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Eternal Patrol
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I didn't mean to start it up again. My intention in referencing Campbell was to show where the GWX changing of everything to HE came from. In fact Campbell's wording is vague, but at the time I originally brought it up it was what I had. When I read the later capture reports I was surprised, but not overly so. It's obvious that the captain had some leeway in the loadout he carried.
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When the British commissioned the Majestic class battleships in 1893, the loadout cosisted of "Armour-piercing solid shot, Armour-piercing shell, Semi-armour-piercing common, and dummy rounds", with no High explosive. The problem at that time was that no one was sure that an AP shell would even work. By the First World War the AP solid shot was gone, the loadout was mostly AP shell, along with some Common and HE. Common was for use against unarmored targets and HE was meant for shore bombardment. Destroyer guns of the period had Common rounds and nothing else, and carried the wonderfully awkward designation of SAPCBC (Semi-Armour-Piercing Capped British Common). In World War Two the famous US dual-purpose 5"/38 carried no HE, but a Common type called HC, for High-Capacity, which was designed to pierce the roof of a small concrete bunker, along with AA rounds, which was why they were 'dual-purpose'. My copies are all in storage, so I can't give you specific issue numbers, but most of this comes from various issues of Conway's Warship magazine and the Amercan Warship International, including articles on the Majestic class battleships and HMS Bulwark, of the London class. They also contain Campbell's series 'British Naval Guns: 1880-1945.' Another source I love is also by Campbell: Jutland - An Analysis Of The Fighting. It contains a shot-by-shot description of the battle - who fired what type of shell, where it hit and damage done. The best part is the information that one British battleship (I think it was Hercules) was loaded for a bombardment mission and went into the battle with nothing but HE! Quote:
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“Never do anything you can't take back.” —Rocky Russo |
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