bruto
Penultimate Amazing
True, but its battle record is a little bit scanty.On the other hand, you can still go look at Vasa nearly 400 years later. That's pretty good longevity! HMS Dreadnought only lasted around 15 years.
True, but its battle record is a little bit scanty.On the other hand, you can still go look at Vasa nearly 400 years later. That's pretty good longevity! HMS Dreadnought only lasted around 15 years.
True, but its battle record is a little bit scanty.
HMS Dreadnought's battle record isn't that impressive either. She did sink a submarine by ramming - the only battleship ever confirmed as having achieved such a feat, but apart from that, says wiki:True, but its battle record is a little bit scanty.
HMS Dreadnought's battle record isn't that impressive either. She did sink a submarine by ramming - the only battleship ever confirmed as having achieved such a feat, but apart from that, says wiki:Dreadnought did not participate in the Battle of Jutland in 1916 as she was being refitted. Nor did Dreadnought participate in any of the other First World War naval battles. In May 1916 she was relegated to coastal defence duties in the English Channel, not rejoining the Grand Fleet until 1918. The ship was reduced to reserve in 1919 and sold for scrap two years later.So her all big guns broadside never seems to have been fired in anger.
But if the said ships are part of the fleet in service during a naval war they see it then all right. She was afloat during the only historical occasion when two battle lines of ships of a class of which Dreadnought was the eponym slugged it out in action - but she was being refitted at the time!Why is it a poor record?
Most warships never see any action, most never even see a war.
I would say that's a pretty poor record, for sure, but if they made it out of the harbor they automatically drop to number 2, I think.
Why is it a poor record?
Most warships never see any action, most never even see a war.
I think you're right, and it's not too bad a record. I was merely struck by these ironies.And of those, presumably half have lost the action they took place in.
Rendering all othervesselsnavies obsolete and being the only battleship to sink an enemy submarine seems like a pretty good strategic record as well as tactical.
I had to look that up. At first I thought that HMS Thunderchild was itself a spscecraft, and that future cosmic wars were envisaged as being fought with fleets of interstellar torpedo rams, Armoured interplanetary turret ships, and casemate spaceships, protected by belts of steel plate.HMS Thunderchild. A torpedo ram fighting Martians. It lost its first and only battle with extra terrestrials.
HMS Thunderchild. A torpedo ram fighting Martians. It lost its first and only battle with extra terrestrials.
I had to look that up. At first I thought that HMS Thunderchild was itself a spscecraft, and that future cosmic wars were envisaged as being fought with fleets of interstellar torpedo rams, Armoured interplanetary turret ships, and casemate spaceships, protected by belts of steel plate.
Poopycock! She took out three of the Martian fighting machines before going down!
Dreadnought was the "bleeding edge" of a period of both extreme technical advancement and a massive arms race that fueled it. No way she was still going to be competitive after 8-10 years at a time like that. For comparison, the USN commissioned these truly awful ships well over a year after Dreadnought.I suppose in retrospect the Dreadnought wasn't so bad, though I suspect that its original hopes were for more front-line sorts of action.
HMS Thunderchild. A torpedo ram fighting Martians. It lost its first and only battle with extra terrestrials.
I think ThunderboxWP would be even better, if that were possible.And "Thunderchild" is the best possible name for a battleship.
Dreadnought was the "bleeding edge" of a period of both extreme technical advancement and a massive arms race that fueled it. No way she was still going to be competitive after 8-10 years at a time like that. For comparison, the USN commissioned these truly awful ships well over a year after Dreadnought.
I was actually going to bring that up. They were far more suited to the needs of Greece than of the USN.Although both went on to have useful service lives with the Greek navy.
I wonder what the average number of surface actions is for a capital ship, during the lifetime of its original commission.
I'd also argue that successfully serving as a "fleet in being" is just as much a win as actually fighting and winning a naval engagement. Most USN supercarriers will never see a serious naval engagement. Mostly because their very existence makes such engagements unlikely. Mission accomplished.