Why Weren't The Montana Class Battleships Ever Built?

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  • Опубликовано: 20 окт 2024

Комментарии • 720

  • @BattleshipNewJersey
    @BattleshipNewJersey  Год назад +53

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    • @Knight6831
      @Knight6831 Год назад

      Isn't it because of the demise of the British Empire battleship HMS Prince of Wales and British Empire Battlecruiser HMS Repulse and the IJN disaster the Battle of Midway

    • @leftyo9589
      @leftyo9589 Год назад +7

      i quit world of warships a few years ago. they have screwed the game up so bad, its not enjoyable to play!

    • @trenteaston3515
      @trenteaston3515 Год назад

      Currently playing as USS New Jersey in World Of Warships PS5, I believe that's the only actual way to play as New Jersey.

    • @chrisaustin9949
      @chrisaustin9949 Год назад

      @@leftyo9589 I'm still playing and I'm still having a blast. It's my favorite video game. My favorite ship is the battleship USS Massachusetts.

    • @TheOneTrueDragonKing
      @TheOneTrueDragonKing Год назад +2

      Are the Essex-class ships back in the game? Because from what I know, they were removed a long time ago and still haven't returned.
      EDIT: I can confirm that the Essex-class is not in the game. Ryan, your statement was in error.

  • @alexius23
    @alexius23 Год назад +428

    The US wartime economy was astonishing but it was not infinite. The Admirals in charge could have built the Essex class carriers or the Montana class battleships. The Admirals chose wisely.

    • @robertf3479
      @robertf3479 Год назад +14

      Some of the long lead-time items for the Kentucky and Illinois were constructed ... 16"/50cal gun barrels. These were warehoused along with the spares for the other four Iowa class ships.

    • @TheDogGeneral
      @TheDogGeneral Год назад +13

      I mean I concur I mean the war had broke out in 1941 for the United States and at that time industry was catching up with war efforts and demands and simply put as mr. Szymanski as stated that priorities were four different vessels and those battleships were obsolete in the strictest sense

    • @maximilliancunningham6091
      @maximilliancunningham6091 Год назад +5

      Well, true, but also true is they finished the war, with a glut of carriers.

    • @drakenred6908
      @drakenred6908 Год назад +7

      Let's face it, they could not get all the Essex class that they wanted, because they ended up building more transports, and more escorts

    • @jollyjohnthepirate3168
      @jollyjohnthepirate3168 Год назад +8

      It was the CVBs (Midway class) that the Montana's were canceled for. They began to collect steel to build Montana but their wasn't enough steel or slip ways/ building docks to go around.

  • @alexius23
    @alexius23 Год назад +176

    Another reason…the number of sailors needed to staff battleships. I had read that the Alaska Class big cruisers required almost as many sailors as a battleship. This was among the several reasons why the 2 barely used Alaska class ships were placed in reserve so quickly after the War ended. Montana class BB would have required huge crews.

    • @joeblow9657
      @joeblow9657 Год назад +21

      Especially given that by 1944-45 the US Army was pretty hungry for manpower. It makes a lot of sense to not spend manpower crewing a battleship you don't really need to begin with.

    • @jimmellenberger8505
      @jimmellenberger8505 Год назад +6

      Additionally, they used almost as much fuel, and you could get 2½ broadsides from an Iowa for less than a single broadside from an Alaska. Maybe even 3. Additionally, the Alaskas, with 4 screws and a single rudder handled like pigs. The Iowas and Midway-class carriers could out-turn them.

    • @alexius23
      @alexius23 Год назад +3

      You are entirely right about both the Alaska crew size and the Montana class crew size.

    • @jimmellenberger8505
      @jimmellenberger8505 Год назад +3

      Surpringly, only about a hundred more crew, in Flagship configuration, as planned. Remember, the 4th gun itself only required 80 men, the WWII complement for an Iowa was 2,700 men. The Montana was planned to have half the 40mm guns of an Iowa.

    • @peytonthompson205
      @peytonthompson205 Год назад +4

      The Alaska was basically a pocket battleship/battle cruiser

  • @Stillnonofya
    @Stillnonofya Год назад +406

    “Can you think of any other reasons the Montana class wasn’t built?” Yeah. Airplanes.

    • @nmccw3245
      @nmccw3245 Год назад +14

      Nuclear weapons.

    • @thunberbolttwo3953
      @thunberbolttwo3953 Год назад +27

      @@nmccw3245 no torpedos and aerial bombs can sink battleships. Pearl Harbor Prince of Wales Repulse Yamato and Mushashi prove this.

    • @dukeofgibbon4043
      @dukeofgibbon4043 Год назад +4

      ​@@nmccw3245 Project Katie

    • @DiscothecaImperialis
      @DiscothecaImperialis Год назад +5

      Japanese has already perfected their naval aviation. they were even the first nation on Earth to design Aircraft Carriers ground up rather than converting existing ships.

    • @JerrySeriatos
      @JerrySeriatos Год назад +4

      battleship traitors

  • @aw34565
    @aw34565 Год назад +141

    The US had built ten fast battleships by the end of the war, the British five (six if you include HMS Vanguard completed in 1946), add the Richelieu and the Allies had a vast overmatch of modern battleships over the Axis. No need for Montanas, Lions or Alsaces.

    • @TheDogGeneral
      @TheDogGeneral Год назад +11

      I think something that's also overlooked is the labor and skill of the Craftsman involved there just weren't as many qualified workers either to build such an extensive dedication of resources at that point in time at least battleships required greater degrees of engineering and tooling than an aircraft carrier by comparison and it just didn't work out in how many hands they had to hold the Hammers

    • @jstutzman1301
      @jstutzman1301 Год назад +7

      The amount of war precious metals needed for ships, copper, brass, and aluminum that were used elsewhere for the war effort.

    • @franzfanz
      @franzfanz Год назад +9

      Not to mention that aircraft carriers were now the kings of the oceans.

    • @alanstevens1296
      @alanstevens1296 Год назад +4

      Two more Iowa class BB would have been completed in 1946 if the war lasted.

    • @TheDogGeneral
      @TheDogGeneral Год назад

      @@alanstevens1296 oh without a doubt had the United States rolled around into 1946 with everything else staying the same no atomic bombs for would have going on for at least one more year Illinois and Kentucky would have been completed and I still believe the Montana's demise was assured after the Battle of Midway
      Profoundly really the only way The Montanas get built if the war doesn't break out for the United States initially and the Battle of Midway does not occur in some timeline continuity if possible but really for them to have seen any service whatsoever Ryan has said this multiple times on his channel they would have had to have their kills lady immediately after Pearl Harbor and Terriers we nowhere More instrumental and I can only imagine if we had actually constructed them and I would have liked to have seen them constructed that would have been fewer aircraft carriers by as much as maybe 10 or 12

  • @jamesleyda365
    @jamesleyda365 Год назад +98

    The battleship is by far the most awesome war machine ever built, so so intimidating and yet so beautiful

    • @rohanthandi4903
      @rohanthandi4903 Год назад +4

      The nuclear bomb would like a word

    • @nos9784
      @nos9784 Год назад +5

      ​@@rohanthandi4903 sadly, we'll hopefully never be able to judge the beauty of nukes ourselves.

    • @garygrant91
      @garygrant91 Год назад +8

      @@rohanthandi4903 The USS Nevada would like a word with two of your bombs.
      Bikini atoll, Operation Crossroads. The Nevada survive both detonations. A 23Kt air burst and a 27Kt subsurface burst about 90 feet below the lagoon surface.

    • @rohanthandi4903
      @rohanthandi4903 Год назад +1

      @@garygrant91 large caliber guns are insignificant compared to the ability to destroy nations and cities, thought that was obvious. Also sure the hull survived the initial blast but any crew would’ve suffered 100 % mortality lol

    • @garygrant91
      @garygrant91 Год назад +6

      @@rohanthandi4903 I wont argue against that, but we cannot use nuclear and thermonuclear weapons for everything. If we could, no nuclear nation would need anything but those weapons.
      Battleships were created with a primary purpose of fleet actions and a secondary purpose of shore bombardment. At the time they were developed nothing could do either job better. By the time of WWII carrier air wings had become the best for fleet actions. The battleship is still the best at shore bombardment, there are other options that are almost as good but also more versatile.
      While the age of battleships is over, that does not mean James Leyda's is false. They are truely one of the most awesome and beautiful ships to ever exist.

