Q: why do you do so many collaborations? Love your vids but the collabs are so painful 😢 terrible mic quality, un-charasmatic guests..... just why?
@vincentrees49702 жыл бұрын
Alaska Vs Scharnhorst- who would win? For the sake of argument, let's put them in the North Atlantic
@vincentrees49702 жыл бұрын
@@nunyabusiness1846 bit rude
@Knight68312 жыл бұрын
What lessons did the US Navy and Japanese Navy take away from the catastrophic destruction of HMS Hood?
@strmdominatr58872 жыл бұрын
Would the Alaska Class hold its weight against Kirov class battlecruisers if they weren't broken up before the 80s
@wrayday71492 жыл бұрын
When the Battleship era ended, it ended with some of the most beautiful looking ships that ever graced the seas.
@0waverunner0 Жыл бұрын
I know they are useless today, but man... That BDE feeling they had would be amazing to see out there today!
@ostiariusalpha Жыл бұрын
@@0waverunner0 Their guns are not really useful anymore, but remove the turrets and fill the barbette space with long range cruise missiles, and you would have a weapons platform that would be potent and effective even in modern warfare.
@argokarrus2731 Жыл бұрын
@@ostiariusalpha Arsenal ships?
@ostiariusalpha Жыл бұрын
@@argokarrus2731 Right, not quite as stealthy as the 90's concept, but you wouldn't need to build entirely new ships. And certainly better armored than the Russian Kirov-class and Slava-class missile cruisers were. No sinking from a few anti-ship missiles like the hapless _Moskva_ did.
@grafarco3717 Жыл бұрын
@@0waverunner0 USS Missouri still saw action in the late 1980s and I am sure, that the "freedom bringing capabilities" of its main guns would make a very good long range artillery support still today. The problem I see is the financial part, as maintaining and operating such a large ship is very expensive in money and manpower.
@Kanikalion2 жыл бұрын
The Judges would have also accepted 'The Appropriately sized for Alaska Cruisers' as a video title.
@williamluster93942 жыл бұрын
English county vs Alaska territory size comparison…
@korbetthein30722 жыл бұрын
@@williamluster9394 try English country size compared to Alaska. Alaska composes roughly one fifth of the USA's landmass.
@wierdalien12 жыл бұрын
@@korbetthein3072 try US state compared to Alaska, it is truely massive
@korbetthein30722 жыл бұрын
@@wierdalien1 oh I know. I live here.
@cannasablin75332 жыл бұрын
@@korbetthein3072 Alaskans Represent!
@Looscannon942 жыл бұрын
In my opinion, Alaska Class Large/Super/Battle/Mega/Hyper/Ultra Cruisers are arguably the best looking warships that have ever existed.
@mancubwwa2 жыл бұрын
Add "post age of sail" to this statement, and I would fully agree.
@Augment_Failure2 жыл бұрын
They look better than the Iowas!
@rembrandt972ify2 жыл бұрын
The North Carolina class looks best before, during and after a major surface action. -"Ching" Lee.
@Augment_Failure2 жыл бұрын
@@rembrandt972ify The NCs proved per ton more efficient than any other US battleship class during ww2, imo.
@rembrandt972ify2 жыл бұрын
@@Augment_Failure I would go so far as to say the most efficient of any battleship of any nation, but I am biased.
@FMJIRISH2 жыл бұрын
It's good to know that US ship designers had the same problems in reality that I have designing ships in Ultimate Admiral Dreadnoughts haha
@Jacen4369872 жыл бұрын
but does UAD simulate congress saying "fuck you. you don't need any new ships" lol
@Lazarus70002 жыл бұрын
@@Jacen436987 Campaign mode absolutely can do this to you!
@bri-manhunter26542 жыл бұрын
@@Jacen436987. Lol, facts!
@Skreezilla2 жыл бұрын
whne the US get added to Campaign: "you must also battle congress to build any ship" you start your 1890 campaign with 4 torpedo boats and 1 light cruiser - this has upset congress they feel you have too many ships your budget is reduced by 90%
@jadeorbigoso52122 жыл бұрын
Sadly the Hood got oneshotted
@michaelmclaren73732 жыл бұрын
The Alaska class design story/evolution/arc reminds me EXACTLY of standing behind that one guy in the line at the sandwich shop who orders a 6” sub and then keeps changing it - ultimately ending-up roughly with something that he could’ve ordered straight away off the menu without the dithering.
