Talk:Battleship

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 Definition A heavily-armored, warship optimized for fighting other warships using large-caliber guns; certain armor requirements differentiated from cruisers; obsolete by end of World War II. [d] [e]
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Battleship/Definition

Howard, isn't this definition redundant?

"A heavily-armored, warship optimized for fighting other warships using large-caliber guns; certain armor requirements differentiated from cruisers; obsolete by end of World War II."

Yes, tonnage plays a role in the definition of a battleship. To my way of thinking, a battleship is a heavy, all-big-gun ship descendant in design from the HMS ''Dreadnought''. We don't need to get an all inclusive definition (some were fast some were slow; and then there was the Battlecruiser variant, and the pocket battleship), but one that covers just the essentials. And, yes, there was a universal naval doctrine that like ships fight like ships. And come to think of it, some battleships just didn't have the armor (HMS Lion comes to mind); or were these classified as battlecruisers? And then there was the USS Alaska and Guam; the Graf Spee and sisters. Hey, I just thought about the Dictionary of American Fighting Ships. How do they define a battleship? Russell D. Jones 19:17, 18 August 2009 (UTC)

Not tonnage, armor and guns. Still, I think it's more logical to class battlecruisers with battleships. "Pocket battleships" were really cruisers.
No, it's not all-big-gun. That was the definition of HMS Dreadnought (1905); pre-Dreadnought battleships had mixed calibers of guns intended to fight large ships &mdash I tend to think of the start of "big" as 12"/300mm; a 9.2 or 8" gun seemed intended to fight cruisers while fighting battleships. John Arbuthnot Fisher arguably was a pioneer in operations research for actually challenging the assumptions.
Nevertheless, all-big-gun evolved. There remained only one caliber of gun intended to fight capital ships, but the standard evolved to secondary and tertiary batteries first to defend against fast torpedo vessels, and then aircraft.
Lion was a BC. Alaska and Guam were "CB" large cruisers, for which a mission never was clear. There was some argument that the Iowa-class battleships (Iowa, New Jersey, Wisconsin, Missouri) should either be distinguished as "fast battleships" or even BCs, as they were much faster than the cancelled followon class of heavier Montana-class. Nevertheless, while the Iowa never faced a Yamato, there's a fair argument that the Iowas, even though having 16" rather than 18.1" main guns, could have taken a Yamato -- their guns were more energetic, their speed and fire control was superior, and postwar analysis showed the Japanese armor was flawed.
Most references rate a battleship as immune to shells of its own main battery, within certain constraints, where a battlecruiser could not take a hit from its own guns. Obviously, "immune" has to be taken in context, as any battleship could be hammered to scrap by enough shells.
"Pocket battleship" never had a very good meaning. Graf Spee, however, was an effective commerce raider, which seems to have been the intended purpose. Note that she was mission-killed by two light cruisers and a heavy cruiser at the Battle of the River Plate.
Some like to call the Kirov-class battlecruisers, but that just doesn't fit. Their guns are modest but their missiles fierce. Still, a Burke-class destroyer probably could have taken a Yamato using SM-2 missiles in surface-to-surface mode.
What of this belongs in the article? Howard C. Berkowitz 19:43, 18 August 2009 (UTC)