  • @stevewindisch7400
    @stevewindisch7400 Год назад +114

    I think modern historians sometimes underestimate the effect of seeing Musashi and Yamato sunk by aircraft with relative ease. The Navy's Big Gun Mafia was ebbing in popularity and prestige, while the Brown Shoes waxed in influence. There is a good chance any Montana's that had been started on the ways in late 1943 or '44 would have been scrapped before completion anyway, even if the armor plates had been available earlier. The concept of the super battleship having been discredited by the proofs of their vulnerability.

    • @davidmarquardt9034
      @davidmarquardt9034 Год назад +13

      Yup. After the British lost the Prince of Wales and Repulse early on in the war, and then the US taking out the two Jappinise BB's we saw the carriers where the wave of the future.

    • @ricardokowalski1579
      @ricardokowalski1579 Год назад +16

      100% agree.
      Even if you allow a wide interpretation of "relative ease", sending 70k tons of anything to the bottom (twice!) is an undisputable success.

    • @Capthrax1
      @Capthrax1 Год назад +2

      Agreed. Sometimes it's hard to understand motivation because we have the whole picture.

    • @NoName-zn1sb
      @NoName-zn1sb Год назад

      any Montanas

    • @robertmartin995
      @robertmartin995 Год назад +4

      The Battleship in WW2, by the end, was not a ship killing weapon so much. They can deliver more ordinance than 20 squadrons of aircraft in the first hour of an assault. Its naval artillery. Given that 80% of the worlds population lives with in 100 miles from the coast having a mobile artillery piece that can sit off shore and pummel your port is still a valuable weapon. We have nothing that can compare today. Shells are cheap by comparison to smart weapons. With radar and lidar acquisition you could build a ballistic weapon that is just as accurate as a smart bomb but it could deliver continuous bombardment, for days, to a region for a half the price. Every smart missile costs us 10's of millions of dollars. Even manned to 2500 people a battleship would just cost us about $400,000 a day. If we really get into it with a force like China or Russia we will be looking at putting a battleship-ish type warship in the theater just to save money on missiles.

  • @pastorjerrykliner3162
    @pastorjerrykliner3162 Год назад +47

    Something else that has to be considered is the manpower drawdown that begins to loom as the outcome of the war becomes apparent. The Navy begins to rapidly decommission the battleship fleet right after the war's end. As Japan entered the final stages of the war, with her navy all-but-eliminated and airpower dissipated, even the oldest battleships like Arkansas and New York get shifted over the Pacific. The Navy just doesn't NEED that many battleships...especially new ones. After "Operation Magic Carpet" gets finished, all the old battleships start getting disposed of (Arkansas, Nevada, New York to Operation Crossroads), the others get sent to either the scrapper or mothballs...even the "new" ones like the 2 North Carolinas and the 4 South Dakotas get taken out of service due to manpower shortages. So, in addition to the material shortages and the slipway shortages, the Navy knew that the manpower was going to be limited and the BB's were too manpower intensive to keep going. (Even the carriers got hit with this, many being taken out of service at war's end as well...)

  • @valkyriedown5465
    @valkyriedown5465 Год назад +13

    Had the pleasure of writing about shipbuilding economics for a class a while back. it's really exciting hearing those concepts I've read about be discussed here.

  • @Cholin3947
    @Cholin3947 Год назад +54

    Because by the time they would be finished the war would be over and aircraft carriers had already surpassed battleships as the center peice of naval power.
    Pitty, i always always wondered a 1980s refit Montana would look like. 🤔

    • @Contrajoe
      @Contrajoe Год назад +4

      I've made speculative lego models in the past. What I came up with was basically a bigger Iowa Refit. Depending on how many 5" gut turrets you delete and what year of technology you install, there may be room for more Tomahawk boxes or perhaps VLS. I think 4 phalanxes would be plenty. There may be room for Sea Sparrow to be far enough from the 16" guns to survive shockwaves. The reduced crew space requirement and reduced 5" magazine requirement also allows lots of possibilities for internal updates/changes.

    • @Ahnenerbe1944
      @Ahnenerbe1944 Год назад +4

      We can resurrect the Montana class for the 3rd world war. 😂 make it nuclear powered with EMP shielding and 20 inch main guns that can shoot hypersonic rockets

    • @Cholin3947
      @Cholin3947 Год назад +5

      @@Ahnenerbe1944 might as well add a wave motion cannon while your at it.

    • @dorsk84
      @dorsk84 Год назад

      ​@@Cholin3947 you beat me by 24 mins with that comment...... Kenpai!

    • @bluemarlin8138
      @bluemarlin8138 Год назад +1

      @@Ahnenerbe1944 Most US military hardware has been EMP shielded for 50 years. But otherwise, sounds cool. You could easily fit a couple hundred VLS cells on a Montana if you lose Turret 3 or 4 and redesign the superstructure. Then throw in some of the launchers for the Dark Eagle hypersonic missile that’s replacing the guns on the Zumwalts. The problem would be getting the AEGIS radars enough electric power and making them stand up to the gun blast.

  • @andrewtaylor940
    @andrewtaylor940 Год назад +41

    It’s always been my understanding that the main thing with the Montana’s was available build space and the anticipated speed of the build. They estimated that they could build the first 2 Midways substantially faster than they could build the first 2 Montana’s. So they wanted those 2 Midways done before they tied up the big docks with the longer build Montana’s. Anticipated speed of build was really the big thing. The big slipways were too precious a resource to tie up for too many years.

    • @novatopaz9880
      @novatopaz9880 Год назад +4

      Yeah, the other thing was the looming end of hostilities. The montanas were not going to complete until 47, 48 at the latest. The Midways could have been completed by the time of operation Downfall(~5 months after the end of the war, the spring of 46). The fact of the matter was that the montanas were never going to see a lick of combat, and the US navy went "Why are we building a ship that isn't going to war, when we can build a ship that can go to war?"

    • @andrewtaylor940
      @andrewtaylor940 Год назад +1

      @@novatopaz9880 True. The Midway herself was days away from service when the war ended. She was a a functional warship by ‘45. I forget how far from service the FDR was at that point.

    • @jerithil
      @jerithil Год назад

      @@andrewtaylor940 The FDR was commissioned in October so while it would had missed Operation Olympic it could have been available for Operation Coronet in the spring.

    • @NoName-zn1sb
      @NoName-zn1sb Год назад

      the Montanas

    • @DireWolf1984
      @DireWolf1984 Год назад

      You could almost build another 2 Iowas to one Montana. If anything that's a better option because the Iowas could keep up with the rest of the fleet.

  • @ricardokowalski1579
    @ricardokowalski1579 Год назад +54

    The improvements of the torpedo bombers, and of the torpedoes in themselves, doomed the big gun warship.
    As Drach has said: bombs and shells can tear a ship apart, they can burn it to the waterline. But ships only *sink* if you poke holes below the waterline and the water comes in.
    Armor steel, drydock slots, gun barrels *delayed* the Montanas. But torpedoes *cancelled* them.

    • @alexwood5425
      @alexwood5425 Год назад +1

      How long would it have taken to make the guns?

    • @usslexingtoncva-1639
      @usslexingtoncva-1639 Год назад +3

      @@alexwood5425 no exact idea but engines, armor and guns were built before any hulls. I mean the USN had several spare 16in 50cal Mk.2 guns from the planned South Dakota 1920 class Battleships and Lexington class battlecruisers. Yet only like the Lexington class battlecruisers had any hulls built by the time the WNT was signed

    • @mahbriggs
      @mahbriggs Год назад +4

      I disagree that the torpedoe bomber was the deathknell of the battleship.
      Quite frankly, blowing them to bits with dive bombers proved quite adequate. Mission kill a ship, and that pretty much ruins it's utility. Submarines were getting better, and guided missiles were being developed!
      Guided missiles are what really killed the battleship. Much smaller, cheaper ships could now carry armament equal to, or more deadly than a battleship's big guns.

    • @ricardokowalski1579
      @ricardokowalski1579 Год назад +1

      @@mahbriggs My reasoning is as follows: ship launched missiles were not operational until the 50s
      The Montanas were cancelled years before surface ship launched anti-ship missiles became operational or proven.
      Operational missiles during ww2 were launched from aircraft. They were flying torpedoes and depended on aircraft/carrier development.
      Had mission kill been adequate in the 40s, many more ships would have been captured. But both Yamatos were bombed first, no quarter was given, and then hit by torpedoes UNTIL they floundered.
      Respectfully, we disagree. 👍

    • @mahbriggs
      @mahbriggs Год назад +2

      @ricardokowalski1579
      Yes, at the end of WWII, torpedo bombers were still viable, but only barely. Look how fast they faded away after the war.
      We disagree only to an extent.
      Yes, effective ship launched missiles only were developed in the 1950s, but effective air launched missiles were available sooner. Destroy the upper works of a modern battleship, and it is mission killed. It can neither effectively defend itself nor attack other ships.
      There was little need for a new battleship after the war, and Ryan explains why it wasn't built during the war. After the war, the US, the British, and the French were the only nations with modern battleships, and they were allies. And while they proved useful for shore bombardment, there just wasn't much other use for them. Carrier air power and submarines, especially after the development of nuclear powered submarines, now ruled the sea!
      The resources spent on a new battleship, even one as capable as the Montana, would have been better spent on upgrading the many carriers we already had, or building newer and bigger carriers, and nuclear-powered submarines, which is what we did.

