40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
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40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
Would it have been possible to mount the 40.6cm SK C/34 guns on the Bismarck class BBs?
- Dave Saxton
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Re: 40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
The 38cm gun was used largely because it was thought, circa 1935, since only the Nelson class were equipped with 16" guns in Europe, a 16" Bismarck would antagonize the British. The Italians and the French (the preceived most likely opponant at the time) had already decided to go with 15" and the British were pushing for a new treaty limit of 14".
The 16" gun was heavier and so would have required larger and heavier supporting structures, increasing the tonnage of the ship slightly. Bismarck probably could have been equipped with the 16" but the increase in firepower was actually marginal.
The 15" had greater deck penetration out to 32km before the 16" eclipsed it. In terms of belt penetration, velocity is the more important factor. The only advantages for the 16" came at extreme battle ranges.
The 16" gun was heavier and so would have required larger and heavier supporting structures, increasing the tonnage of the ship slightly. Bismarck probably could have been equipped with the 16" but the increase in firepower was actually marginal.
The 15" had greater deck penetration out to 32km before the 16" eclipsed it. In terms of belt penetration, velocity is the more important factor. The only advantages for the 16" came at extreme battle ranges.
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Re: 40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
... true,Dave Saxton wrote:The 38cm gun was used largely because it was thought, circa 1935, since only the Nelson class were equipped with 16" guns in Europe, a 16" Bismarck would antagonize the British. The Italians and the French (the preceived most likely opponant at the time) had already decided to go with 15" and the British were pushing for a new treaty limit of 14".
The 16" gun was heavier and so would have required larger and heavier supporting structures, increasing the tonnage of the ship slightly. Bismarck probably could have been equipped with the 16" but the increase in firepower was actually marginal.
The 15" had greater deck penetration out to 32km before the 16" eclipsed it. In terms of belt penetration, velocity is the more important factor. The only advantages for the 16" came at extreme battle ranges.
but the 16" would have an extra advantage - more devastation delivered to the target, because of the much heavier shell.
I would expect the 16"/L52 to require more turret space, barbette space and, if the ammo capacity would stay the same as per Bismarck (120 rounds/gun), given the larger volume occupied by the 16" shells, probably a larger diameter of the main magazines, and thus a slightly increased beam of the ship. This would take away some of it's speed...
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Re: 40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
Exactly what the H-Class was!alecsandros wrote:I would expect the 16"/L52 to require more turret space, barbette space and, if the ammo capacity would stay the same as per Bismarck (120 rounds/gun), given the larger volume occupied by the 16" shells, probably a larger diameter of the main magazines, and thus a slightly increased beam of the ship. This would take away some of it's speed...
http://www.kbismarck.com/h-class-battleships.html
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Re: 40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
But the 40.6cm C/34 fired at a velocity just a mere 10 m/s slower than the 38 cm C/34, thus I'd expect the 40.6 cm to feature a similar trajectory?Dave Saxton wrote:The 38cm gun was used largely because it was thought, circa 1935, since only the Nelson class were equipped with 16" guns in Europe, a 16" Bismarck would antagonize the British. The Italians and the French (the preceived most likely opponant at the time) had already decided to go with 15" and the British were pushing for a new treaty limit of 14".
The 16" gun was heavier and so would have required larger and heavier supporting structures, increasing the tonnage of the ship slightly. Bismarck probably could have been equipped with the 16" but the increase in firepower was actually marginal.
The 15" had greater deck penetration out to 32km before the 16" eclipsed it. In terms of belt penetration, velocity is the more important factor. The only advantages for the 16" came at extreme battle ranges.
