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#46 (permalink) | |
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Resident Curmudgeon
Military Professional
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BTW I saw this a while back but never got to use it. From June 2000, concerns those spare barrels you were talking about. http://www.battleship.org/html/News/.../SpareGuns.htm The nine 16 inch Mark IV gun barrels that were being stored at the Long Beach California Naval Shipyard have been disposed of by the US Navy. These barrels, which have a length of 68’ and weigh 106 tons, are powerful symbols of the strength and engineering magnificence of the battleships. Of the nine barrels, two have been sent to China Lake Naval Air Test Facility for government tests. Six of the barrels have been cut in half for scrapping. Thankfully, one of the barrels has been saved and is now on display at the Los Angeles Maritime Museum. This will help give people a sense of how massive these ships actually are. The three key people at the Los Angeles Maritime Museum coordinating the exhibit are Dr. William Lee, Cdr. Tom Goodall USN (ret.) and Mr. I. Roy Coats. ICPA is helping to coordinate the donation of two 16 inch projectiles and 6 dummy powder bags. These are being obtained through the cooperation of Mr. Bob Sawyer of the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station and the U.S. Navy Supply Depot in Crane, Indiana. The combination of the barrel and the shells should make for an impressive display. I hope they got the Projos and bags. That would be awesome. For those that would like to read the BBs coming back (M21Sniper) vs Make razor blades out of them (GG) it starts about here. And to be honest, I figured that at any day I would get banned. These were some of my first post http://www.worldaffairsboard.com/sho...9&page=4&pp=20 |
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#47 (permalink) | |
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Resident Curmudgeon
Military Professional
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So no unreps of rounds? |
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#50 (permalink) | |
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Contributor
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A little about myself; I'm a grad school engineer. I've taken some classes on marine engineering. Seems interesting, thinking of specializing in naval architecture. So I do understand the design concepts. I actually contacted the pentagon last week through navy.mil, but when they responded I chickened out. You know, big guy at the pentagon asking me about qualifications and asking for the details of the thing. I don't know how to put together a detailed doctrine for them. Anyways, thats me. Nuff said I guess. So how about it? |
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#51 (permalink) | |
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Resident Curmudgeon
Military Professional
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And Strategy page. WOW the words "Intelligent" and "Marine" in the same post. Don't see that too often DefCon UnRep= Underway replenishment. Will the ship shoot her load and go home or will she be able to reload at sea. At sea reload is a manpower intense operation. Especially if you want to include munitions. Even more so since you have no flight deck for VertRep |
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#52 (permalink) | |
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Contributor
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Yes, I misused the term 'caliber' when referencing the 16" gun. My mistake. |
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#54 (permalink) |
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New Member
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" Remember, most of my "board" experence prior to this was Sparks run boards.
And Strategy page. " LOL, sparks will ban anyone that doesn't call the Stryker a truck. I used to actually write for Meyers site, i just couldn't take his paranoid nonsense anymore, so i disassociated myself from him. |
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#56 (permalink) | |
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Contributor
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#57 (permalink) |
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New Member
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"Snipe. How can I get you on my side on this? With the anti's thumping around here I need some backup on the issue."
Show me 500 billion of money in the USN budget you can dedicate to the development and construction of six of these ships, and then listen to me when i tell you the ship is simply about 40% too small by displacement to effectively deploy 12x 16"/50 guns. LOL...at the displacement you propose the ship will be top heavy as Dolly parton. Sure, a lot of weight is freed by going nuke, etc....but you NEED that weight below the waterline to make the ship stable. You've got well over 1/2 of the ship's mass above the waterline, that will never work. Ships are not tanks, you can't just start adding a lot of mass up high on the ship or it will be prone to capsizing. You tout the ship you envision as having a double hull. Great....the 60yo Iowas have a triple layered armored hull with spacing as wide as 10 feet in many places. About materiel', Steel is not steel. The Iowas use Class A, Class B, and STS(Special Tempered Steel) Plating in their armored scheme. To be honest, the Iowas are capable of being much better ships than what you're proposing IMO. |
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#58 (permalink) | |
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Contributor
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The Iowa's from what I understand wern't actually double hulls. They had multiple layers of armor on a single hull design. Am I right? Anyways, I don't even know how to reply to the 500 billion dollars thing. I'm gettin stressed about this. I tried defensetalk.com, but the anti-BB trolls over there beat me over the head. Last edited by Defcon 6 : 09-19-2005 at 23:18 PM. |
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#60 (permalink) |
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Contributor
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Not a double hull. It's just got layered armor. The difference being that a hull helps support the super structure. Armor is more or less attached to the hull.
Are you still pro-BB? Well just to give my opinion, the Iowa's won't work. Too old, gutting them and rebuilding them would cost a lot of money. The best way is to design a totally modern high tech battleship from scratch. Listen, I understand the engineering aspect behind building the gun systems I talked about and what not. I would like to help. I can design a ship with the basics. Don't know what else I can do here. Really it comes down to the simple question, will the Navy favor a bigger ship? I'm looking at this in a serious light. A serious proposal. Anyone who wants to post feel free. |
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