  • @rydplrs71
    @rydplrs71 Год назад +15

    I had lunch on Saturday looking out at a coastline that was filled with liberty ships being constructed in the 40’s. Completing one every few days. The instant growth of the shipbuilding industry to support wwii must have been amazing to see, but as stated that ability wasn’t infinite.

  • @claiborneeastjr4129
    @claiborneeastjr4129 Год назад +7

    I've always thought the battleship had become somewhat obsolete by 1945, and instead of the once-anticipated battleship v. battleship duels, they were relegated to escorting the fast carrier groups. This role was performed admirably, as well as shore bombardment of Japan, and later 'Nam. They are magnificent machines of great beauty, speed, grace, and power. I'm glad that a number of them are preserved today for us to admire. I do wish, though, that at least one Montana class had been built.

    • @TheFranchiseCA
      @TheFranchiseCA Год назад

      Depends on what is meant by "obsolete." The ones in service were still useful enough to continue to maintain and upgrade them, but the cost of building more new hulls was no longer the best way to use manpower and material that could be spent on carriers.

  • @spireland5
    @spireland5 Год назад +6

    The really amazing thing about the switch from battleships to air power is how an institution as rigid as the military was able to adjust over such a short period of time. It’s fascinating from an organizational behavioral standpoint, I can’t think of any organization that large that has made such a fundamental shift that quickly.

    • @WisGuy4
      @WisGuy4 Год назад

      But contrast that statement with respect to battleship construction, with how long it took the Navy to acknowledge the problems with the frequently defective torpedoes that American submarines used in the first half of the war.

  • @arrow1414
    @arrow1414 Год назад +6

    As much as a Battleship fan that I am, the Navy made the right decision. We needed mor fleet and escort carriers and other smaller ships. We had enough BBs both modern like New Jersey and near obsolete like Texas, to handle shore bombardment which was virtually the only likely scenerio that they would likely use their main armorment for.

  • @heretoforeunknown
    @heretoforeunknown Год назад +23

    My recollection of history indicates that there was a view the US was winning the war in 1944-45 and there was a realization that the BB was no longer 'Queen of the Seas'. Also, BBs were expensive to build but somewhat dependent on the sale of war bonds. With the end of the war, most warships that were started were canceled outright, including KENTUCKY and ILLINOIS. As you mentioned, in 1945 only about 7,000 tons of armor were designated for BB construction, the same as pre-war. I imagine most of this armor plate went to KENTUCKY as not much had been done on the ILLINOIS. The USN budget after September 2 was seriously reduced to the point it was hard to properly maintain the 'mothball fleet' due to paucity of funding.

    • @HoldenOversoul
      @HoldenOversoul Год назад +1

      Kentucky wasn't cancelled when the war ended. Work continued on her until 1950, and she was nearly 75% complete when they halted construction.

    • @rohanthandi4903
      @rohanthandi4903 Год назад +1

      Lol that was known in 1941

    • @chac65
      @chac65 Год назад

      @@HoldenOversoul The hull for the New Jersey was laid down in 1940 and was launched in 1942. The hull for the Kentucky was laid down in 1942 and was not launched (uncompleted) until 1950. It is obvious that the construction of the Kentucky was a very low priority.

    • @HoldenOversoul
      @HoldenOversoul Год назад

      @@chac65 Ok, what's your point? The post I was replying to stated that Illinois and Kentucky were cancelled outright. All in caps, ILLINOIS and KENTUCKY cancelled outright. Cancelled outright and low priority are the same thing?

    • @chac65
      @chac65 Год назад

      @@HoldenOversoul My overall point is that the USA and the rest of the world stopped building battleships (the Montana, etc.) because the raid on Taranto, Pearl Harbour, the sinking of the Repulse and Prince of Wales, and early naval battles between the US and Japan demonstrated their obsolescence.

  • @keithrosenberg5486
    @keithrosenberg5486 Год назад +12

    Another reason was probably that the BB was dangerously obsolete by 1944. Only one or two BB vs BB actions happened in 1944. Except for shore bombardment and AA defense, BBs were virtually useless. And no enemy navy had anything close to the number of BBs needed to take on the BBs of the USN.

    • @Destroyer_V0
      @Destroyer_V0 Год назад +2

      Or, for that matter. the allies in general. They started the war with a massive hull number advantage over the axis, one that was only maintained, then further widened once the united states joined.

    • @keithrosenberg5486
      @keithrosenberg5486 Год назад +2

      @@Destroyer_V0 The Axis could and did gain local naval superiority as the Japanese did for the first 6 months of the war in the Eastern Pacific and the Indian ocean. Two entire fleets, one Allied and one Japanese went down in the Solomon's by the end of 1943.
      To win the Allies had to make sure the Axis powers could not get naval superiority anywhere. Hence the enormous naval expansion. The US built 10 BBs. No other nation built that many. The US also built over 100 aircraft carriers, more than all of the other nations combined. By 1945 the USN and RN had naval supremacy virtually everywhere on the planet.

    • @jimmellenberger8505
      @jimmellenberger8505 Год назад +1

      And really, the way they bombarded was flawed, anyway. They fired in close, fuzed for impact detonations. The rounds should've been lobbed in from high angles delay-fuzed to penetrate more deeply, because the bursts on the surface had very little effect on the Japanese fortifications, all told.

  • @baronpen
    @baronpen Год назад +8

    I don't play World of Warships on PC, but I do play World of Warships Blitz on my phone. I generally play with the Richelieu. I like the way her main battery is arranged, as I can fire my full broadside at an enemy ship while heading straight at them. Very helpful when chasing somebody down. With Iowa, I'd have to approach at the right angle if I wanted to fire my full broadside. Her secondary battery, on the other hand, is just bad IMO.

    • @jameshickman9325
      @jameshickman9325 Год назад

      I play legends and the Richelieu is one of the worst tier 7 battleships. It is very weak to HE rounds and every cruiser likes to spam HE plus it's guns are very inaccurate. Ironically It's sister ship Jean Bart is considered one of the best due to it's reload booster and better reload in general. Very few players have it though since it was a campaign ship a very long time ago and it hasn't returned since.

  • @aland7236
    @aland7236 Год назад +8

    I feel pretty confident that the US Navy saw the writing on the wall, or rather the oil slick on the sea, when HMS Prince of Wales (53) was sunk the way it was. I believe the PoW succumbing to an Aircraft Carrier was one of the primary factors for why the US Navy kept bumping a start of the Montana line like they did. Also, the numbers presented validate my hypothesis, in that more and more armor plating was being allocated for CVs and their escorts.

    • @wesleyphillips7744
      @wesleyphillips7744 Год назад +4

      However the Prince of Wales was sunk by land based airplanes. There was no ship based aircraft involved in that fracas.

    • @aland7236
      @aland7236 Год назад +6

      @@wesleyphillips7744 Land based, but aircraft with a handful of bombs and torpedoes nonetheless. I'm not fully informed but was Bismarck the only big ship that shot at PoW?

    • @Knight6831
      @Knight6831 Год назад +2

      Forgetting Hood at Denmark Strait

  • @nomar5spaulding
    @nomar5spaulding Год назад +7

    Those armor steel tonnage numbers are insane.

  • @johnshepherd9676
    @johnshepherd9676 Год назад +39

    If Halsey left TF 34 to guard the San Bernadino Strait we would have at least finished Illinois and Kentucky because the largest naval battle in history would have been primarily a surface engagement and we would looked at battleships differently then we do now.