@Dave5843-d9m2 жыл бұрын
Of following your Mrs around the dress shops. She finds one she likes and looks great in it. But, no it’s too expensive. So you drag around endless crap shops looking at endless lines of horrible dresses. Eventually go back to the original and it’s been sold. Obviously it’s your fault that she didn’t buy it hours ago.
@marcusfranconium33922 жыл бұрын
Yeah , the dutch had an idea lets buy the design of the scharnhorst 11" Battle ship . make a few adjustments and improvements and turn it in to a battle cruiser. With a 34 knot speed. And done,
@craigfazekas39232 жыл бұрын
You mean a hoagie. As we're on a naval discussion page ? You should say a naval term for a sandwich..... See, "hoagie" comes from Hog Island in the Delaware River (as linguists can best guess where that term came from in the Delaware Valley, versus other places....) where naval construction took place- hence the relation to naval speak....The Hoagie. Whereas a "sub" is a....uh, ummm. Damn.... More dithering !!! 🚬😎
@augustosolari77212 жыл бұрын
Super Star destroyer sounds better.
@jimtalbott95352 жыл бұрын
This raises the question: Am I the Senator Tillman of sandwiches? I’m always ordering the biggest thing, then adding to it.
@samuel59162 жыл бұрын
I think the Alaska represented a better path for Battlecruisers to begin with. The main issue that plagued BC’s throughout their existence is that they had battleship-grade guns and therefore incompetent military planners constantly tried to shoehorn them into the battle-line. Going with an intermediate gun calibre between contemporary cruisers and battleships could’ve prevented most of the misuses that cost hulls and lives. Probably saved a decent amount of money as well. The Alaska’s weren’t cheap by any means but they were still cheaper then a Battleship while Battlecruisers typically cost more to build and operate.
@JoramTriesGaming2 жыл бұрын
I'd argue the reason they were called CBs was specifically to *prevent* them being used as capital ships, i.e. how the Invincibles were used.
@Debbiebabe692 жыл бұрын
'and therefore incompetent military planners constantly tried to shoehorn them into the battle-line.' This carries on to the current day, and its less incompetent military planners and more incompetent politicians, moneymen and media. Where it shows now for a really good example is interceptor aircraft. Dedicated air to air platforms. Designed to be the best they can be. Yet the politicians and media create a furore that 'we are spending x million dollars/pounds on this new jet and is *CANT EVEN DROP A BOMB* therefore it is a useless plane'. Hence Tomcats, Eurofighters, F22s, and other dedicated anti-air fighters suddenly have to be able to *bomb* to earn their keep....
@Philistine472 жыл бұрын
Unfortunately the _Alaskas_ *weren't* much cheaper than a fast battleship, and at the same time weren't much more capable than a late-war heavy cruiser. Choosing between one _Iowa_ and 2-3 _Baltimores_ might be a stumper, but choosing between one _Alaska_ and 2-3 _Baltimores..._ well, one of those things is just better than the other in almost every circumstance. To be clear here, the problem was that _Alaska's_ specification was impossible. The designers did an heroic job of creating a ship to meet the stated need, it's just that the specified combination of armament, protection, and speed couldn't be accomplished with the technology of the day on anything much smaller (or cheaper) than a full-on capital ship. So the _Alaskas_ are an example of fantastic execution of a deeply questionable concept.
@samuel59162 жыл бұрын
@@Philistine47 Yeah they unfortunately came into service right when gun-based warfare became obsolete and naval strategy flipped on its head overnight. However, up until that point cruiser killers were a valid concept and I think they could’ve been quite successful if they’d been built a couple years sooner.
@mbryson28992 жыл бұрын
Von Spee might have a different opinion.
@robertalaverdov81472 жыл бұрын
The Alaska class is a culmination of the US navy's desire to build every ship type known to man. With the exception being the Super Heavy Battleship Montana Class. Though rest assured if the war had gone on for a little longer they would have had one or two of those. Even if both the Yamato and Mushashi had been sunk. You never know when you might need a 70k-80k ton battleship with 16-18 inch guns. Just a safety precaution that's all.
@tommihommi12 жыл бұрын
the supercarriers fulfilled the role of being the chonkiest chonkers on the ocean
@robertalaverdov81472 жыл бұрын
@@tommihommi1 But what if we like, put really big guns on them? Maybe rail guns, some lasers and nuclear missiles. Make it capable of going underwater, fly into space. We need a modular full spectrum dominance platform with high lethality cross platform networked integration. I even have a name picked out. We can call it the USS Enterprise or the Battlestar Galactica. Just trust me on this. All I'll need is about $300-500 billion a year for the next 20-30 years.
