What was the best battleship of WWII?
What was the best battleship of WWII?
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Discussion

irocfan

Original Poster:

46,814 posts

214 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
quotequote all
That's not to say what was the most effective (the Graf Spee could be considered in that case) or tied up the most resources of the enemy (Yamato/Tirpitz?) but what would have been the victor in a one on one slug-fest?

AAGR

918 posts

185 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
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I'm sure this is not the answer required, but I have always had a love for the dear old Warspite.

It might not have been the fastest or the most modern, but it seemed to get into a lot of scraps, and always came out with honours.

OK, tin hat duly fitted ....

Supernova190188

932 posts

163 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
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The Bismarck?

essayer

10,360 posts

218 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
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Yamato (and Musashi) I would have thought





Wacky Racer

40,705 posts

271 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
quotequote all
The Bismarck/Tirpitz, but by the end of WW2 large battleships were virtually obsolete.

Sink the Bismarck.....(Full film)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9cFOAG0wfBw&t=...

The Yamato was formidable too...

silverfoxcc

8,127 posts

169 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
quotequote all
Hard to choose

Hood for sheer post WW! beauty

Bismark for looking just efficient

KGV class for having 4 gun turrets

The US groups, typical US Big, Brash, but something about them

Vanguard.. very late to the party shame she could not have been kept UK missed out on a lot of history


BrettMRC

5,602 posts

184 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
quotequote all
Hard one to get right!

In terms of use I think it would USS Texas or Warspite - both literally run into the ground from WW1 onwards.

In terms of outright battle capability - Yamato & Musashi.

In reality? Probably the Iowa's and KGVs.

FourWheelDrift

91,906 posts

308 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
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Iowa class. Yamato might have had bigger guns but was 6 knots slower, plus the Iowa's 16" guns could fire just a bit further than the 18.1" on Yamato, so Iowa would control the fight. Iowa class ships also had twice the range of the Yamato class so it would be like fighting a taller boxer with a longer reach, with the speed of Usain Bolt and the stamina of Mo Farah.


300bhp/ton

41,030 posts

214 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
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silverfoxcc said:
Hood for sheer post WW! beauty
Technically a Battlecruiser, not a Battleship. Although the line is maybe hard to distinguish.

300bhp/ton

41,030 posts

214 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
quotequote all
HMS Vangaurd, although not commissioned until 30th Nov 1944. She was the last and probably best battleship, despite smaller guns.


Zirconia

36,010 posts

308 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
quotequote all
I answered the wrong part.

But from the odd tome or three on various stuff, they seem to go on who could see who first then get the weight of shells on them and keep it up and comment on ship speed, the faster aggressor can control the engagement. All paraphrasing from memory. So a top trumps on speed and detection and range (inc firepower)? Passing interest not real knowledge.

Quick shifty says as above, Iowa.

But what were real life distances?

FourWheelDrift

91,906 posts

308 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
quotequote all
Then you have the planned but scrapped Montana Class, the planned German H39-H44 and Super Yamato (A150). But that's a different thread.

InitialDave

14,367 posts

143 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
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While not directly a metric for "best", my favourites are the Iowa class, and if nothing else, they were still in service fifty years later, having outlasted every other battleship by something like 3 decades, and were technically still able to be put back in use up until the early 2000s.


Leon R

3,695 posts

120 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
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300bhp/ton said:
HMS Vangaurd, although not commissioned until 30th Nov 1944. She was the last and probably best battleship, despite smaller guns.

The Jean Bart was technically the last battleship since she wasn't completed until 1955.



As for what was best I don't see how it could be anything but the USS Iowa class.

FourWheelDrift

91,906 posts

308 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
quotequote all
Leon R said:
The Jean Bart was technically the last battleship since she wasn't completed until 1955.

And easily defeated if you sneaked up behind it.

Pothole

34,367 posts

306 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
quotequote all
silverfoxcc said:
Hard to choose

Hood for sheer post WW! beauty

Bismark for looking just efficient

KGV for having 4 gun turrets and Pothole's Dad handling comms!!

