Good for you that you wrote it in small letters.Col. Crackpot wrote:umm... great leader the North Carolina is not an Iowa class boat. She is a North Carolina class.
Our Great Leader is in a good mood now but the NKVD is always watching you!
Moderator: Edi
The US knew that Japan was working on a new class of battleship, and one of the design criteria for the Iowa was to combat this new ship. It was faulty intelligence reports that had the Yamato at 45,000 tons with 16 in guns. The US had heard reports and rumors that the new Japanese ship was larger then 45,000 tons and carried larger guns, but these reports were quickly dismissed. They believed that Japan could not possibly construct such a large ship, so the US went with a more "reasonable" estimate of 45,000 tons and 16 inch guns for the Yamato. And it was this estimate that the Iowa was desinged to counter. So yes, the Iowa was designed to combat the Yamato.Sea Skimmer wrote: No it wasn’t. The US knew NOTHING of the Yamato class when the Iowa’s where laid down, and thought they where 45,000 ton vessels with 16 inch guns though about 1944. Only near the end of the war was it suggested they might be 60,000 tons armed with 17.7 inch guns.
Paper and reality in factBurak Gazan wrote:Iowa on paper wins the fight hands down.
The radar horizon is slightly longer then the visual horizon. Bismarck's fire control did not prove its self to be particularly good in action and she's going to be under heavy fire by the time she can even see her target anyway. Iowa can open up as soon as she has a contact on the upper structure of the Bismarck on the other hand.However, given height-of-eye and horizon limitations, neither side will be engaging at maximum range unless you have perfect visibility and weather allowing their spotter planes to be aloft.
Thats about right, but neither side had anything like Iowas radar. Blind fire only showed up in 1943-44.If I remember correctly, Bismarck and Hood began exchanging fire around 27,000 yards (13.5 nautical miles).
Irrelevant, go make your own thread if you wish
Dont forget, this would also be a 1941 ship vs a 1943 ship; more "fair" would be North Carolina or Washington vs Bismarck;
Likely? You've yet to bring up a single thing that disputes the fact that Iowa would tear the crap out of Bismarck, a ship very worth of its place on the cover of Anthony Prestons The worlds Worst WarshipBismarck would likely still lose
Exactly. One side is using optical fire control backed by shitty radar that generally was knocked out by the first salvo of the ships own guns. The other side, Iowa, has blindfire radar that worked perfectly.but in any cap ship engagement, whoever gets on range first and scores a hit has the edge.
Indeed, and Bismarck's thin low main armored deck can be pierced by Iowa outside of 25,000 yards. Bismarck will be lucky not to be crippled by the first few hits. Meanwhile, Bismarck's own guns can only defeat Iowa's deck at ranges over 32,000 yards, where she has no chance of ever getting a hit.If the intercept was the same as Hood and PoW, having all that long deck open to plunging fire doesnt seem like fun
http://www.hazegray.org/navhist/battleships/us_wwii.htm
The Iowa's rivaled the Yamatos. The Montana's would have torn them apart.For some info on the Montanas - they would have been major heavyweights to rival the Yamato-class
Indeed. Bismarck would be totally incapable of dealing with the resulting fuel fires, the needed equipment wont exist until the 50's and 60's and wont work well until the 80's. Not to mention massive blast damage against her poorly protected comm. and power lines. Hell the SAP warhead in theory could defeat the Bismarck's main deck armor.Beowulf wrote:16 Harpoons are quite enough to sink the Bismarck from over the Horizon... (The original poster never said which era Iowa...)
True, but I thought the armored box launchers held TLAM.phongn wrote:For extra overkill you could also use TASM as well
But what were usually fitted with TASM, or with TLAM?phongn wrote:The Armored Box Launcher could carry the full range of Tomahawks.
Of course..the only modern us battleship to engage another battleship was the USS Washington which torn a Jap battleship apart in a little over 7 minutes..of course that was at night and almost point blank range..Burak Gazan wrote:"Paper and reality in fact"
Uh, no actually -- Iowa never fought Bismarck, so any engagement WOULD only be speculative "what if" not fact.
And in that scenario, Iowa holds the big edge.
