Ventanni
Golden Member
- Jul 25, 2011
- 1,432
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but they also need room for all those jets
remember reading it somewhere on some military site
might have been a battleship proponet
still any one ship class is not better than any other
a battleship would still serve a useful role in a navy
You're right. Battleships do serve a useful role in the Navy. When it comes to shore bombardment and firepower, nothing can touch the Iowa class battleships. The problem is, the Iowa's are over 70 years old. Their role and platform are extremely limited, and they're very expensive to operate given their behemoth size. These are not small ships, but capital class ships that require a huge amount of manpower to run. They're not nuclear or gas-turbine powered, either, so their propulsion systems are a little more on the unusual side from a supply standpoint.
I'll outline the limitations of the battleships for clarity's sake, and this will help you understand why we don't actively use them in the US Navy anymore.
1. They're very costly to operate given their role. They're huge, require a lot of fuel, and have enormous crew requirements even despite the massive crew overhaul of the 1980's. You have to pay, feed, and support sailors, and this is one area the Zumwalt has an enormous advantage; 140 crewmen vs 1800. Big difference!
2. Very limited platform, and I'm not talking from a gun standpoint. The Iowa's were made back in the 1940's, and unfortunately were not designed for the electricity generation capability's needed for today's equipment. As a result, you can't just simply add advanced radar and weapon systems to the Iowa's, because there just isn't enough electricity to power them. That, and you can't just add the equipment to generate more juice, because it'd be way too expensive to cut through all that armor. The Zumwalts rectify this problem significantly, and as a result are a significantly more versatile platform.
***Power generation is also a big limitation for Nimitz class carriers; something the new supercarriers correct as well.
3. The Zumwalt artillery platform isn't as big as the Iowa, but it makes up for it in significantly greater range and precision. Now, I won't deny, the Iowa shells are truly terrifying. Even the Iraqi's got a taste of them during the First Gulf War, but the Zumwalt can rain destruction where the Iowa simply can't (~70 miles vs 25 mile range), and no matter the sheer ferocity difference, that's something you can't compete with.
With that said, I share you love of the battleship. It's one of America's finest weapons of war ever created. But it just doesn't fit in today's battlefield. What you're proposing is to design a brand new class of battleship; one that fixes the power generation limitations, aligns itself with the same fuel used on other ships of the US Navy, has greater firepower and range capabilities, and doesn't need so many men to operate. But designing capital class ships of this caliber are abso-freaking-lutely, ho-lee crap expensive that it's just not worth spending all that money for something like 2-4 ships. You can argue the expense of the supercarriers, and yes they are tremendously expensive, but they're enormously valuable political tools; something the battleship is not.
The new Zumwalts are the "battleship" you're looking for. They have their own share of criticism, but if you give them the chance, they'll impress you too.

