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Shortround6
Major General
The use of seaplane scouts by the Japanese was not unique to them. Just referencing the Hobart in 1939 she managed to recover her Walrus after it flipped in a night landing off of Sumatra. Either this plane or a replacement was used on June 17th to bomb an Italian radio station on Centre Peak Island in the Red Sea. By August 8th the Italians were attacking British Somalia and in return for a raid by 3 Italian aircraft " Howden sent Hobart's Walrus seaplane to attack the Italian airbase at Zeila with hopes of catching the enemy aircraft re-fuelling. Finding no better targets, the Walrus bombed what appeared to be a headquarters building then strafed the base, wrecking enemy vehicles and silencing two machine gun posts. The aircraft returned with two bullet holes; Hobart's first battle scars" Hobart also dismounted a 3pdr saluting gun and sent it into action with three volunteers as an impromptu AT gun.Between the use of seaplane scouts at night, such as they did use at Savo island, using seaplanes for marking targets with flares, used perfectly by the IJN in that battle, star shells (used by both sides in the battle) and the oft ridiculed superior naval optics of the Japanese, combined with the clearly very good training and discipline, and torpedoes with vastly more speed and range, I am just not sure radar alone is going to tip the scales, in say 1942 or 1943.
The British and the Italians (and others) had been using star shells for years, I have provided pictures of special star shell guns on some ships.
Training/morale is a bit variable from ship to ship but there doesn't seem to much complaint about the RN morale.
You place a lot of stock in the Japanese torpedoes. I an not saying they weren't good but they are not smart cruise missiles. And they were rarely fired (or at least hit anything) much over 20,000yds. British had the 2nd best torpedoes during this part of the war so the difference is nowhere near as marked as the difference between the US and the Japanese. In the vast majority of the battles the Japanese would have been in range of the British torpedoes.
" overcome superior Japanese torpedoes, aircraft, and ships."
Japanese torpedoes don't make their own ships torpedo proof. At this stage of the war only the A6M is clearly superior for carrier aircraft. and the superior ships thing needs a lot of looking at.
At least British ships didn't roll over as easy in a storm.
There are a lot of things that go into a warship, the Japanese strongly emphasized some. In other areas they were rather deficient. Their destroyers were pretty much one trick ponies. They were the best in the world at that one trick. For any other trick they fell into the middle of pack.
The Asashio class (in service in 1939) is supposedly the first Japanese destroyer to have sonar. With a whopping 16 depth charges. Later increase to 36 BUT at the cost of getting rid of 4 of the torpedo reloads.
They had six 5in DP guns, except the rate of fire sucked, and the gun director did not have an AA mode. Surface fire only with the director. The Contemporary J & K classes were about 200 tons lighter (10%) Their six 4.7 in guns didn't aim as high but fired at least 20% faster. The J&K also had a quad 2pdr instead of two twin 25mms. They also had a pair of quad .5 mounts, J&Ks had ten 21in tubes instead of eight 24s. One set was often traded for a single 4in HA gun but that was bit dubious. They also had sonar and 45 depth charges.
Daylight gun fight was probably equal, at close range the higher British rate of fire may put it ahead but a lot sea fights had a lot of luck.
There is a lot of 'stuff' that is hidden away. The British guns had twice the barrel life. May or may not matter in one battle depending on worn the barrels are. Makes a difference keeping a ship in fighting shape over several years.
Rounds per gun may favor the British. Tribals carried 200 shells per gun which was pretty standard for the British destroyers, SAP, HE and star shell (at least 50 per ship to start) The Big L&Ms carried 250 shells per gun so it is doubtful that the J&K carried less than the Tribals. Japanese started with 150/180 (normal/war) in the Fubiki's but that was cut to 120/150 after Tomozuru capsized. Later destroyers may have had the ammo capacity restored.
We seem to have skipped right over submarines. The Japanese boats were big but had problems, more due to the size rather than build quality. They didn't dive quickly and they didn't turn quickly.
Depends on what you mean by "radar guided gunnery" the fight with the Scharnhorst was the first British fight with blind firing.I would like to read about some examples of the RN using radar guided gunnery in that period or before.
However they had been using radar ranging for quite some time. This came in two forms. The first was for AA fire as it is harder to get optical range finders to give true range (slant) on aircraft. They then started using radar range finding for surface fire. Optical for train/bearing and the radar input for range.