Delaware class Battleship
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Re: Delaware class Battleship
Two rudders. The props and rudders are in the same setup as the North Carolina, South Dakota and Iowa classes.
Re: Delaware class Battleship
Not the way you've drawn it now. Right now the rudder is either on the centerline or further to port.
“Close” only counts with horseshoes, hand grenades, and tactical nuclear weapons.
That which does not kill me has made a grave tactical error
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Source Materiel is always welcome.
That which does not kill me has made a grave tactical error
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Source Materiel is always welcome.
Re: Delaware class Battleship
I used this configuration for the rudders and the propellers:
Re: Delaware class Battleship
I got that, but the way you've drawn your rudder it's either on the centerline or further to port
“Close” only counts with horseshoes, hand grenades, and tactical nuclear weapons.
That which does not kill me has made a grave tactical error
Worklist
Source Materiel is always welcome.
That which does not kill me has made a grave tactical error
Worklist
Source Materiel is always welcome.
Re: Delaware class Battleship
All other drawings of other US battleships and other ships with two rudders has it drawn the same way.
Re: Delaware class Battleship
Not quite. In order to show what you're trying to show you would have to draw something along these lines:
Unless the area aft of the props are completely flat that is, but as far as I'm aware, it isn't.
Unless the area aft of the props are completely flat that is, but as far as I'm aware, it isn't.
“Close” only counts with horseshoes, hand grenades, and tactical nuclear weapons.
That which does not kill me has made a grave tactical error
Worklist
Source Materiel is always welcome.
That which does not kill me has made a grave tactical error
Worklist
Source Materiel is always welcome.
Re: Delaware class Battleship
Around this time the 3-inch/50 AA gun was being supplanted with the 5-inch/25, the 5-inch/38 was the primary DP gun of WW2. The 5-inch/51 is an anti-surface gun, some of which were later used as shore batteries (most notably at Wake Island).Thiel wrote:Not quite. The 3in guns are part of the aa armament and as such falls outside the traditional system of primary, secondary, etc battery in much the same way the 40mm does.eltf177 wrote:1) The mixed Secondary Batteries suggest a laydown date around the end of WWI, but these look far more modern than that. Ditto with the aviation arrangements, they look too modern for the period.
It really looks to me like your ships have 3 shafts and 1 rudder as well...
Re: Delaware class Battleship
According to springsharp the Delaware 1942 refit is underpowered or underperforming relative to the displacement.
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Re: Delaware class Battleship
It should, as she is basically armed the same as the South Dakota, but with a far thinner deck (1.5" vs 1.5"+6") and lacks SoDak's heavyweight 'command and control' equipment... but is over 3000t heavier (standard displacement).Karle94 wrote:According to springsharp the Delaware 1942 refit is underpowered or underperforming relative to the displacement.
The deck armor need a massive increase- to at least 4" and possibly 5"- and a decapping deck needs to be added- another 1.5" or so- then displacement needs to be trimmed as much as is practicable to leave the hull full enough to support the guns.
Re: Delaware class Battleship
5"/51s were developed as surface weapons, with a low angle. Not suitable for AAW. Other than that, it is still a great design.
By the way, if you want additional heavy AA weapons, the 5"/25s would make a great weapon for an inter-war period battleship design like this.
By the way, if you want additional heavy AA weapons, the 5"/25s would make a great weapon for an inter-war period battleship design like this.
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Puerto Oeste - AU - WWI-WWII
Puerto Oeste - AU - WWI-WWII