@germanvahatov43142 жыл бұрын
@@robertalaverdov8147 and it would still be cheaper than F-35 programme
@wierdalien12 жыл бұрын
@@germanvahatov4314 F-35 produced 3 different airframes. Get swivled.
@patchouliknowledge44552 жыл бұрын
So you're saying, the Tillman-class battleships should've been built after the Montanas? It's only for an extra layer of security in case the Montana mutinies, that's all
@zachcd3901192 жыл бұрын
Absolutely gorgeous ships aesthetically. They just look right, despite lacking any meaningful function at the time of launch.
@mtumeumrani3762 жыл бұрын
They had huge meaningful functions the the time of launch. The Truman administration however was suffering from an identity crisis rivaling some groups this day snd age.
@mtumeumrani3762 жыл бұрын
@@dukeford8893 Truman and the Dules Brothers were so missed the entire CIA/NASA and three presidencies were modeled after his: Reagan, and Both Bush 1 and 2. If your talking about the surface fleet? Your welcomed to find all the surface warfare officers who lost their jobs because of that debacle: theres that m8.
@RedXlV2 жыл бұрын
@@mtumeumrani376 The reason they lacked meaningful function is that by the time they were launched, there was a serious shortage of cruisers for them to kill. There were plenty of other things they were capable of doing, but other ships could do those same roles more efficiently.
@thomasconley34292 жыл бұрын
I agree. I think these are handsome ships.
@babelhuber34492 жыл бұрын
@@mtumeumrani376 Actually not: Like all ships with comparable costs, they weren't numerous but - in theory - quite capable. Hence such ships immediately turn into actual _strategic targets_ Like a real battleship, any adversary will try to sink an Alaska as soon as they know its location - if feasible. This means that they aren't really suited as cruisers, which you can send to dangerous missions because if worst comes to worst you can stomach their loss. Just look at the WW1 battle of Jutland: Both the UK and Germany used their battlecruisers like ships of the line, with own cruiser and destroyer escorts. Basically as fast battleships. So instead of acting like cruisers, battlecruisers acted like battleships in real life. The only exception is the battle of the Falklands, and even there a bunch of old armored cruisers could have achieved the same at lower costs.
@redenginner2 жыл бұрын
I honestly love how the Alaska’s look even if they where practically useless right off the slip. Wish they saw more use then as a floating AA gun battery but not much could be done there.
@bluemarlin81382 жыл бұрын
Well, they weren’t useless. They were just overkill for the cruiser role (especially since the Des Moines were being built and were cheaper to build and man) but would struggle against a true fast battleship and were much more vulnerable to torpedos and AP bombs. For a third more money, you could get a much more capable and survivable Iowa, which would have also had more room for upgrades, or two Baltimores, or 1.5 Des Moines. And if you just wanted shore bombardment, you could use the SoDaks, NCs, or even WV.
@HighlanderNorth12 жыл бұрын
They would've made interesting museum ships, if not much else.....
@MrCoolguy4252 жыл бұрын
Honestly, anything in its role if it came out even a year earlier and it would have done great work killing smaller vessels, at that point the Japanese heavy fleet was mostly collecting barnacles on the sea floor and it was only enemy raiders and escorts floating around with a few heavier ships providing supplemental task forces to landing ships and what was left of the carrier fleets. The alaska escorting carriers in these engagements would have done quite well, especially considering they wouldn’t be the focus of enemy bombers (as they were escorting carriers) but would be able to be detached easily to chase enemy cruisers Really interesting and cool design and probably one of my favorites. Shame it didn’t get finished just a bit sooner though
@HighlanderNorth12 жыл бұрын
@@bluemarlin8138 The question we should be asking, is how many PT boats could we get for the price of an Alaska class ship.... Maybe a thousand?? Well, you could certainly overwhelm just about any large enemy warship with swarms of hundreds of PT boats! 😁
@danhaas97302 жыл бұрын
@@HighlanderNorth1 *Laughs in jeune ecole*
@Big_E_Soul_Fragment2 жыл бұрын
It's a Cruiser Destroyer or simply a Destroyer, if you will.
@williamgandarillas21852 жыл бұрын
No, it’s a Cruiser Patrol Boat Destroyer, or simply a PT boat
@atpyro79202 жыл бұрын
"No, you're playing [the Alaskas] wrong!" -some US admiral, possibly
@jonrolfson16862 жыл бұрын
So, were they fully armored fast yard patrol boats (YP)?