Repeat: Iowa kills Bismarck barring any lucky bounces
Geez, calm down
This sort of argument always crops up every few years, evading the minor detail that the Iowas never fought any major surface combatants in their entire careers. Frankly, I'd rather bring the North Carolinas or Tennessees to the party
Don't belittle them for their 14" guns. They had thicker armor than the Iowas, among other attributes.macman wrote:If the Bismark was the worst warship would not the Prince of Wales and King George V have to be seem to be even worst....
Have to agree with Hipper.Frank Hipper wrote:Don't belittle them for their 14" guns. They had thicker armor than the Iowas, among other attributes.macman wrote:If the Bismark was the worst warship would not the Prince of Wales and King George V have to be seem to be even worst....
And there were far worse 20th century capitol ships than Bismarck, anyway. And they weren't built by Germany, that's for damn sure!
Indeed, the KGV class were also built at a time when Britian still went by Washington and London treaty limits. Given the design and cost limitations they were not overly bad vessels.Frank Hipper wrote:Don't belittle them for their 14" guns. They had thicker armor than the Iowas, among other attributes.macman wrote:If the Bismark was the worst warship would not the Prince of Wales and King George V have to be seem to be even worst....
And there were far worse 20th century capitol ships than Bismarck, anyway. And they weren't built by Germany, that's for damn sure!
By the time Britain realised they were following the treaty limitations by themselves, it was too late to put bigger guns in, or increase displacement. All things considered, they were excellent. No Yamato, but I'd take them over a Richelieu.Stuart Mackey wrote:Indeed, the KGV class were also built at a time when Britian still went by Washington and London treaty limits. Given the design and cost limitations they were not overly bad vessels.
Indeed. However, in retrosepect, even if the Brits could have increased tonnage, gun size etc, They were effectivly out of the Large force of BB's game. They simply couldnt afford it, and should have built decent carriers..aint hindsight great?Frank Hipper wrote:By the time Britain realised they were following the treaty limitations by themselves, it was too late to put bigger guns in, or increase displacement. All things considered, they were excellent. No Yamato, but I'd take them over a Richelieu.Stuart Mackey wrote:Indeed, the KGV class were also built at a time when Britian still went by Washington and London treaty limits. Given the design and cost limitations they were not overly bad vessels.
You know as I'm getting older and older my eyes are not as good as they were before... (that's not a "cool", it's a "blind" emoticon)Frank Hipper wrote:It's the subject of a book that Sea Skimmer mentioned towards the top of the page.Boba Fett wrote:On the other hand nobody told that the Bismarck was the worst battleship.
I was responding to a statement about Bismark being the worst warship...Bismark was tough and certainly more than a match one on one for any British Battleship except for maybe the Rodney or Nelson and both those ships were way to slow to force an action...Frank Hipper wrote:Don't belittle them for their 14" guns. They had thicker armor than the Iowas, among other attributes.macman wrote:If the Bismark was the worst warship would not the Prince of Wales and King George V have to be seem to be even worst....
And there were far worse 20th century capitol ships than Bismarck, anyway. And they weren't built by Germany, that's for damn sure!
I disagree. A fully worked up KGV would have been a close fight, as would the older Nelson and Rodney, never mind Vanguard, which wasn't that far behind an Iowa. Hood was just damn unlucky, and as a result Bismarck has a rep as an ubership.macman wrote:I was responding to a statement about Bismark being the worst warship...Bismark was tough and certainly more than a match one on one for any British Battleship except for maybe the Rodney or Nelson and both those ships were way to slow to force an action...Frank Hipper wrote:Don't belittle them for their 14" guns. They had thicker armor than the Iowas, among other attributes.macman wrote:If the Bismark was the worst warship would not the Prince of Wales and King George V have to be seem to be even worst....
And there were far worse 20th century capitol ships than Bismarck, anyway. And they weren't built by Germany, that's for damn sure!
Bah. It was already sinking (and had been a hulk for some time). They scuttled it because it's SOP, not because the RN was gonna tow it back home for a refit.Some reports I have read believe that in spite of all the punishmnet the Bismark it was scuttled to prevent capture and not actually sunk by all the shell and torpedeos .....