Hopefully not, a lot of the infrastructure required to support them just does not exist anymore (schools for the guns and boilers, maintenance facilities, ect) and would need to be recreated.I'm afraid not, unless some well informed person makes me look stupid, the last of the battleships have been struck from the register. In an era of expenditures on Harpoon, Cruise Missiles, Nuclear Submarines et al, I think it's unlikely the battleship proper will ever be revived.
That can be debated, they spent more time in mothballs than in active service and one of the only reasons they were revived in the 80's was because they could mount more of the old ABL Tomahawks than any other ship the USN had.Saying that, I thought it was quite astute that the Americans retained the 4 Iowa class battleships in the reserve.
I doubt it, it was a 50+ year old ship that was armored in places to protect against surface running torpedoes and large caliber gun fire, a modern ASM would most likely hit above the armor belt or dive down the stacks where you can not armor. Plus it has 50+ year old damage control facilities and requires escorts to protect it against ASM's. Besides you don't need to get through the armor to mission kill a ship.They proved they were still very useful naval artillery in Desert Storm, and lets face it if they'd ever managed to get in a surface combat they'd have presented a headache. It'd take quite a few SSMs to knock one of those out. I think I'm right in remembering there was a lot of flak at the decision to retire them. I'll see if I can find a link.
No, it is just cheaper to use missiles than to reactivate, retrain the people needed, manufacture new gun barrels, new ammunition, new power bags, ect.Seems like the USN just isn't big on naval artillery any more.
Except the armor belt was designed and placed to protect against gun fire not missiles. Their are plenty of places on a battleship that are either not armored or minimally armored and a mission kill is just as good as sinking it most of the time.I read somewhere that the thick armored belts of a battleship would give brilliant protection against cruise missiles like the harpoon as there not designed to go through armored belts.
5 inch gun could be more effective but if I knew I had 16 inch guns aimed at me and even if it had less chance of hitting me, I would just get out of that areathat historically the most effective artillery support has come from around the 5 inch gun size, it is more accurate and you can get it closer to friendly troops than you can with a 16 inch monster gun.
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I reckon in using WW2 classifications the DD-1000 is a Battlecruiser fast, lighter armour, yet well, in terms of Naval fire support well I thing the Ohio SSGN would be the true definition, 154 Tac 4 Tomahawks, well protected ship through low observability rather than heavy armour, plus anti shipping capability with torpedoes and maybe even sub launch harpoons, but I suppose we would have to call it a battle boat as not to offend the submariners .Could you count a kiev as a modern battleship? It definatly fulfills the sea controll elemnt of the definition.
I guess the closest thing to a battleship being built today is the DD-1000 Zumwalt class, with automatic 6 inch guns she will bring naval artillary back in from the cold. Interestingly it seems that the new trend is for larger naval guns, up to 6 inch (155mm). IIRC the RN was looking at replaceing all of its 5 inch stiff with 155's.
You'll have to excuse my pedantism.There wasn t a single dreadnought sinked in WW1, and taken into consideration that there is no more dreadnought in WW2, it is safe to say the dreadnoughts is the safest warship ever exist.
Good one GD!You'll have to excuse my pedantism.
The catastrophic explosions that took out the three British battlecruisers at Jutland, along with Hood, Barham and the IJN's Yamato in WW2, raise questions about British magazine design and practices. After Jutland, the British took many additional precautions to prevent future magazine explosions but this failed to save Hood or Barham (Barham would have sunk anyway but loss of life would almost certainly have been much lower if she had not blown up). The Japanese ship had been hit numerous times by torpedoes and bombs so the fact that fires eventually spread to the magazines is not surprising. It seems to me that the RN suffered more than other major navies in this regard.RIP those poor bastards on the Barnham. 4 minets from impact to the mags going. They didnt stand a chance.
Efforts to speed up the rate of fire and spillage from the silk bags containing the cordite sometimes resulted in a trail from the turret floor to the magazine!The british handling of cordite was partly responsible for the loss of ships at Jutland, Designs of latter british capital ships seemed to produce a much more sturdy design the nelson's and KGV class plus the Hood was an old ship by 1941 and needed a major rebuild.
Good point.Also concerning the magazine explosions for the Royal Navy, can it be because they had more action compared to other Navies? Rather than faulty ammunition procedures and tools ( at least for WWII)
According to the wikipedia, Chanell 4 and ITN funded expedition found the wreck of Hood in July 2001 so I am sure they have some TV program showing that.Has there ever been a dive or ROV sent to the Hood in her final resting place ? It would make an interesting TV programme.
I don't know about any 'failsafe system' for shells in the time between the fuses being set and loading them into a gun but I can't imagine that fused shells would have been placed in such a way that they could roll about as the ship pitched and rolled. I'm unaware of any incidents in a ship where a shell has accidently detonated as a result of dropping on its nose. However, someone else may have information regarding this.Tasman,
was there any failsafe system for 4" shells just in case they fell down on their nose and detonated? Because once the ship begins to roll, shells in transition from storage to upper decks would be not tied to anything and roll all over and hit other objects that might cause them to detonate.
The way the Bismark was doomed by a hit on the rudderTheir are plenty of places on a battleship that are either not armored or minimally armored and a mission kill is just as good as sinking it most of the time.