@ReptilianLepton2 жыл бұрын
Ah yes the JMSDF classification convention.
@nolanmonke43302 жыл бұрын
no it’s a submarine duh! Or we should just call it a battlecruiser
@FedralBI2 жыл бұрын
The Iowa's hold a special place in my heart, and you can feel the history standing on the deck of the Missouri. That being said, the Alaska Class were absolutely gorgeous ships. I wish they had kept one around as a museum.
@DamianMaisano2 жыл бұрын
My personal favorite thing to call them is “Dreadnought armoured cruiser”, putting them in the same category as SMS Blucher. There kinda capital ship status but also approximate weakness compared to a proper battleship or battlecruiser fits. And it’s just a cool name
@dclark1420022 жыл бұрын
Basically, the Alaskas represent the final culmination of the cruiser design prior to missiles. So many of the 'battlecruisers' so called are really just fast battleships...i.e Hood, for example. It is the whole London and Washington Naval Treaty era that creates such problems of definitions...
@andrewreynolds49492 жыл бұрын
Under Professor Alex Clarke’s thinking the Alaska class are what the armored cruiser would have grown into had the treaty era not halted their development. I prefer to call the Des Moines the ultimate heavy cruiser
@Tuning34342 жыл бұрын
@@andrewreynolds4949 I would agree. Heavy cruiser are a direct result of the Treaty definitions, what would make Des Moines the final result of that artificial offshoot. Not what the Armoured cruisers would have evolved into based on needs and usage.
@Debbiebabe692 жыл бұрын
The Americans insisted that the Alaska class were NOT capital ships. This meant any resources allocated to capital ship construction would NOT be diverted to these ships, since if they were then the proponents of both the carrier AND battleship programmes would campaign against their construction. This is the reason they refused to call them 'battlecruisers', since battlecruisers were internationally considered capital ships.
@jjayyoung73352 жыл бұрын
@@Debbiebabe69 those two cruisers were still badass cruisers for escort duty for the Essex class carriers weren't they. A whole lot of anti-aircraft protection, great shore bombardment also and gun battle for all but full fledged battleships weren't they. plus they were beautiful ships IMHO
@lowspeedhighdrag5669 ай бұрын
These videos help my autism and make me feel less alone. I often fall asleep listening thank you
@derekhamel29915 ай бұрын
Same
@stoutyyyy4 ай бұрын
Ah, you’ve got battleship autism, this is the very place for you. Much more useful than train autism, depending on what circles you’re in.
@paramounttechnicalconsulti52192 жыл бұрын
Oddly enough, my father was an enlisted man on the fast carriers (plankowner on Yorktown CV-10) and he had a very firm opinion on these ships. I say "odd", becasue he was all over the place, only 2 Alaska's were built, but he seemed to be quite familiar with them. The opiion was (paraphrased) beautiful ships, decent escorts, pretty pointless. added no unique capabilities and were largely either repetitive of smaller ships or worse than larger ones. As an aside, battleships were good escorts but otherwise good for nothing else than churning up beaches. In retrospect, quite a detailed analysis for an electrician's mate!
@IrishCarney2 жыл бұрын
_"good for nothing else than churning up beaches"_ - clearly your father was not an enlisted man in the Marine Corps. The Marines have always loved battleships for their unique ability to provide truly awesome levels of shore bombardment
@SwiftJustice Жыл бұрын
@@IrishCarneyaka churning up beaches
@richardbennett1856 Жыл бұрын
That's good. The opinion of your father was spot on. As an electrician, I get it. The demand for them was in 1942. By 1944, the mission was unclear for them. An in between er. It depends a lot when they were commissioned.
@markblix6880 Жыл бұрын
I just learned today what plankowner means. Now I see you use the word.
@leftyo95898 ай бұрын
they would have made great escorts to the amphib fleet. plenty of AA, and big guns for shore bombardment.
@Anlushac112 жыл бұрын
Drachinfel: "Large/Super/Battle/Megs/Hyper/Ultra Cruiser." US Navy: "Just dont call it a Battlecruiser"
@nk_33322 жыл бұрын
Looks at the Montana class, then at the Iowas, I think I have a better recipient for that name. US Navy: REEEEEEEE!
@Anlushac112 жыл бұрын
@@nk_3332 Iowa is not a Battlecruiser. Drachinel covered that in a recent video.