The US groups, typical US Big, Brash, but something about them

Vanguard.. very late to the party shame she could not have been kept UK missed out on a lot of history
FTFY!!

2xChevrons

4,191 posts

104 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
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Since the question is about one-on-one combat effectiveness, I'd go with the other posters who have said the Iowa-class. As FourWheelDrift says, the Japanese battlewagons' greater weight of shell and armour don't count for much when the American ships can technically out-range them, can definitely out-run them and boast superior fire control systems. Plus you might have to get into the operational aspects which aren't anything to do with the actual design and build of the ships but are crucial to how effective they are - for instance USN damage control was vastly superior to the IJN.

Had she entered service in the conflict, I think 'Vanguard' could definitely have been in contention, as would the French Richelieu-class, but they each bring different strengths and weaknesses. I still think the Iowas would be the best all-rounders.

I'm interested in the responses saying that the Bismarck-class are in contention as the best battleships of WW2, though. They were dangerous opponents by any means, and certainly worth the resources put into bottling them up and destroying them, but they were not 'the finest battleships in the world', as propaganda on both sides tended to portray them as suited their purposes. All designs are a compromise but the Bismarcks were especially so, due to their confused brief being intended to operate against British and French battle fleets in European waters and as commerce raiders in the Atlantic. Germany also lacked the ability to test and refine battleship designs in the inter-war period that the Allies did (often using captured WW1 German ships to do so). The Bismarcks were overweight for what they brought to the table in terms of either firepower or armour, had an armour scheme that was relatively inefficient and more akin to a WW1 design, were heavy on fuel and manpower for use as raiders and the size/displacement compromises led to the flawed three-shaft powerplant.

I'm not saying that they were bad or obsolete, or couldn't be deadly in individual circumstances (the facts speak for themselves) but they were only just in the top rank of battleship design at the start of the war and were optimised for very specific roles - which, importantly, they were never actually used for - and by the end of 1942 they were second-tier at best.

Speaking of obsolete; if we're talking favourite warships rather than objectively the best, I think everyone has at least a respect for 'Warspite' but I have always had a soft spot for the old RN R-Class; all were WW1 veterans and two served at Jutland. They were dispersed to secondary duties and (with the unfortunate exception of 'Royal Oak') acquitted themselves very well in their old age. Plus, following their last modernisations with the single funnels, torpedo bulges, more AA guns and big radars, and painted in disruptive camoflague, I think they look exactly how 'a battleship' should look.

300bhp/ton

41,030 posts

214 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
quotequote all
Leon R said:
The Jean Bart was technically the last battleship since she wasn't completed until 1955.



As for what was best I don't see how it could be anything but the USS Iowa class.
The Iowa is cool and looks fab. But I've read that it was essentially just a long South Dakota with no more protection and punch. But a lot heavier and lot more expensive, all for the gain of 5 knotts. So whether the trade offs are really worth it may be up for debate.

I've also read the Vanguard had superior armour and the range both ships would need to be to inflict comparable damage is about the same, maybe with a slight adv to the Vanguard. Also in rough seas the Vanguard was reported to be able to maintain higher speeds than the Iowa. Despite being rated as the slower ship.

Leon R

3,695 posts

120 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
quotequote all
FourWheelDrift said:
Leon R said:
The Jean Bart was technically the last battleship since she wasn't completed until 1955.

And easily defeated if you sneaked up behind it.

Agreed no big guns but not what I would call defenseless either.


BrettMRC

5,602 posts

184 months

Tuesday 28th April 2020
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It's all relative though - depending on the year and the location as to which is best.

What I will say is that nothing we have today has the ability to make you feel like an excited 8 year old quite like a battleship - if you get the chance, go to the USA and see some. (Texas is still technically afloat, unless they sink it taking it to dry dock, and over 100 years old now)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K1lmUA2TZi8




https://www.flickr.com/photos/toyokogyo/albums/721...