their lives, or end up being taken care of by the VA for the rest of it. :salute:

Nippelspanner 04-23-17 05:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by em2nought (Post 2480348)
We should be fighting with nukes, better that Islam is wiped of the face of the earth than one US soldier needlessly give their lives, or end up being taken care of by the VA for the rest of it. :salute:

https://s-media-cache-ak0.pinimg.com...3cdd2c57ca.jpg

Platapus 04-23-17 05:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Nippelspanner (Post 2480357)

I don't think one is enough

https://s15-us2.ixquick.com/cgi-bin/...ticache=749064

Rockin Robbins 04-23-17 06:42 PM

You can kill mosquitoes with explosives too. I remember in one James Bond movie, James had left his car and the bad guy came snooping around after something in the car. On the window was a sticker "this automobile is electionically protected." The bad guy snickered took out his tools and the car and he blew up. Nuclear weapons are like that.

As far as the battleships go, any garden variety DDG has more firepower than any WWII battleship today. And they hit what they shoot at. Put a dozen DDGs off the coast of any nation and they can destroy with precision any target within several hundred miles. What's the range of those battleship popguns?

Julhelm 04-24-17 02:50 AM

Battleships were hopelessly outmoded the moment Billy Mitchell sank one.

All that armor really did was prolong the inevitable. In the case of Bismarck and Yamato, they were so heavily armored that allies had to use extreme firepower to bring them under, needlessly slaughtering thousands of sailors. The Iowa's armor protection is comparatively weak and pretty much any modern SSM would mission-kill it outright.

vienna 04-24-17 03:19 AM

The vulnerability of any vessel to more modern technology is obvious. Look at the USS Stark: attacked by an Iraqi fighter from about 15-20 miles away and hit by two Exocet missiles; only one exploded; if the second one had detonated, the Stark probably would have been sunk. Now, the Stark could do about 30 knots, tops; but, much like the Lamborghini outrunning a Boomer question in another thread, in a speed contest with a locked-in missile, no ship is going to win that race...

...and consider the vulnerability of warships to low tech threats: the USS Cole was severely damaged and almost destroyed by a couple of guys in what wasn't much more than an explosive packed dinghy...




<O>

Sailor Steve 04-24-17 11:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Julhelm (Post 2480411)
Battleships were hopelessly outmoded the moment Billy Mitchell sank one.

Quite true, though it took Pearl Harbor and the sinking of HMS Prince Of Wales before the lesson set in.

Quote:

The Iowa's armor protection is comparatively weak and pretty much any modern SSM would mission-kill it outright.
Here I only partly agree. "Mission-kill" is a tricky concept. If the mission is to deliver heavy artillery to a target, then no, the average SSM will not stop that. "Comparatively weak" is the problem. The armor on any battleship is designed to withstand its own shells at prescribed ranges, since the designers don't consider themselves to have adequate access to the other guy's firepower. This requires that the battle be kept to a range that balances the ship's own strengths and weaknesses. No anti-ship missile is what we would consider "armor-piercing". Yes, such a hit on a battleship has a fair chance of knocking out certain electronics, but it's not going to be catastrophic to such a ship.

Quote:

Originally Posted by vienna (Post 2480417)
USS Stark

Unarmored. No defense against that sort of thing at all.

Quote:

USS Cole
Again, completely unarmored. One-half inch of steel isn't going to stop a destroyer's 5" HC round, and it's not going to stop a boat full of explosives. That same attack would have had on effect on a battleship whatsoever.

Bismarck was disabled by dozens of armor-piercing rounds travelling at more than twice the speed of an anti-ship missile, with hardened heads specifically designed to get through that armor. Plus several torpedoes. Plus the scuttling.

Yamato and Musashi were attacked by dozens of bombs designed to get though light armor, coming straight down onto decks which were only lightly armored. The big killer there was the multiple torpedoes. Building anti-torpedo armor is difficult. It may be proof against one tin fish, but once it has done that job it is useless against a second hitting in the same place.

In all those cases the ships took a whole lot of killing. All that said, though, the torpedo is the bane of the battleships, and there are lots of submarines and lots of planes with lots of torpedoes out there.