@ВладимирБабичев-ц3ш2 жыл бұрын
@@Anlushac11 Judging by it's belt armor thickness, definetly a battlecruiser, compare to other battleships - 307 mm. HMS Hood has 305 mm belt and it was battlecruiser 100%, KMS Scharnhorst/Gneisenau has up to 350 mm belt armor. Too thin armor compare to it's own main gun caliber.
@justinebautista138311 ай бұрын
Iowa had a 12 in belt inclined putting her effective armor thickness at 13 inches. Her armor alone is pretty immune to the 16"/45 caliber Mark 6 guns of the South Dakota
@NashmanNash8 ай бұрын
The 350mm belt of the Scharnhorsts appears to be a myth though....Builders documents state the belt to have been 320mm@@ВладимирБабичев-ц3ш
@331Grabber2 жыл бұрын
I had a toy set of several WWII ships when I was a kid in the 70s and I swear this answers my little kid question of why I had 2 battleships in the set but one was a little shorter and skinnier than the big one but it's gun lay out was almost the same in arrangement. I think the Alaska was in this toy set. They were kinda big plastic ships with flat bottoms and little hidden wheels on the bottom to turn any floor into water. The big turrets were movable. Oh. They also were fully capable of floating in the pool too :) Guessing the battleship was 10 or so inches. Difficult guess since I was small back then
@ianwilkinson50692 жыл бұрын
Now all these years later I bet you wish you still had them huh lol, I would
@331Grabber2 жыл бұрын
@@ianwilkinson5069 Yeah. The last memory of them is in my parent's swimming pool circa 1980-81 I remember the battleship with a few rocks placed in the back would sink in a very satisfying movie type way :) The cruiser was my favorite because it was faster on the water than the battleship. I guess I'll never know if that cruiser was based on Alaska.
@enricomandragona1632 жыл бұрын
Google it!! If the Bow was a little broader as it met the beam it was the Alaska as in the side by side pier overhead in the video which was the Missouri BTW in the mothball storage in CA.
@solicitr6662 жыл бұрын
Part of the problem of course is that there has never been a settled definition of what a "battlecruiser" is. The argument could be made that the Iowas were battlecruisers, having almost exactly the same relationship to the South Dakotas as Hood did to the Queen Elizabeths.
@ostlandr2 жыл бұрын
"Battleship guns, heavy cruiser armor" is a pretty good definition.
@solicitr6662 жыл бұрын
@@ostlandr then what about the German WWI battlecruisers?
@ariancontreras43582 жыл бұрын
@@solicitr666 Technically 28cm was battleship grade back then during ww1.
@goldenreaperjtx Жыл бұрын
Actually, you're not far wrong. The Iowa's - SIX of them - were to be the fast wing that would scout and engage the enemy while waiting for the slower heavyweight's - the Montana's to blast the opposing battleline to bits from a closer range, which their heavier armor would permit. This was an update to the 1920's plan for six Lexington class battlecruisers and six "South Dakota" class 45,000 ton battleships with 16" / 50 caliber guns. When the Iowa's were drawn up critics asked what they were getting for 10,000 more tons of displacement from the "new" South Dakota's - the four "treaty" 35,000 ton "standard displacement" ships that were actually built. Well, they got 50 caliber guns - 80 inches longer than the SoDak's for longer range. The plan was to use the guns already made for the OLD South Dakota class ships but somehow they forked up on the turret design and had to make an entirely new, but lighter weight 16"/50.
@solicitr666 Жыл бұрын
@@ariancontreras4358 Yes, but the Grosskreuzer carried much heavier armor than cruisers (or British BCs prior to Hood)
@13lbaseball2 жыл бұрын
Really glad that you covered these again, my grandfather served on Guam as an engineer and told me some of his stories about his time on her. Unfortunately, he passed in 2015 before I could really get to hear too many of his stories. I did inherit his copy of the ship's book and it is a fascinating look into what he did in his time aboard in WWII.
@Noble7132 жыл бұрын
Be awesome if you could get that scanned and shared with a naval museum's website so the rest of us can pour over the details too.
@13lbaseball2 жыл бұрын
@@Noble713 I am looking into getting it done, I just haven't had the time to really reach out to anyone yet
@enricomandragona1632 жыл бұрын
Kudos to your Grandfather!!
@enricomandragona1632 жыл бұрын
Intrepid museum actually has the stern Flag from the Alaska
@reggieflanders6079 Жыл бұрын
My dad was on the Guam as well. He was a boatswain's mate.