    • @richardthomas5362
      @richardthomas5362 Год назад +8

      The possible battle of San Bernardino strait would have matched the battleship numbers of Sarigao strait (8 battleships total) but the numbers would have been more even (6 US and to Jap in Sarigao, 4 ea at San Bernardino). Assuming a lot of "ifs": What would have really been impressive, and would match your point at looking at battleships differently, is if Halsey had taken the bait and headed north, left TF 34 behind, and the Japanese center force was undetected until spotted by TF 34. If adm Lee decided to seek support with the 7th fleet, and if the Japanese center and southern forces had merged prior to a huge surface fleet fight there would have been 7 Japanese and 10 US battleships engaged with each other. It would have been the biggest BB duel since Jutland, although not anywhere close to the numbers of Jutland, and would have fulfilled the wet dreams of all the Admirals involved in all four fleets. After the war the survivors - Lee, Obendorf, Kurita, and the Jap dude who ran the southern force, would all be sitting in a bar reliving the glory days of the last major battleship duel in history while Halsey would be siting in the corner eating his heart out.

    • @johnshepherd9676
      @johnshepherd9676 Год назад +3

      @@richardthomas5362 Drachinifel did a what if, but I think he it left as Lee v Kurita for balance. If it really happened Lee would have coordinated with the Senior Sprague and would have hit Kurita with an anti shipping strike from the three TAFFYs before the surface engagement.

    • @NoName-zn1sb
      @NoName-zn1sb Год назад

      than we do

    • @richardthomas5362
      @richardthomas5362 Год назад +1

      @@johnshepherd9676 I saw Drach's video on that, but I am not sure the TAFFY air strikes would do much good. They were armed with ground support weapons rather than anti-ship weapons, so, other than confusion and making life hell for anyone on deck on the cruisers and battleships, the only ships which could have been threatened would be the destroyers.

    • @johnshepherd9676
      @johnshepherd9676 Год назад +3

      @@richardthomas5362 The air groups had a limited supply of anti-shipping weapons. The historical action off Samar was a haphazard affair and the aircraft flew with what they had available in the hanger. They still launched several torpedo attacks. Aircraft would have been set up with whatever anti-ship weapons were available if given a mission. By Lee

  • @markwheeler202
    @markwheeler202 Год назад +13

    I would be interested in seeing a video on how armor plate was installed during construction of a battleship like New Jersey.

  • @brendanfillingim5199
    @brendanfillingim5199 Год назад +6

    The Montana's were not designed to be able to pass thru the Panama Canal and Slower than the Iowa's, so those two factors were surely important considerations in cancelling the class. In World of Warships I primarily play Arkansas Beta (USS Arkansas (BB-33)), West Virginia '41, USS Oklahoma (BB-37) and USS New Mexico (BB-40).

  • @haroldhenderson2824
    @haroldhenderson2824 Год назад +4

    The time required to build the guns was often longer than the time required to build hulls. The Montana class COULD use 16"/50 (12 instead of 9). However, an Essex can deliver 10 times the weight of ordinance, at 15 times the range. Properly sequenced, two squadrons of fighters can escort the bombers, keeping a squadron back to protect carriers. Guns are pretty good at shore bombardment, but typically 5% (or less) hit the opposing battleships. Further than 23 miles inland, you need airstrikes, NOT naval guns.

  • @robertdonnell8114
    @robertdonnell8114 Год назад +12

    You see similar issues with German tank production resulted in over hardened (brittle) steel going on the front and mild steel being used on the rear because that is what they had. Can you imagine haw many tanks could have been produced with the steel used on Bismarck and Tirpitz at 55,000 tones each?

    • @bluemarlin8138
      @bluemarlin8138 Год назад

      The tank factories were already running at full capacity.

    • @nobodyspecial4702
      @nobodyspecial4702 Год назад

      Bismark and Tirpitz had already been completely years before the German tank industry started making "real" tanks. When Tirpitz was launched a Pz.Fpfw. II was state of the art and the PzKfw III was just getting approval for production.

  • @legiran9564
    @legiran9564 Год назад +9

    The reason Kentucky and Illinois existed as Iowa's sisters is that at the time the USN still hadn't made up their mind about the final design specs of the Montanas.
    So as to not leave the slipways idle so that the design of the Montana's could be finalized they ordered two additional Iowa since those designs are already finalized.
    Montana originally started out as BB65 but it was moved down two numbers to accommodate Illinois and Kentucky.
    In 1939 when Montana was still BB65 some of the designs reached up to 70,000 tons, the size being needed to make this ship top out at 33 knots
    but around 1940 when Hitler's Wehrmacht blitzed through France and it seemed assured that America being dragged into a global conflict was merely a matter of time the order was given to downsize the Montanas for faster construction. Because this new series of redesigns would take time a further 2 Iowas were ordered to keep the slipways occupied.
    This push and pull of designs and incorporation of new ideas due to war experience persisted until the Montanas were formally cancelled in 1943.
    So we don't really know what the final Montana would really have looked like had they been built because the USN up to the cancellation of the Montanas hadn't made up their mind..
    Some proposals called for the deletion of the 4th turret to save weight in place for increased electronics and heavy AA.
    Other proposals called for the secondary gun layout mirroring that of the Alaskas and Baltimores with a superfiring 5 inch twin mounts over the main central turrets.

    • @jonathanstrong4812
      @jonathanstrong4812 Год назад +1

      I've read the book US Battleships by Dr Norman Friedman The Montana-class was a dollar-intensive and they were having a 12 16|50 main armament and a brand-new 5 inch secondary armament And they couldn't completed them would run out 'Tick-Tock' and they were going to be deeper in the harbor And the Panama-Canal wouldn't have them because of 921 feet comparing to 887 feet

    • @davidford3115
      @davidford3115 Год назад

      @@jonathanstrong4812 My father just got that book in along with his Cruisers and Destroyers books by the same author. Very interesting reading.

  • @Mountain-Man-3000
    @Mountain-Man-3000 Год назад +1

    I like that I finally know what those random cables in the background are for now!

  • @francisbusa1074
    @francisbusa1074 Год назад +7

    Now, armor manufacture and availability was a factor that I had never considered. Great insight into this subject, Ryan. You've acquired a lot of good resources.

  • @brucesheehe6305
    @brucesheehe6305 Год назад +2

    Plus, repaired and rehabilitated older battleships (and those salvaged from Pearl Harbor) were coming online for surface and shore bombardment usage. Although not fast battleships, they were plenty useful. Modernized with radar, improved torpedo blisters, dual 5-inch gun mounts, 20mm, and 40 mm antiaircraft weapons, these were awesome and useful battlewagons. This allowed the fast BBs to stick with the carrier task forces.

  • @donchaput8278
    @donchaput8278 Год назад +2

    Great video. Highlights how important naval production and capacity is. Takes a long time to build ships, especially when you have ships taking up space getting repaired. Logistics is something you have to win to win the war

  • @palmpurusdiotech3432
    @palmpurusdiotech3432 Год назад +4

    My favorite ship personally in W.O.W. is the Scharnhorst because she is a good brawling battleship, you aim for the weak spots with your 11in modest guns then slap them with torpedoes when you close the distance, New Mexico and Nevada are also among my favorites

    • @davidford3115
      @davidford3115 Год назад +1

      Scharnhorst (both Iron Blood and META versions) in Azur Lane is pretty good too!

    • @palmpurusdiotech3432
      @palmpurusdiotech3432 Год назад

      @@davidford3115 truthfully it’s hard to use Scharnhorst here lately due to all the HE spammers out there

  • @cameronsienkiewicz6364
    @cameronsienkiewicz6364 11 месяцев назад +1

    It’s kinda cool being able to see the navy’s priorities change during the war through armour designation .. you can literally see the death of battleships through their armour designation of allotted amount .. battleships construction died between 1943-44 and never recovered

  • @wfoj21
    @wfoj21 Год назад +4

    He asked earlier about if interested in a video on the shipbuilding capability - why 2 Battleships per year. Yes, please, (beg). And your thought on the current warship building capability in our country.

  • @heretoforeunknown
    @heretoforeunknown Год назад +13

    Also, there were twenty-nine allied BBs in the Pacific near the end of the war. Probably includes the French and the British Pacific Fleet. Don't recall how many were USN.

    • @nobodyspecial4702
      @nobodyspecial4702 Год назад

      17 US BBs in the Pacific in 1945. The US had 38 total.

    • @jackdaniel7465
      @jackdaniel7465 6 месяцев назад

      If you cannot recall how many American battleships were in the Pacific theater, all you have to do is Google that, it's very simple to do, if you would like I can name everyone of them for you.
      Iowa
      Missouri
      Wisconsin
      New Jersey
      Washington
      North Carolina
      Alabama
      South Dakota
      Indiana
      Massachusetts
      Nevada
      Pennsylvania
      Idaho
      Colorado
      West Virginia
      Tennessee
      Mississippi
      Tennessee
      New Mexico
      New York
      Texas
      Arkansas
      That's a total of 22 American battleships that were in the Pacific theater out of the 29 you mentioned.

