You could probably count on the fingers of one hand the number of engineers with steam tickets these days.
You could probably count on the fingers of one hand the number of engineers with steam tickets these days.
Blue Ridge and Mount Whitney are still going, and will be for twenty years. No Boiler Tech's any more though.Well, of course ALL of the US Navy's nuclear powered vessels are technically steam ships! Probably takes a different "ticket".
I'd guess the last of the Navy's conventional steam powered ships was USS Camden, of the Sacramento class. Those ships each had half the propulsion system from an Iowa battleship, specifically the never-completed USS Kentucky.
It would probably be cheaper and faster to build three more Burkes, than refit one Iowa.
Not even counting the knock on effects of the Burkes already having established training and maintenance pipelines.
And if you need more shore bombardment for some reason, talk to the Air Force. F-15Es, B-1Bs, and F-35As in "beast mode" are going to be far more effective than BB guns. Plus being useful for all kinds of other fire missions as well.
Plus also having established training and supply pipelines.
The "but muh battleships are still relevant!11!" meme really needs to die in a fire.
Artillery support is best given by artillery.
Why would you want to tie up thousands of crew aboard a battleship to serve a few guns giving artillery support?
Through no fault of the design, the Yamato and its fellow Yamato Class battleships have to be considered.
The Japanese had already taught the world that big gun naval warfare was going to be a thing of the past, but rather than use the two yuge battleships to possibly sucker the Americans in when they still had sufficient naval power (they being the IJN), they kept them safely away until their fates were fairly well sealed when the USN had submarine and carrier dominance. The Musashi went down during Leyte Gulf, when it was still the flagship of the fleet, I believe. And the inglorious and stupid end to the Yamato at Okinawa is the stuff of legend.
The one time the Yamato got into the shooting war it was very effective against smaller ships but didn't meet up with the USN battleships, and certainly no carriers! Both of the ships of the class were allergic to carriers. The anti-aircraft batteries were less effective than designed. And no one's immune to torpedoes, which is what took out the Musashi.
So design-wise, probably good ships but we don't have enough data. But when it comes to mismanagement by naval command, absolute boondoggles.
Artillery support is best given by artillery.
Why would you want to tie up thousands of crew aboard a battleship to serve a few guns giving artillery support?
Modern 155mm naval guns, on the other hand, are entirely useless.Completely tooting my own Reg't's horn here, but this. Modern 155mm howitzers reach out 40km. And drop their rounds in a area the size of a football field. And at 24km within 5-10m and a lethal radius of 50m....
Through no fault of the design, the Yamato and its fellow Yamato Class battleships have to be considered.
The Japanese had already taught the world that big gun naval warfare was going to be a thing of the past, but rather than use the two yuge battleships to possibly sucker the Americans in when they still had sufficient naval power (they being the IJN), they kept them safely away until their fates were fairly well sealed when the USN had submarine and carrier dominance. The Musashi went down during Leyte Gulf, when it was still the flagship of the fleet, I believe. And the inglorious and stupid end to the Yamato at Okinawa is the stuff of legend.
The one time the Yamato got into the shooting war it was very effective against smaller ships but didn't meet up with the USN battleships, and certainly no carriers! Both of the ships of the class were allergic to carriers. The anti-aircraft batteries were less effective than designed. And no one's immune to torpedoes, which is what took out the Musashi.
So design-wise, probably good ships but we don't have enough data. But when it comes to mismanagement by naval command, absolute boondoggles.
A claim not supported by the link.Modern 155mm naval guns, on the other hand, are entirely useless.
A claim not supported by the link.
Modern 155mm naval guns, on the other hand, are entirely useless.
True, there are about 90 rounds available and no plans to make any more, due to the cost.