In the end it would still be impractical to bring back the battleships, and a huge waste of money for a ship with such limited parameters.

Rockstar 04-24-17 11:45 AM

I know after the Cole incident there were a boat load procedural changes which encouraged a much more rapid response to such threats. Before the incident one could say we werent really thinking about or all that prepared for such things. We are now though.

Julhelm 04-24-17 04:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sailor Steve (Post 2480497)
Quite true, though it took Pearl Harbor and the sinking of HMS Prince Of Wales before the lesson set in.

Here I only partly agree. "Mission-kill" is a tricky concept. If the mission is to deliver heavy artillery to a target, then no, the average SSM will not stop that. "Comparatively weak" is the problem. The armor on any battleship is designed to withstand its own shells at prescribed ranges, since the designers don't consider themselves to have adequate access to the other guy's firepower. This requires that the battle be kept to a range that balances the ship's own strengths and weaknesses. No anti-ship missile is what we would consider "armor-piercing". Yes, such a hit on a battleship has a fair chance of knocking out certain electronics, but it's not going to be catastrophic to such a ship.

Only the citadel is armored, but directors and sensor arrays are very vulnerable and if damaged would definitely mission kill a battleship. But something like SS-N-12 or SS-N-19 which were designed to kill US carriers would most likely defeat the Iowa's armor protection.

Quote:

Bismarck was disabled by dozens of armor-piercing rounds travelling at more than twice the speed of an anti-ship missile, with hardened heads specifically designed to get through that armor. Plus several torpedoes. Plus the scuttling.
That is totally incorrect. Bismarck was effectively mission-killed by a single hit to the bow section which caused major flooding and a fuel leak. By the time the torpedo bombers attacked it, it had already aborted its mission to break out into the Atlantic.

Sailor Steve 04-24-17 11:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Julhelm (Post 2480550)
Only the citadel is armored, but directors and sensor arrays are very vulnerable and if damaged would definitely mission kill a battleship. But something like SS-N-12 or SS-N-19 which were designed to kill US carriers would most likely defeat the Iowa's armor protection.

Carriers aren't armored at all, that I'm aware of. Your other points are good ones.


Quote:

That is totally incorrect. Bismarck was effectively mission-killed by a single hit to the bow section which caused major flooding and a fuel leak. By the time the torpedo bombers attacked it, it had already aborted its mission to break out into the Atlantic.
Also an excellent point. I'm forced to agree.

Kaye T. Bai 04-25-17 12:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Platapus (Post 2480361)
I don't think one is enough.

Make that a triple facepalm.
Quote:

Originally Posted by Julhelm (Post 2480411)
The Iowa's armor protection is comparatively weak and pretty much any modern SSM would mission-kill it outright.

I was wondering about this as I've heard claims to the opposite, that the Iowa-class BBs are practically invulnerable against SSMs precisely because of armor.

ikalugin 04-25-17 01:14 AM

Some points:

- not the entirety of the Iowa class has been armoured to the same standard.
Iowa without the front/aft areas of hull or superstructure may still float but it would be mission killed.

- the armoured citadel has been desighned to protect inside a narrow safe area.
This was done because protecting that fast BB against it's own guns at all ranges was not feasable.

- this safe area is defined by munition's velocity and angle of fall.
That is because those are functions of engagement range.

- it is not hard to modify AShMs' angle of fall or to attack the weakpoints.
This means that you can bypass Iowa's protection and that is without going nuclear.

However with heavy AShMs you dont need to do that, because at their speeds (600m/s+) and mass (500kgs+) they would penetrate Iowa's belt in horizontal flight, so you don't need, say, go into a speed dive to plunge through the deck armour even if it is the standard flight trajectory (ie for the Kh22N).


So, in my opinion, modern BBs are dumb. The last gun orientated warship US has built - Zumwalt was born as a white elephant.

Nippelspanner 04-25-17 09:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ikalugin (Post 2480599)
The last gun orientated warship US has built - Zumwalt was born as a white elephant.

It's an abomination, haha.


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