    • @jackdaniel7465
      @jackdaniel7465 6 месяцев назад

      Sorry mentioned Tennessee twice, that's a total of 21.

    • @jackdaniel7465
      @jackdaniel7465 6 месяцев назад

      The French did not have any battleships in the Pacific theater....that's a fact.

    • @jackdaniel7465
      @jackdaniel7465 6 месяцев назад

      21 American battleships in the Pacific theater, that's not counting the 75 Aircraft carriers Essex class fleet carriers -Light carriers and escort carriers over 30 cruisers heavy and light and over 125 destroyers and destroyer escorts, so by 1945 you can see clearly how big the US Navy was in the Pacific theater was in comparison. Hope that information helps you.

  • @RMS_Gigantic
    @RMS_Gigantic Год назад +5

    Speaking of World of Warships, I'd love to see a video of you looking over the game's hypothetical Iowas-Delaware (a battlecarrier with a wonky two-gun third turret, located further aft than where turret 3 would be) and Illinois (an Illinois or Kentucky completion proposal sporting twelve Des Moines-style 8-inch main guns, though the superstructure on the WoWs depiction is less radical than the real AA battleship proposals we know of)

  • @thomasmoore8142
    @thomasmoore8142 Год назад +2

    FYI, Battleship armor is made from STS Steel; the difference is what they do to it after the steel is made. All the ships' frames and plates are made from STS steel--nearly everything in the ship is STS but the armor has a long process after the steel is made: it is kept red hot for months, they give it carbolic acid baths (CO2 dissolved in water) to raise the carbon content, they store it in burning peat piles on not allowed to go lower than a certain temperature, then after the prescribed amount of time they let it cool very slowly, and then finally they cut, drill, machine it to shape.

  • @rickashcroft8226
    @rickashcroft8226 Год назад +9

    In addition to the problems highlighted in this video, I believe need for the last of the Iowas and the Montanas was overtaken by air power. By the end of the war, the old BBS were used only for shore bombardment and the fast BBS were essentially AA escorts for the carriers. The high cost and relatively limited offensive and defensive capabilities of BBSs compared to aircraft carriers led to phasing out big- gun ships in favor of more flexible aircraft carriers.

    • @glennrishton5679
      @glennrishton5679 Год назад +3

      A fellow Heretic. I made a similar comment a few minutes ago. If you need AA cover for the carriers you dont need to be hauling around 16" guns.

    • @brovold72
      @brovold72 5 месяцев назад

      And as the Unauthorized History of the Pacific War hosts have pointed out, mere destroyers are actually very useful for "shore bombardment" -- or at least for close support during landing operations.

  • @bmhh123
    @bmhh123 Год назад +1

    I love World of Warships, it is a great game. I am currently playing the British Battle Cruser line, loving the Renown so far.

  • @waynesmith4584
    @waynesmith4584 Год назад +2

    Thank you, Ryan, for a great summary on the long-delayed MONTANAs. Heinrich's book on Warship Building is a must read for every student of warship design, building and gaming. I think their final cancellation in July, 1943 is intriguing because of the timing. The U.S. had not yet taken a Japanese held island (Tarawa was four months in the future), North Africa had just been secured, the next carrier battle would not be for another year, the Battle of the Atlantic was still raging, and the invasion of Europe was postponed until 1944 due to a lack of landing craft. Could anyone in the Navy convince the air-minded president that larger battleships should be built when destroyers, aircraft carriers and landing craft are needed for the planned assaults in 1943 and 1944?

  • @BELCAN57
    @BELCAN57 Год назад +3

    Most folks have no idea how important logistics are in wartime.

  • @rays7437
    @rays7437 Год назад

    In World of Warships, I just got the North Carolina battleship. I can't spend much money so it took me a LONG time to get the exp and coins to obtain it. I have the Farragut destroyer, New Orleans cruiser, and the Cachalot submarine. My least favorite is the submarine because of the ridiculously low amount of time it can stay submerged. I also have the cruiser Charleston, which I got free when I signed up a few years ago, using the link from this RUclips channel. I have several other ships as well, but they are earlier design models and I don't play them as much.
    Overall, it's an enjoyable game, and you don't have to spend money on it if you don't want to; unlike most other games out there.
    Thanks Ryan!

  • @kaylzshter6153
    @kaylzshter6153 Год назад +1

    What a great channel, excellent presentation as always!

  • @TheOneTrueDragonKing
    @TheOneTrueDragonKing Год назад +3

    Currently, the battleships I am playing are Montana, Yamato, Missouri and Musashi! I am also playing the aircraft carriers Enterprise (the actual most-awarded warship from World War 2, that honor does not belong to New Jersey) and Midway.

  • @calebvaldecanas8867
    @calebvaldecanas8867 Год назад +2

    1:50 “and you’re a TRAITOR to battleships”
    Exactly how it feels

  • @caseybyington7197
    @caseybyington7197 5 месяцев назад

    Currently playing the New Orleans and the Helena, American cruisers. Both are super fun boats. The Helena is more of a sneaky, set 'em on fire from cover type and the New Orleans is a beast mode type cruiser that can pick on battleships if it wants to. The Helena has 152mm main guns, while the New Orleans has 203mm. Helena is lightly armored but has an interesting turret setup with three of them out front. Good for poking a nose out and hitting other ships that have only two guns they can fire back. The New Orleans has bigger guns and better armor. It's not a BB, but it can take one on the chin and not go down

  • @ChristopherDoll
    @ChristopherDoll Год назад

    I was quite addicted to World of Warships for a number of years and started just after the Beta run ended. When I play now I'm primarily running USA Battleships, Cruisers, and Destroyers, and IJN Destroyers. Over the years I've filled my shipyard with a lot of lines and classes to try them out too.
    I'm thrilled that the USS Missouri can still print money (original release version).
    To this day one of my favorite things is to wreak carnage with low visibility IJN Torpedo Destroyers, despite the insanity introduced with the later version of Aircraft Carriers

  • @pyroman6000
    @pyroman6000 Год назад +2

    I think it's important to note, that by the time the Montanas would have begun building- there really WERE no enemy battleships for them to fight. Germany's were essentially all gone before we entered the war. What they had left rarely put to sea- because the Brits were hell bent on sinking them whenever they came out of port, and they were VERY persistant about it, lol.
    The Japanese didn't fare much better- we'd mauled them pretty badly by that point. AND we already had 10 fast BB's, and at least that many Standards and super dreadnoughts that we'd refitted and upgraded heavily. They had Yamato and one or 2 others by late war. Like the Alaskas, they'd have been ships without any real mission by the time they were commissioned.
    CV's were the relevant heavy hitters. And we needed all the amphibious assaults, DE's, and other smaller ships we could get.
    As for WoWS, I found the US cruisers- especially the heavy cruisers, and the Alaska and Puerto Rico to be an absolute blast to play. If you like gunships, these are for you. Those 8 and 12" guns hit like runaway freight trains, and they're rather accurate. The CL's are just plain mean, with as many 6" guns as they carry, the rate of fire, and the accuracy and punch of the shells. I ran both lines up to tier 10, reset them, and did it again. I rarely missed having torpedoes- because I never had the temptation to expose myself trying to use them, lol. The battleships are fun, too- esp the Iowas- when played right, they are just evil. Great Destroyers, too. There's a real learning curve to them in the upper tiers, but when you figure it out, damn!! I HATED Benson- then I LOVED it, lol. (WHY are 5" pew-pews so darn FUN??) Could never CV to save my life, so I have no opinion on those. The French lines really clicked for me, too.

    • @guessmyhandle
      @guessmyhandle Год назад

      Iowa class was the last battleship, everything else has been armored cruiser at best.
      British recycled all of theirs by the 1950s.

    • @Knight6831
      @Knight6831 Год назад

      Well of course the British were going to put the German battleship on the bottom, they were a threat after all

  • @AdmiralKakarot
    @AdmiralKakarot Год назад

    Beta tester for Warships here. Been playing for years and have Iowa and Montana. Working on getting Vermont and just started on the "hybrid" battleship line, which is a line of flight-deck battleships using North Carolina, Iowa and Montana as their base ships. Also own Texas, Arizona and Oklahoma.

  • @dvone4124
    @dvone4124 Год назад

    Clever! Using artwork from your sponsor to add color to the historic B&W footage.