At least according to navweaps the 40.6cm gun featured superior belt penetration at all distances, and better deck penetration up until around 20 km.
http://www.navweaps.com/Weapons/WNGER_15-52_skc34.htm
http://www.navweaps.com/Weapons/WNGER_16-52_skc34.htm
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Re: 40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
José M. Rico wrote:Exactly what the H-Class was!alecsandros wrote:I would expect the 16"/L52 to require more turret space, barbette space and, if the ammo capacity would stay the same as per Bismarck (120 rounds/gun), given the larger volume occupied by the 16" shells, probably a larger diameter of the main magazines, and thus a slightly increased beam of the ship. This would take away some of it's speed...
http://www.kbismarck.com/h-class-battleships.html
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Re: 40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
... navweapons is a perfectible source.Christian VII. wrote:But the 40.6cm C/34 fired at a velocity just a mere 10 m/s slower than the 38 cm C/34, thus I'd expect the 40.6 cm to feature a similar trajectory?Dave Saxton wrote:The 38cm gun was used largely because it was thought, circa 1935, since only the Nelson class were equipped with 16" guns in Europe, a 16" Bismarck would antagonize the British. The Italians and the French (the preceived most likely opponant at the time) had already decided to go with 15" and the British were pushing for a new treaty limit of 14".
The 16" gun was heavier and so would have required larger and heavier supporting structures, increasing the tonnage of the ship slightly. Bismarck probably could have been equipped with the 16" but the increase in firepower was actually marginal.
The 15" had greater deck penetration out to 32km before the 16" eclipsed it. In terms of belt penetration, velocity is the more important factor. The only advantages for the 16" came at extreme battle ranges.
At least according to navweaps the 40.6cm gun featured superior belt penetration at all distances, and better deck penetration up until around 20 km.
http://www.navweaps.com/Weapons/WNGER_15-52_skc34.htm
http://www.navweaps.com/Weapons/WNGER_16-52_skc34.htm
German offical documents show differences of ~ 5% in terms of penetration between the 2 guns, and the weight difference would not justify the 16" gun.
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Re: 40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
The 1030kg weight vs 800kg weight means that the heavier shell will lose less velocity per range. This means that the lighter shell will start getting steeper angles of fall sooner. This is why the 15" will have greater deck penetration until the battle range is very great.Christian VII. wrote:But the 40.6cm C/34 fired at a velocity just a mere 10 m/s slower than the 38 cm C/34, thus I'd expect the 40.6 cm to feature a similar trajectory?
Entering a night sea battle is an awesome business.The enveloping darkness, hiding the enemy's.. seems a living thing, malignant and oppressive.Swishing water at the bow and stern mark an inexorable advance toward an unknown destiny.
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Re: 40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
But at such high weights wouldn't the difference in fall off be rather small? And considering that the lighter shell starts out faster I'd suspect that the extra 10 m/s wouldn't be all lost until quite some range?Dave Saxton wrote:The 1030kg weight vs 800kg weight means that the heavier shell will lose less velocity per range. This means that the lighter shell will start getting steeper angles of fall sooner. This is why the 15" will have greater deck penetration until the battle range is very great.Christian VII. wrote:But the 40.6cm C/34 fired at a velocity just a mere 10 m/s slower than the 38 cm C/34, thus I'd expect the 40.6 cm to feature a similar trajectory?
But then again I'm just guessing, I don't have the ballistic charts for the two guns so I can only speculate :)
Re: 40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
Twin 16" turret weight in at 1452 tons and had a barbette diameter of 11m. Bismarck turrets weight in at 1047 tons and the Barbette diameter was about 10 meters. So to make this work you'd have to have the Bismarck built even bigger than it was to compensate the extra mass and width needed for larger turrets.
I always see the German 16" guns and 15" guns and 11" guns -all designed and built at the same time as a real waste. Had they realised war was eminent by the end of that decade I'd bet they would only have built a 14" gun and had enough by 1940 for all 4 Battleships to be armed with 6-8 of these. If anything else an improved gun for the PBS and follow on would be more worth while...but that's me.
