The 90/53 had zero depression, which becomes a problem in the anti tank role as it means you have a hard time finding suitable firing positions. This is less of an issue in the desert then in Europe, but the desert is still not flat and defending the heights is ever more important because of how great of observation they give. Heavier weight is an issue when its several tons as is the case here, the Flak 18 was fairly light for its firepower in the first place though so this isn’t exactly a reason to call the Italian gun bad. A big advantage of the Flak 18 though was it could safely fire from its wheels without deploying for action, and was quick to deploy, and equally important quick to limber up and withdrawal. It was always designed to serve as a duel purpose weapon, few other anti aircraft guns were.
The US 90mm M1 and British 3.7in never had much luck in the anti tank role in spite of also being superior ballistically and in ROF to the German weapon because they were also much heavier and slow to deploy, and the M1 lacked any depression (M3 variant added it late war). I’ve heard before that the 3.7in only had depression to make cleaning the barrel easier, and could not be fired below 0 degrees but I don’t know if that is true or not. The Soviet 85mm M1939 had depression and was pretty damn light, but it was also a less powerful smaller weapon, which is why they managed to cram it into a T-34 tank so easily later.
http://img36.imageshack.us/img36/4048/l ... enetio.gif
Here is a diagram of Littorio class armor and side protection over machinery. Armor over magazines was somewhat different and heavier, TDS is more or less the same. Numbers are thickness of plates in millimeters, generally stuff under 10mm is not armor but just structural steel. Notice how the main belt is actually a composite of plates, intended to decap incoming rounds (this may really have worked, may have made this the best belt armor EVER) and the bizarre decision to make the decks thinner outboard, even though only a puny 24mm bulkhead is preventing a bomb or shell that goes through that thinner deck from reaching the vitals.
As for the Pugliese System, the idea was instead of vertical or flat but sloped bulkheads as everyone else on the entire planet used, the center of the system would be a circular drum void inside a liquid loaded compartment. The logic was as a cylinder is much stronger then a vertical bulkhead, more energy would be absorbed crushing it. Then when it collapsed massive turbulence would be unleashed, and fluid displaced, further weakening the torpedo blast. Behind this liquid loaded space was a sloping and then rounded off armored bulkhead to catch fragments and further deflect blast.
I have marked the armored bulkhead in red, and the void space in blue to be clear. The numerous smaller holes in the diagram around the void are preformations in the traverse rib bulkheads that hold the drum void in place so to keep the water or fuel loading even. Some of these supporting rib bulkheads would have actually been solid to divide the side protection into different fuel tanks.
anyway, the problems are several fold. First, hard to build, hard to repair because of so many curves plates, and such bad access working around the damn drum. Even today this would be a pain in the ass to deal with even given computer controlled presses to make the plates and welding to join them. The ship however was mostly riveted.
The main flaw though of the Pugliese System though is it just didn’t work right. As you can see, a torpedo that hits too low or too high will miss the center of the drum, reducing the effectiveness of said drum as a barrier, blast can directly be transmitted to the inner armored bulkhead. That might not be so bad.
What was really bad was, the joint of that inner armored bulkhead with the bottom of the hull was flawed, really flawed. That’s why this diagram bothers having a blowup of it. Basically it would tear completely free of the hull bottom, and the entire torpedo defense system would be displaced onboard a couple feet or so. Result is massive damage, total failure of the holding bulkhead and an extremely difficult repair job to cut it all apart, then rebuild it.
Another problem was, this system has extensive liquid loading, but only the drum is a void, and a void which is not meant to be flooded. Italian solution was to put counterflooding tanks above the torpedo defense system, everyone else used voids within the system below the waterline. So counter flooding was slow as water had t be pumped in by the fire mains, rather then rushing in from the ocean after you opened the proper valve. That means a loss of power would also prevent counterflooding, though this never caused a loss of ship.
The Pugliese System was successful at the most basic requirement of a torpedo defense system, which is to keep blast and fragmentation out of the vital spaces. This is important because torpedo blast entering magazines tends to turn into the ship exploding. Preventing this was the earliest reason for having a TDS at all; a number of dreadnoughts in WW1 for example only had patches of armor over each main battery magazine. Keeping blast and fragments out of the engine rooms is also highly desirable, even if they flood they’ll at least be much easier to fix. Replacing turbines and boilers is very time consuming, and turbines may take years to manufacture if you truly need total replacement (almost unheard of, damn things are huge, don’t get smashed easy)
So while the system was not a complete failure by any means, it was expensive and time consuming, and led to a number of Italian battleships taking very serious damage and heavy flooding from relatively small British aerial torpedo warhead. In general you can’t really stop a torpedo from causing ~1,000 tons of flooding or so, but Italian ships were taking several times that.
"This cult of special forces is as sensible as to form a Royal Corps of Tree Climbers and say that no soldier who does not wear its green hat with a bunch of oak leaves stuck in it should be expected to climb a tree"
— Field Marshal William Slim 1956