  • @robertf3479
    @robertf3479 Год назад +1

    I've been playing World of Warships since Beta Testing. While I don't have the number of ships in my "port" I do have the North Carolina (T8) Iowa (T9) and Montana (T10). I tend to gravitate to destroyers and cruisers in my play even though I do have Japanese, U.S. (of course,) German, British, French and Italian Battlewagons. I simply enjoy the faster play of the smaller, lighter ships.
    I did obtain ONE carrier from a giveaway prize container but have yet to equip or play her.

    • @counterfit5
      @counterfit5 Год назад +1

      Destroyers sure are fun. I just delivered 75k damage in three minutes with a Benson.

  • @justinbrown8759
    @justinbrown8759 Год назад

    Thank You for your time

  • @jamesm3471
    @jamesm3471 Год назад

    I love this man’s contempt and disgust at the mere mention of the kind of person who’d pass on using a battleship to instead use an aircraft carrier in the World of Warships plug before the main content.

  • @JoshSees
    @JoshSees Год назад

    The propeller machining footage was really cool

  • @davidstange4174
    @davidstange4174 Год назад +3

    Aircraft carriers had superseded battle ships as well as far as Navy doctrine goes. They were deemed unnecessary, and resources were stressed.

  • @lonnyyoung4285
    @lonnyyoung4285 Год назад

    I just started the Japanese BB line tonight. I ran the US CA and BB lines simultaneously to start. I made it up to Iowa, but don't like to play Random, so I've stopped there. I do have Des Moines (I free XP'd my way to her mostly from Baltimore). I also have Seattle, but can't use it in operations, so that's as high as I have gone with it.

  • @LordZontar
    @LordZontar Год назад +1

    Quite simply: the battleship had become obsolete. By 1942 it was clear that the role for which such a ship was intended: the big gun battleline clash between opposing fleets, was never going to happen in the age of air warfare. Sea control turned into an issue of air control: whichever side could field the largest air force over the oceans would gain strategic mastery. The aircraft carrier became the primary strike instrument at sea, and naval warfare in the Pacific became a matter of capturing islands large enough to locate air bases from which to control large expanses of ocean territory by air and to launch long-range bombers from to attack the enemy homeland. The only reason four Iowa-class ships ended up entering fleet service was because they were already under construction and were far enough along in the building that it was more economical to simply complete the ships and get some usage out of them as escorts for fast carrier task forces and offshore invasion bombardment support. But the remaining two Iowas that had just begun building were canceled, and when that happened the fate of the Montana-class was sealed. The Navy needed aircraft carriers, cruisers, destroyers and submarines far more than it needed battleships.

    • @francisbusa1074
      @francisbusa1074 Год назад

      I very much agree. I love those battleships, but carriers were the big priority. Thankfully, by '42-'43 the Navy decided in favor of carrier production over battleships. Kind of a no-brainer after Midway.

  • @iamian9028
    @iamian9028 Год назад +4

    Yep, I can think of one big reason they were never built- lack of Panamax capability.

  • @Redhand1949
    @Redhand1949 Год назад

    I worked at the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard (PNSY) as a Lt. (j.g.) "Ship Superintendent" in 1974 and had oversight responsibility for the completion of the modernization of USS Macdonough (DLG-8) for the last two months before she was re-commissioned. If you want to learn more about the day-to-day operations of the Yard and how the work got done, I'd be happy the chat with you. I also have a good reference book on the Yard's history.

  • @bighairyfoot1217
    @bighairyfoot1217 Год назад

    ..The Word "Astonishing" Is a Neat-O Word! Thank-You!..

  • @captiannemo1587
    @captiannemo1587 Год назад

    The footage around 13:00 minutes is just wild with the lath work on propellers.

  • @papapsadventures6119
    @papapsadventures6119 Год назад

    New Jersey is on my bucket list to go see. Touring the USS North Carolina this Saturday!

  • @ericthomsen9644
    @ericthomsen9644 Год назад +2

    Wars are about attrition. Once they got good at sinking multi-million dollar battleships with a handful of hundred thousand dollar planes it was over for the battleship.

  •  Год назад

    Very interesting and a very fitting sponsor

  • @politicsuncensored5617
    @politicsuncensored5617 Год назад +6

    Hi Ryan, I drove up 2 summers ago to donate a large model of the battleship U.S.S. California BB-44 that I had built in the early 2000's. Including the plexiglass cover over the model. Were you ever able to use it in any exhibit? Our city Jacksonville, FL just got the USS Orleck a few months ago & they will be having their grand opening I believe on Memorial Day weekend. I have driven past where she had been anchored & I am looking forward to visiting the Orleck when she opens. Hopefully you can visit our memorial ship like you have done so for so many other memorial ships. PJ

  • @davidncw4613
    @davidncw4613 Год назад

    Cool to see WOWS onboard, maybe some in game stuff to support the channel? Some onboard stuff to support the game? This could be a great relationship.

  • @Kami-sama.isekai
    @Kami-sama.isekai Год назад

    Ive been playing WOWS since 2015, and ill say that my favorite line is the IJN BB and currently the best line that fit the meta especially with the super Yamato ship Satsuma with 8×510mm guns.

  • @erikterock9071
    @erikterock9071 Год назад +1

    I think another reason the Montana class was never completed was because the Navy had begun to realize that battleships no longer held the value they had in the past, especially with the proven advantages of aircraft carriers. When the Iowas and Montanas were envisioned, battleships were still the capital ships of their fleets. But in the first few years of the war, that changed, and with resources like armor plating being limited, it makes sense that the Navy would prioritize the construction of ships that would contribute more to the war effort.

  • @johnlorrieboskovic2836
    @johnlorrieboskovic2836 Год назад

    A lot of very valid comments here. To me, the primary reason for not building the Montanas was the cost to crew them. The aircraft carrier became the dominant warship due, in no small part, to its ability to attack with force from a distance. Battleships became too labor intensive for their limited scope of operation. The same number of crew aboard an aircraft carrier is much more cost effective.

  • @blackbuttecruizr
    @blackbuttecruizr Год назад +6

    Lead times for the 16" guns were pretty long too weren't they?

    • @bluemarlin8138
      @bluemarlin8138 Год назад +1

      Yes, but those were already being churned out for the Iowas. They could have used the spares for the Montanas in a pinch.

  • @patrickcotter5629
    @patrickcotter5629 Год назад +3

    What about the 16" turret construction requirements for the Montana Class would that have impacted construction timelines.

  • @nathanokun8801
    @nathanokun8801 Год назад

    Bethlehem, Carnegie-Illinois, and Midvale made some 21" Class "A" barbette test plates for the MONTANAs, each one having the same 55% face thickness as the thinner plates made for all of the other new WWII battleships ("Thick Chill"), but the hardness pattern of the face layer was very different for each plate. Interestingly, Midvale's plate had a fixed maximum hardness for the entire 55% depth. This hardness was also the maximum for earlier, thinner plates, but for them it was that hard only near the surface, being about 550 Brinell Hardness Number -- we are ignoring the thin 1-1.5" surface ~650 BHN "Cemented" or "Harveyized" (carburized) layer. Then the Midvale plate hardness dropped suddenly to the constant backing layer hardness (below ~250 Brinell Hardness Number). The other companies' plates had a more normal slow dropping of the face hardness from the 550 BHN near the surface to the ~250 BHN backing layer. All plates passed the spec ballistic tests, though.

  • @hughpenn
    @hughpenn Год назад +1

    I never heard of Montana before. What makes it different from other Battleships?

  • @binksterb
    @binksterb Год назад

    Long time WOW player!! Always something interesting.

  • @kineticdeath
    @kineticdeath Год назад

    my guess is related to the ever shrinking allocation of armor plate - "the admirals had determined that air power was the way to win in the naval arena, more and better carriers would help them achieve this, not a couple new big battleships that possessed no air power".

  • @audacity60
    @audacity60 Год назад +1

    Just before WW2, the British planned to build the Lion class battleships. Sept 1939, the British realise the war will be over before they are completed. A proposal to build 2 battlecruisers with turrets taken from old scrapped battleships, could have been in service by 1945, but Churchill wanted a super battleship, which became HMS Vanguard, a new battleship with 2nd hand turrets. It missed the war. Had the Lion class been built, they would have new MK IV 16 inch guns & been 56500 tons, full load.

  • @rogerb3654
    @rogerb3654 Год назад +2

    I wonder...under what circumstances...would it take for the Montana's to be built (Maybe 1 or 2)
    - The plans were finalized sooner? (This is why they started building Kentucky & Illinois)
    - We had better & timely intel on Yamato class? (Found out sooner)
    - Not as much shortage on steel?
    - Construction of new locks for the Panama Canal moves forward?
    - Or making and exception, i.e.: Midway class carriers?
    For them to be completed and make it "into the fight", they would have to have been laid down at the same time as Missouri & Wisconsin...or shortly thereafter. Definitely BEFORE the Pearl Harbor on Dec 7, 41.
    - Perhaps we get Montana...and MAYBE Ohio built before the armistice is signed Sep 2, 45.