I always see the German 16" guns and 15" guns and 11" guns -all designed and built at the same time as a real waste. Had they realised war was eminent by the end of that decade I'd bet they would only have built a 14" gun and had enough by 1940 for all 4 Battleships to be armed with 6-8 of these. If anything else an improved gun for the PBS and follow on would be more worth while...but that's me.
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Re: 40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
I've always been of the opinion that the German 11" gun was a great design, was very deadly for its size and IIRC featured the smallest salvo spread of any naval gun in the world.
Re: 40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
Christian VII. wrote:I've always been of the opinion that the German 11" gun was a great design, was very deadly for its size and IIRC featured the smallest salvo spread of any naval gun in the world.
If it had been able to retro fit it to the PBS I would have supported it, but making it exclusively for the Twins was a luxury Germany could not afford. The 11C28 was excellent Panzerschiffe weapon.
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Re: 40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
The older 28cm of the Panzerschiffe used a shorter L/3.7 APC shell. The 28cm L/54 of the Scharnhorst class was designed around the new, vastly improved L/4,4 family of APC. This new shell gave the twins much better armour penetration, but had a too great an overall length to fit in the shell hoists of the Panzerschiffe. I would not say Germany could ill afford having the new 28cm gun, as it represented an incremental design improvement and its design specification dated to before Hitler renounced the Versailles treaty which limited ships to 28cm calibre maximum.If it had been able to retro fit it to the PBS I would have supported it, but making it exclusively for the Twins was a luxury Germany could not afford. The 11C28 was excellent Panzerschiffe weapon.
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Re: 40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
tommy303 wrote:The older 28cm of the Panzerschiffe used a shorter L/3.7 APC shell. The 28cm L/54 of the Scharnhorst class was designed around the new, vastly improved L/4,4 family of APC. This new shell gave the twins much better armour penetration, but had a too great an overall length to fit in the shell hoists of the Panzerschiffe. I would not say Germany could ill afford having the new 28cm gun, as it represented an incremental design improvement and its design specification dated to before Hitler renounced the Versailles treaty which limited ships to 28cm calibre maximum.If it had been able to retro fit it to the PBS I would have supported it, but making it exclusively for the Twins was a luxury Germany could not afford. The 11C28 was excellent Panzerschiffe weapon.
Given how little time they had 11" 15" and 16" were a terrible duplication of effort. As many historians have noted , Grand Admiral Raeder never reconciled his basic miss understanding of the Time line Hitler was marching to. He still believed he had at least a decade to build his fleet.
The PBS hoists could be rebuilt to the same specs and standard as the Twins. The Barbette is the same diameter in both cases to a new turret basket[?] could be rebuilt to fit. Alternatively if and when the Twins are up gunned to 15" guns , their turrets + basket & hoists could be back fitted to the PBS...with 500 tons of weight compensation.
Triple 11" c-28 were 590 tons of which the three guns amounted to 144 tons leaving 446 tons turret . By comparison the Twins turrets weight in at 750 tons each with 157 t guns leaving ; 593 ton turret.
I'm told the ROF for both turrets was the same at > 3 rounds per minute - suggesting the loading mechanisms were similar. most of the difference In turret mass must be the heavier armor of the Twins turrets, [360mm vs 160mm]. However the armor on these turrets is about 1/3 of its mass or 165 tons vs 220 tons or only < 60 tons difference.
The Twins turrets must also be larger ; but the guns are not that much bigger [9%]. Perhaps that is the effect of having a turret that was supposed to be able to mount 3 x 33cm guns instead of 3 x 28cm guns. So the only real option would be to swap out the C-28 turrets for the C-34 turrets and rebuild the turret race accordingly. or build new turrets for the C-34 guns to operate in the PBS hull.
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Re: 40.6 cm SK C/34's on the Bismarck class
The twin's turrets also had much heavier armour.
Entering a night sea battle is an awesome business.The enveloping darkness, hiding the enemy's.. seems a living thing, malignant and oppressive.Swishing water at the bow and stern mark an inexorable advance toward an unknown destiny.