USS Iowa (BB-1943)
The great debate, with the Iowa Class, has always been, "is it a battleship
or battlecruiser?" My answer to that is 'who cares'. When you look at the stats
for the class it has to be the best performed ships of the twentieth century. No
other class of ships spent over 50 years in service and spent as much time
fighting the bad guys. WW2, Korea, Vietnam, the Gulf Wars, Lebanon, wherever the
US had fleets in harms way, there were the Iowa class.
The 16" mk.7 gun system was a very good weapon. But it was designed to fight
other ships and its best feature was its penetration of armour. Unfortunately I
can not recall seeing where any of the Iowa class actually fired its main guns
at an enemy warship. Bits of dirt, grass and sand and the odd bits of concrete
were the main targets. After the classes 1980's refits its main armament became
the Tomahawk missiles. The main guns were still there as direct fire weaponry
when off an enemies coast, but the Tomahawks went just a bit further and even
more accurately. During WW2 their main task was as anti-aircraft ships.
The other debate was who would win in a straight fight between the Yamato and an
Iowa? The simple answer is 'both'. If a fight between a brand new Yamato in 1942
and an Iowa, then the Yamato would have an advantage. The Yamato loses its
advantage the further into the war the fight goes. The better the radar systems
on the Iowa's become the better the Iowa's have of hitting the Yamato. In the
end it will be electronics that win that battle. Also the US Navy had so many
more 16" battleships than the two Yamato class. In any battle between US
battleships and a Yamato, the US ships would always have at least a two-to-one
advantage. With that advantage the Yamato always loses.
I use an old game called Action Stations! to trial my creations against their
most likely opponents. So I have had the fight with my new
Yamato
class ships with the 8x18" against both the Washington and Iowa class US
battleships. Even with the one less 18" gun, the battles follow the same
outcomes as listed above. The sooner the battle takes place the better the
Yamato type has of winning. That is one-on-one, as soon as you add the US fleets
superiority of numbers the fight goes the other way. Add both electronics and
numbers together and the Yamato class does not stand a chance. So what about a
fleet action in 1942? The US loses. The US Navy fleet action doctrine of 1942
had their ships sailing along in nice neat lines as the Japanese Long Lance
torpedoes arrive and sink them. That simple. Of course all this is entirely
academic as by the time these ships get to sea, the aircraft carrier has already
shown that it has become the queen of naval warfare. Look at any 'fleet' actions
and it is normally fought between carrier aircraft. Only at night do the ships
come closer together. Again the further into the war you go the more the
advantage changes from the early success of the Japanese Navy to the
overwhelming odds of electronics and numbers in all categories to the Allied
navies.
Displacement |
|
Length | 887 ft 3 in (270.43 m) |
Beam | 108 ft 2 in (32.97 m) |
Draft | 37 ft 2 in (11.33 m) (full load) |
Propulsion |
|
Speed | 33 knots (38 mph; 61 km/h) |
Complement | 151 officers, 2,637 enlisted (WWII) |
Armament |
|
Armor | |
Aircraft carried | floatplanes, helicopters, UAVs |
Notes: | Iowa New Jersey Missouri Wisconsin Kentucky Illinois |
Stats sourced from Wikipaedia.
What improved the accuracy of the Iowa's 16" guns was the continual improvement
to the electronics controlling them.
Having the two incomplete Iowa class, Kentucky and Illinois, various proposals
were put forward to complete the hulls into something useful, including the
conversion to an aircraft carrier. However with so many Essex class purpose
built carriers being available, a conversion of an Iowa was considered
pointless. In the end, both were scrapped.
While the class had been earmarked for refits during the 1980's, one of the
proposals was for the conversion of one or two to Harrier carriers retaining the
battleship forward and having a load of tubes for launching its missiles.
Last but not least was a conversion I based on the Iowa class but with the
triple 16" being replaced with triple 14" and a much bigger carrier area aft of
the bridge.
Below is an indepth look at the 1980's refit of the New Jersey. An interesting
view.