    • @Contrajoe
      @Contrajoe Год назад +1

      What if the US carriers had been sunk at Pearl Harbor and/or if Midway had gone in reverse? If we'd suffered more carrier loses in the world the "battleship is worthless" myth might never have formed. Also, consider that not all of Japan was on board with the surrender - perhaps a long war changes what was built? That may depend on the Invasion of Japan going forward and what might've been lost during such an undertaking.

    • @zoopercoolguy
      @zoopercoolguy Год назад +1

      It would have to involve the US not just using the escalator clauses in the various naval treaties but actually leaving the treaties sooner. The Montana was the first post-Treaty battleship the USN authorized.

  • @pauld6967
    @pauld6967 Год назад +1

    As a guess, I would think another hindrance to the Montana Class being completed swiftly would be some of the technological innovations that they would want to integrate into the designs.
    As for your question, the answer is none. I play War Thunder. In that game I have unlocked several Tier III vessels in the American set.
    With all of the other nations, I am just Tier I in Naval because I mostly play Air and Ground vehicles. Yes, all three realms in a single game.

  • @jaredwilliams5466
    @jaredwilliams5466 Год назад

    If I recall correctly, the Montana Class was designed to be more of a return to the "standard type" battleship in terms of speed. This would have made it considerably slower when compared to the previous three classes of fast battleships. Even if completed, the Montanas wouldn't have been able to escort the carriers and couldn't keep up with the speed the Navy liked about the Iowas. If completed, they probably would have had a service life similar to the Alaska Class, while the Navy would have still retained the and used the Iowas just as it did, simply because it was easier to rapidly deploy the Iowas.

  • @donkeyboy585
    @donkeyboy585 Год назад

    Ya know I never even thought about the availability of armor plate. To me the conversation in 42 was “What do we need the most..Iowa’s or Essex’s”

  • @ASMRARTHOR
    @ASMRARTHOR Год назад +4

    Very interested in knowing about the authorized two battleships a year.

  • @jakekidd6431
    @jakekidd6431 Год назад

    Fij,I love to see a video on how many cruises you think New Jersey could take on. From the Axis nations.

  • @geneard639
    @geneard639 Год назад

    The US had the MOST Aircraft Carriers in WWII. Over 120 were built from keel up, or other ships were converted like the Wolverine and Princeton the only two Great Lakes Training Aircraft Carriers. Most of the 120 were Jeep Carriers, and some were Seaplane Carriers (there were only about 2 if I remember), but still there were over a lot of heavy carriers.

  • @alancranford3398
    @alancranford3398 Год назад +1

    Other reasons for not constructing the Montanas?
    Start with a finite number of sailors to crew the Montana-class battleships. The peak number of Americans in naval or military uniform was something like 13 million with around 18 million serving during the period 1939 to 1946. Many of the people in uniform on Pearl Harbor Day were not physically capable of deployment to combat zones overseas--Captain Ronald Reagan, US Cavalry, was one of those due to severe myopia. Where would the sailors come from to crew a Montana? Wouldn't those sailors be better used on another Essex-class carrier or on several fleet oilers? That's just ship's crew--support for the battleships required ports, anchorages, advanced naval bases and the ships needed to service them--plus underway replenishment.
    Next is a limited amount of money. The USA ran everything on a dollar basis--except when the government could ignore costs. Even sailors needed to be paid! The most expensive program was the B-29 bomber, followed by the atomic bomb--together they're just shy of six billion 1945 dollars. That doesn't include the cost of seizing and supplying forward area bomber bases. The atomic bomb raids on Hiroshima and Nagasaki could not be done from Omaha due to technical limitations of Army Air Force aviation. On the other hand, the Montana-class battleship had to be within 20 miles of the Japanese home island coast to bombard the shoreline but the B-29 base could be 1500 miles from the Japanese home islands and still burn out cities. This money was raised by taxes, by bond sales, and by printing more money, but there was a limit to all three.
    The labor force was stretched to its maximum during WW2. Otherwise "unemployable" workers were all but drafted into labor armies to keep the fighting forces supplied. The shipyard workers that Montana-class battleships required for their four-year build could have launched hundreds of Liberty and Victory ships.
    Supporting the labor force meant feeding and housing them. Farm labor was so short that German and Italian POWs were employed in agriculture. There was a 1945 mass shooting in Utah when an off-duty soldier climbed into a guard tower and sprinkled the tents containing captured German soldiers with machine gun fire until the soldier ran out of ammunition. Food was rationed so that "nobody starved" during World War Two, and if someone was in dire straits, they were attended to. If they were workers, they frequently were provided a free hot meal in the factory's canteen. Housing was a significant problem. I attended boot camp at MCRD San Diego back when there was a naval recruit depot next door. I grew up around military and naval relatives, most of them who had experienced WW2 at home and some were on battlefields. Housing was in such short supply that some warehouses were converted to worker barracks--despite the extreme need for warehouses. It didn't quite get to the flop house stage (flop houses seem to have been converted to comply with government housing standards, low as those were) in order to meet the need for more housing. I was a volunteer at the Hill Aerospace Museum and there were some exhibits on home front housing for the massive Hill Field Air Depot. Travel to the east a couple of hours and the smaller Wendover Field Museum has exhibits on how the families of personnel assigned to Wendover had to be creative in their search for housing--decaying relics of the base personnel's housing are being restored. San Diego still has large shipyards and a US Navy base--my relatives talked about how hard it was for workers to find housing.
    That is, if you could find the warm bodies capable of doing shipyard work.
    The two biggest constraints were shipyard space and armor plate. Workforce and money were next. Then there was feeding and housing the workforce. The limited number of sailors had to come from somewhere. I haven't exhausted the limits on warship building that required prioritizing ships other than the Montanas.
    Time is a factor that I cannot place because time cannot be reduced to mere money--and because WW2 was expected to go on into 1948 a few days after Pearl Harbor. Everything was needed NOW.

  • @BobK58
    @BobK58 Год назад +1

    The engines for the BB-66 USS Kentucky ended up on my ship the USS Sacramento AOE-1.

    • @edwinarnold4865
      @edwinarnold4865 7 месяцев назад

      Fyi the last two Iowa class battleship hulls ended up being built as u.s.s Sacramento AOE - 1 and u.s.s. Camden AOE -2 that's why they have all of the machinery from the Iowa class battleship still in them👌

  • @joechang8696
    @joechang8696 Год назад

    I see to recall hearing that the most restrictive bottleneck in (fast) large ship construction was the reduction gear. Much of the authorization was in the two Navy acts of 1940, not to be confused with the purpose being to have sufficient ships to operate two navies. 3 Essex's were order in Jul 40, and eight more in Sep of 40. Large ships are normally 3 years from keel lay (which is several months after order) to commission. Compressing this to 19 months was incredible. Even then, several more months are necessary for shake down and training before combat operations. So, it's really two years plus a few months for keel to combat. Furthermore, the initial combat ops were raids. Really offensive operations do not commence until several carriers are trained up (including the 9 Independence's)
    After Pearl Harbor, we are at Jan 42. The US has 2 Lexington, 3 Yorktown (Hornet just getting ready) and Wasp (really a light carrier). At this point the thinking is defense, including counter-attacks (but not counter offensive) due to great Japanese carrier + battleship force. After Midway a limited offensive was possible, but with the loss of 2 more carriers in Guadalcanal and Saratoga a torpedo magnet, offensive was only possible up the Solomons making use of land bases. So, the thinking in Jan 43 was the main offensive would not begin until late 43.
    Given the probably 3-year gap between prioritization of ship build to actual combat use, the actual situation changes considerably.
    It's not until the Marianas campaign that just as US Navy airpower is cresting, an assessment can be made that Japanese airpower is in decline, not from number of aircraft, but rather loss of skilled aviators, and ability to match US planes with 2000 hp engines.
    Even so, the thinking in mid-44 must be that the invasion of Japan would not start until late 45, and early 46. So, ships started in late 43, even early 44 could see action,
    Another factor is that ship building needs to accommodate both sufficient striking force plus losses. Four carrier were lost in 42, but no big carriers were lost after that, (1 or 2 heavily damaged, + 1 independence?)

