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I've posted this on another forum but I post it here as well if it can get some thought processes flying:
From Norman Friedman's US Battleships - An Illustrated Design History:
So... the question arises, how would WW2 look like if 12" armed battleships would roam the oceans? Both older re-gunned ones with thick belt armour for their calibre and new ones with corresponding belt armour for their calibre? What would be the implications of such an under-gunning present?
Or just imagine 4x3 12" armed Colorados VS either 3x4 or 3x3 12" armed Nelsons and 4x3 31cm armed Nagatos?
Of course the question arises if the old guns were to be scrapped, to be used as coastal defence or "stored"? If stored we could except re-gunning to the original calibre in the first few months of any war and thus would reduce the capital ships of each nations in the early parts of the war due to the re-installment of the original weapons.
From Norman Friedman's US Battleships - An Illustrated Design History:
By this time the United States had been committed to achieving naval parity with Britain for about fifteen years. Acceptance of the 12-inch gun limit would preclude parity until after the demise of the Nelsons (1951, if proposed twenty-six-year lifetime were accepted). Leahy's proposed alternative was not merely to limit new construction but also to require that existing guns replaced by 12-inch weapons on a one-for-one basis - which would overwhelm the British, as their eight-gun ships would face US units armed with twelve guns (originally 14 inch vs. British 15 inch).* Studies already showed that the alternative, for 12-inch ships to face the 16-inch Nelsons, would be as ruinous as the situation of the wooden ships at Hampton Roads exposed to the Merrimack before the appearance of the Monitor. At 20.000 yards, a 12-inch shell would penetrate only 9,6 inches of belt and 2,4 of deck, compared with 15 and 3,4 for the 16in/45. Leahy clearly considered the regunning proposal a bargaining tactic to be used at the coming London Conference, "It would be very pleasing to me if the US could get an advantage t one of these conferences." He found it particularly unfortunate that the public not understand that the British system of overseas bases unbalanced any apparent equivalence between the two navies achieved by treaty.
* It was argued that 16-inch guns could be replaced by larger numbers of 12-inch guns: three for every two US 16-inch. Quadruple turrets were considered impractical, so there was the delicious possibility of Nelsons armed with nine 12-inch facing Colorados armed with twelve such weapons.
So... the question arises, how would WW2 look like if 12" armed battleships would roam the oceans? Both older re-gunned ones with thick belt armour for their calibre and new ones with corresponding belt armour for their calibre? What would be the implications of such an under-gunning present?
Or just imagine 4x3 12" armed Colorados VS either 3x4 or 3x3 12" armed Nelsons and 4x3 31cm armed Nagatos?
Of course the question arises if the old guns were to be scrapped, to be used as coastal defence or "stored"? If stored we could except re-gunning to the original calibre in the first few months of any war and thus would reduce the capital ships of each nations in the early parts of the war due to the re-installment of the original weapons.