Joe_Dracos said:
BuShips,
I was having a good time discussing the historical side of the arguement (especailly where it comes to the hood), I would like to make one final point on the matter (even though its redundant).
I have vaying sorces about weather the hood successfully made her turn. The one source I trust completely is The War at Sea. This one coroberates your discription so I must reluctantly state that she had not executed the turn. However, now that I've had some sleep (I work nights and its my day off) I have taken a more refreshed look at the topic. Your best example to use in this situation is Surogao strait. Not the battle of the Denmark straight, Hood was approaching at a 60 degree angle to Bismarks Beam. It wouldn't take much of a manouver to correct this situation (if Tovey had been thinking). That battle had so many mistakes. Tovey should have kept the Destroyers with his Capital ships, he should have used Prince of Wales search radar at least Intermittently to keep track of Bismark and he should have fired at Bismark, not Prinz Eugan (Tovey fired after Bismark opened hostilities) KGV would have made a better consort to Hood, not PoW. PoW was running shake downs. When the battle opened up, Her A turret had one of the guns develope a fault and was rendered useless, the after turret developed a fault and could not rotate. Suffolk and Norflok were in the area, Tovey should have...
I could go on like this....
It's no problem

, as I think there are always things to be learned whatever our own experiences are. Besides, there are many more who are readers here and are not jumping into the discussion that are benefiting from our little ramblings :wink: . By the way, I'm not saying that the Hood was destroyed
before turning. DM pointed out quite correctly that the Hood was lost in the middle of a maneuver ('manoeuvre' in Commonwealth English, but I'm an uneducated Yank, lol) that would have brought her X and Y turrets to bear. If you would indulge me (and not as an attempt to nitpick but rather to state my own perspective on history), I believe that if the Hood would have turned to starboard or gone a bit more forward, she might not have taken the fatal hit that she did. In a curious way of tossing into this discussion, the author's "large silhouette" bonus basically came into effect and I believe just as she was showing her broadside the die roll shifted :!: (if Matt is reading this, I'm sure he's grinning ear-to-ear as at the same time shedding a tear :wink: ) and Hood took her fatal critical hit. Thus, I am stating that from what I have read on the subject the Hood achieved her full broadside but sadly never survived to gain any bonus for the accomplishment. As something of a graphic of my viewpoint, please take a close look at my forum avatar and you will see the Hood taking her
last turn to port

. I fully agree that the best example of xT is the Battle of Surigao Straight. In what you said about Tovey, I think you mixed him up with Vice Admiral Holland who was on the Hood (Tovey was in KGV). Holland fired at Prinz Eugen because he thought at that range (visibility was 12 miles) that the lead ship was the Bismarck. I'll insert a snippet from one of the narratives now to tell why the British thought Bismarck was the lead ship-
At 03:19 the Suffolk transmitted one of her reports on the enemy. This was very useful for VADM Holland to evaluate the whole scenario. The Suffolk reported a battleship at 188° (from Suffolk) at a distance of 24,000 yards (21,900 meters) and one heavy cruiser at 185° at a distance 22,500 yards (20,500 meters). From this message it is clear that Suffolk was still reporting the Bismarck position as ahead of Prinz Eugen by1,400 meters (1,500 yards), without having realized that the two German ships had changed their own positions a few hours before. The naval formations were now approaching on converging paths, but the British warships had lost their initial advantage. They could have cut across the course of the German formation establishing the best course and angle of approach to the enemy during the coming engagement ( the classical “crossing the T ”).
Just as a hypothetical, are you so sure KGV would have really performed better than PoW? Sure KGV should have been better, but consider several tidbits I found that I've never known before I poked around a bit- (from
http://www.navweaps.com/index_tech/tech-016.htm ):
"KGVs guns were working OK until 0920 when she started to have safety interlock problems. As a result she started firing salvoes that comprised whatever guns were ready. At 0929, she started using her Type 279 for ranging and did so until 0953 when she returned that set to air search."and
"Overall, KGV had her A turret out of action for 30 minutes due to a shell jamming between the fixed and revolving structures, Y turret was out of action for seven minutes due to drill errors. Five guns out of ten jammed at varying times."
Heck, if the Bismarck (that's the spelling, as some forget the 'c') and PE had taken a different route into the Atlantic, Hood might be a museum ship today :shock: . I would answer a lot of your comments with a term called the 'fog of war', in that with a few alterations of events, the Hood and PoW might have indeed only been first seen from the Bismarck and PE as crossing
their T :idea:. The PoW turrets might have not malfunctioned the way that they did, and Hood's first salvo might have evicerated the PE with one salvo had it been on-target. We'll never know, as history has been written there. But it hasn't on a tabletop at least, and we can play the scenario endlessly working over it, heh.