  • @Knight6831
    @Knight6831 Год назад +47

    I feel people take it for granted that the Iowa Class has survived as they could have very easily been sent for scrap because the Government decided they were not worth keeping

    • @fuckoff5078
      @fuckoff5078 Год назад

      It was too late to cancel them and they made excellent escorts for the carriers with their speed and aa armament

    • @robertf3479
      @robertf3479 Год назад +6

      I am frankly surprised that all four of the class found "happy homes" as museums, I fully expected Iowa and Wisconsin to be stricken and scrapped like two of the three Des Moines heavy cruisers were. Because of the turret explosion Iowa was considered to be in the worst shape of the four and of course neither she nor Wisconsin were going to be able to find a berth in their namesake states so I thought they would be goners. I always knew Missouri would be preserved because of her role as the stage for the Japanese surrender (should have been Enterprise IMHO.) New Jersey was the first surprise, and then Whiskey and Iowa.

    • @haroldhenderson2824
      @haroldhenderson2824 Год назад +4

      After the turret explosion on Iowa, I expected her to be scrapped.

    • @NFS_Challenger54
      @NFS_Challenger54 Год назад +4

      @@robertf3479 Why was New Jersey a surprise? She's the most decorated battleship in naval history. As a matter of fact, New Jersey is more historical than Missouri. I DO love Missouri, don't get me wrong. However, her only achievement was, as you stated, the site of surrender for the Japanese. It would've been a crime to scrap New Jersey the same way it was a crime to scrap the Big E (which was also a highly decorated vessel).

    • @DMS-pq8
      @DMS-pq8 Год назад

      @@NFS_Challenger54 How can she be the most decorated Did she ever even sink another warship?

  • @eddieb1323
    @eddieb1323 Год назад +3

    I am interested in knowing more about the authorized two battleships a year.

  • @nicksivert5431
    @nicksivert5431 Год назад

    To anyone who reads this comment, I find it funny as I listen to this video I am/was playing WoW-L; commanding the German battleship Gneisenau. It's a battleship before the Bismarck. I did reach the goal of having the Bismarck, but since the grind for the green stars is long I decided to sell her and still use the Gneisenau. Yes, the Gneisenau only has 6 main guns which are below average for caliber size. However, getting her fully upgraded in acceleration and increasing her HP, she can travel at 32 knots and, what I like about her the most, is that she can launch three torpedoes from her port and starboard sides.
    I'm also using her to grind for the green stars to get the Colorado, and then the Iowa. On the other hand, both the New Mexico and Colorado are slow ships; the New Mexico can only travel at 21 knots and it's annoying.

  • @henrycarlson7514
    @henrycarlson7514 Год назад

    So Wise , Thank You .

  • @robertkoons1154
    @robertkoons1154 Год назад +2

    US could have built all the Montanas and the larger Panama canal locks if it hadn't provided half of all the rolled steel used by the USSR during World War Ii.

  • @robertgutheridge9672
    @robertgutheridge9672 Год назад +1

    Skilled labor/shipwrights it takes a lot of man power to build those ships

  • @spaman7716
    @spaman7716 Год назад +2

    I'm just miffed because if they had been built in completion, thet would have included USS Maine and USS New Hampshire, my two favorite states 😭

  • @SpaceMarine3371
    @SpaceMarine3371 Год назад

    In world of warships I use mostly Montana, Iowa,(All US Hybrid Battleships) Yamato, Musashi, kawachi, Ishizuchi, ISE, Atlantico, Rio De Janeiro, Agincourt, Bismarck, Tirpitz, Konig, Derflinger, Moltke, Von Der Tann, Viribus Unitas, and Sun Yat Sen

  • @Allen0592
    @Allen0592 Год назад +2

    Considering how far along Kentucky was and they were starting Illinois.Had they been completed, I wonder if New Jersey would have been reactivated during Vietnam or if they would have just used those ships since they were newer.

    • @edwardrhoades6957
      @edwardrhoades6957 Год назад

      By Vietnam, Kentucky's bow had already been attached to Wisconsin after its bow was damaged in a collision in 1956.

  • @alexlupsor5484
    @alexlupsor5484 Год назад +1

    Good afternoon,
    The amount of construction, plus the delivery of the war time equipment, it had to be reassess. They weren’t going too have, the amount of materials needed to sustain the two fronts they were engaged in. If Midway wasn’t as successful as it turned out to be, and the loss in navy assets became, the loss of two carriers along with half of the escorting ships, then having to hold back the Japanese battle fleet ( the factor being battleship Yamato), the need for the Montanas would have to be reassess, which included the needed slips and docks for advanced production. The nation would have the ability to build and/or replace Battleships as well as losses in the carrier forces, therefore the immediate need to build the Montana class would not be necessary. If the last two Iowa battleships were completed, with the number of ships increased with fore mentioned needs and given the increased armour and updates to the Iowa class, they would have been enough. Upgrades in the armour and adjustments was necessary to improve the ship design. This would be faster, adding more value with less expense. Kentucky would not received as much armour upgrades as she was in the final phase of its completion. The number of Iowa’s could be extended by the navy estimates and production would have been faster. This would allow the use of the Panama Canal, which would be advantageous to the fleet.
    The European convoys would have to be reassess at the expense of the Russian convoys. By reducing war materials to the Russian campaign, the materials would be re addressed, as the German armies had been weakened to the point that the Russian forces was now producing their own combat assets and thus hold their own. The European continent was the second most important piece to the puzzle. By this time, the Canadians had increased production of corvette and frigates to protect convoys thus increasing the cover of protection, and to destroy U-boats. The national ability to replace losses of carriers in the Pacific theatre was astonishing . Thank God, the battle at midway had been successful and the strains on ship building was not tax further and the need for the Montana Class had been relieved. Either way the navy had the backing of the President. That is my analysis of what the question asked. The need for the Montana class was not needed although most navy personal would have loved to see them built.
    Forever in His service

  • @douglasbarnes3986
    @douglasbarnes3986 Год назад +2

    I, was on the New Jersey. In 1983, off the coast of Lebanon and we, fired our 16 inch guns for 10 straight hours. President Reagan said don't stop until I, tell you! If any of you can imagine all that time we, started to think when are we , going to stop.

  • @luigigenoni5944
    @luigigenoni5944 Год назад

    just a little correction. Italy completed 5 BBs before the was, not 3. You forgot Doria and Duilio, which were almost completely reconstructed fron scratch. They were smaller than littorio and roma class, but had sistema pugliese and 10 320 guns. they were probably better, for example of scharnhost.
    They did not had the possibility to shine, of course, not even like cesare and cavour (old renoved BBs) in 1940 a capo teulada, but they not only survived the war and served in italian navy long years after that.

  • @jimcat68
    @jimcat68 Год назад

    In addition to the factors discussed in the video (limited resources and number of shipbuilding facilities available), there is another factor that I think contributed to the decision not to build the Montanas: they would not have had any real mission after the war.
    As a fellow battleship fan, it pains me to admit this, but the Montana class plans were a relic of the big-gun, line-of-battle naval philosophy that was already obsolete before 1939. Their primary function would have been to engage enemy battleships, and by 1945, there *were* no enemy battleships to engage. In any case, as the sinking of Yamato and Musashi demonstrated, that task could be done just as well, or better, by carrier aircraft.
    The other functions of battleships, such as shore bombardment, anti-aircraft fire, later conversion to missile platforms, and even performing a diplomatic show of force, could be carried out more efficiently by the Iowa class, since the faster speed of the Iowas would allow their more rapid deployment and the ability to keep pace with the carrier battle groups.
    Had the Montanas been built before 1941, they would most likely had some significant role to play in the war. But history did not play out that way.

  • @chrisburnett5263
    @chrisburnett5263 Год назад

    It is said that a weapon system goes through a lifecycle, where the first of it is always offensive, it gains defensive capabilities until the defense of the system requires more than the offense can give. That is a good description on why the Montana's were not constructed. While their offensive systems were grand, the same could be accomplished with the aircraft carriers of the day, and more was promised. The battleships required a lot of their systems be devoted to anti aircraft and anti sub, which limited the big gun capability. We can argue that the escort of either ship would be the same, but the power projection of the aircraft carriers held much further range (think of the battle of Midway being fought with one side having only battleships), and the defensive systems (aircraft) of the carrier were the same ones as the offensive(again, aircraft). With the advent of radar and scout planes, aircraft carriers offensive range made them better suited for the battles of WWII and beyond. Some of these arguments were being stated across the Navy in WWII, and the days of the big gun carrying officers became a career shortening opinion. It is also postulated that we build our defenses for the last war, but that's another comment.