The way I understand it rigidables are ridid airships (such as Zeppilins), while derigidales are non rigid airships (basically motorised gas filled cigar shaped balloons, AKA Blimps). Buty maybe I've got the terms all whong & 'derigidable' means the same thing as 'rigidable', the same way 'inflammable' means 'flammable'.
BTW, I think your spelling ('dirigibles') is more accurate than mine so you could be right.
Sorry Denni, I meant 'Cruisers', when I typed 'Destroyers'. No way would an fleet commander put 4 destroyers up against a battlecruiser.
"yup gotta agree That the Hood was a battle cruiser kinda the 800 pound gorilla of the cruiser classes but the lack of any really effective armor for the main magazines was still a serious design flaw even if nothing else is armored on the ship they should at least try and armor the most potentially dangerous part of the ship. The fact that a single 8 inch heavy cruiser class shell hit took the Hood down in 3 minutes or something like that says that the magazine armoring was a serious design flaw."
There were no design flaws in the Hood, Nexud, it was simple a post WW1 Battlcruiser & had the limitations that all battlcruisers of that era (1915 to 1925) had.
Sure its a gamble putting multiple battlecruisers up against a battleship, but that's war. The alternative was to have all the Cruisers (include lightcruisers, heavycruisers, battlecruisers & ones without a prefix), Suffolk, Hood, Norfolk & Repulse, withdraw from the pursuit & leave the attack on the Bismark to the old early 20's era battleship, HMS Rodney, the new but not fully commisioned & run-in 'Prince of Wales', & the great new 'King George V' (Bismarck's equal in the Royal Navy). Which would of lessoned the odds of victory even more.
"I've heard the arguments too on the Hood design. But a battle cruiser against a battleship only hastened its demise. It was simply out-classed.
The Graf-Spee was scuttled. It was never actually defeated in combat with the Brits, and it was smaller than the Bizmarck.
If you want to see bad designs... look no farther than japanese and american air craft carriers of WWII. Japanese carriers were just bad designs (largely conversion jobs) period. And the wooden flight decks of the American carriers lead to so many deaths. But that was a philosophy problem. The "Yanks" actually thought they could keep enemy planes at bay with their own navy planes."
Hey Dabonehead, nothing I said conflicted with your statements.
BTW, as well as the British Aicraft carriers having armoured flight decks, they had better names (well except for Hermes, Eagle, Ark Royal, Argus, which are pretty parsee names), such as Courageous, Victorious, Glorious, Furious, Illustrious, Indominable, Indefatigable, Invincible, Formidable, Indomitable. Even many of their escort carriers (converted merchant ships) & light carriers had great names - Audacity, biter, Dasher, Avenger, Battler, Attacker, Stalker (definitly not politically correct), Hunter, Chaser, Fencer, Pursuer, Striker, Searcher, Ravager, Tracker, Slinger, Ruler, Arbiter, Trouncer, Smiter, Puncher, Reaper (this is just an example of them - they were supplied with about 50 Escort & Light carriers, via the Lend-Lease, from the US, plus many more were built in Canada & the UK, too & converted from prewar merchant ships)
Also many of their replacement flag carriers (mostly launched & commisioned in 44 & 45 & 1st saw action in Korea, well those that weren't sold or scraped) continued this tradition of great names - Implacable, Colossus, Terrible (saw service as HMAS Sydney in both Korea & Vietnam in the Australian navy), Magnificent, Vengeance, Venerable, Hercules, Majestic (also saw service in both the Krean & Vietnamese wars as the HMAS Melbourne), Powerful, Glory, Triumph, Warrier (actually ended up in the Argentine navy & fought against the British in the Falklands War).
These British flag carriers that were built arround the end of WWII were the 1st carriers in the world to have the new British innovations - the angled deck, which provided separate take-off and landing areas; the steam catapult; and the mirror landing system. Wich were all needed in the jet age.