@Philistine472 жыл бұрын
Listening to the design history of the _Alaskas,_ it really sounds like they were at an unhappy medium in terms of their intended role(s) vs. the technology of the day. The "sweet spots" seem to have been for considerably smaller cruisers and considerably larger battleships, where many factors came together to produce well-balanced ships with, respectively, 6-8 inch guns on 15-20 thousand tons or 15-16 inch guns on 40-45 thousand tons; in between those two was a vast desert of bad options, where costs very quickly escalated toward battleship levels while capability increased very slowly from cruiser levels.
@marcusfranconium33922 жыл бұрын
The dutch had Project 1047 building a cruiser killer . based on the scharnhorst battleship. same guns , less armour better AA . No cruiser that could touch them and fast enough to outrun any battleship. The Alaskas could just have been copies of the original sharnhorts an upgun it by 1 '
@BestAnswer125492 жыл бұрын
@@marcusfranconium3392 can out run a Iowa through.
@marcusfranconium33922 жыл бұрын
@@BestAnswer12549 34 knot Iowa dont think so Project 1047 would have been the fastest capital ship ever build . And the 34 knots was based on tropical waters Meaning it would go even faster in colder waters and eras where steam comes more efficient.
@BestAnswer125492 жыл бұрын
@@marcusfranconium3392 I mean the ship was never made so it's just paper specs. And the design it's based off of only does 31 knots. Even if it is faster than an Iowa what's the difference between 33 and 34 knots.
@marcusfranconium33922 жыл бұрын
@@BestAnswer12549 Well they looked simular but had but where totaly different. Different powerplants and propulsion , armour secondarys , bulbous bows. better armour distribution torpedo protection .etc etc. 34 knots based on tropical conditions it would have functioned in .
@einarsharpe76372 жыл бұрын
I’m saddened they were scrapped. I would have loved to have this be a museum ship mored in Juneau Alaska
@korbetthein30722 жыл бұрын
Meh, it would need armed guards to prevent it from becoming a homeless camp.
@urviechalex996310 ай бұрын
@@korbetthein3072 Wouldn´t that been a cool usage of such a vessel? Look at how the Finns approach to fighting homelessness....
@PurpleandGeauxldАй бұрын
Would love to visit an Alaska. Would be an incredible experience.
@egyeneskifli78082 жыл бұрын
I don't care what people call them. The Alaskas are among the most beautiful warships ever built. Fast battleships made battlecruisers obsolete in my opinion. Battlecruisers became unsustainable after Hood.
@kyleheins2 жыл бұрын
I would argue battlecruisers were just the development process of battleships, due to almost everything about them being centered on the idea of battleship firepower with cruiser capabilities, and the armor issue was the part that took awhile to hash out. Heavy cruisers and armored cruisers should have been the same but the treaties screwed that up nicely.
@gokbay30572 жыл бұрын
Fast Battleship is just a false name for Battlecruisers.
@kyleheins2 жыл бұрын
@@gokbay3057 in a way you could be on to something, but traditional battlecruisers tend to lack protection and subdivision, so maybe one would be a subclass on the other, or both the subclasses of dreadnought style cruisers?
@Kieselmeister2 жыл бұрын
@@kyleheinsWW1 German battlecruisers had less armament for their size while retaining enough armor for the battle line. The "stretched limo" style of fast battleships, which take the standard armor and armaments of the previous battleship class and make it huge for speed, all end up looking suspiciously like an overgrown WW1 German style battlecruiser. (Hood had the guns and armor thickness of a stretched Queen Elizabeth, Iowa = stretched South Dakota, Bismarck = stretched Baden) The Alaska class were ironically designed to do the original battlecruiser mission, instead of battleline duty, and and up being a pretty good 1v1 match for the Kongo class, which were some of the most useful ships in the IJN during the solomons campaign. (Launched in 1912 as "his imperial Japanese majesty's ARMORED CRUISER Kongo" ) Similar penetration main guns, similar armor thickness, broadly similar size. The Kongo's got improved deck armor in their 2nd refit, but their horizontal protection was essentially unchanged and their "fast battleship" desgination was actually the product of a face saving excercise. Their 1st refit with Japanese built boilers and torpedo bulges had been so botched, that it had reduced their speed to slower than the Nagato class, and the IJN reclassified them as "battleships" to pretend and imply to the public that their reduced speed was due to improving their protection. When the subsequent refits restored their speed, they couldn't reclassify them as battlecruisers again without losing face and admitting they had made a mistake, so they just kept doubling down, and called them "fast battleships" despite the main actual improvement over the original 1912 design being more resistance to bomb attacks and improved AA guns.
@termitreter65452 жыл бұрын
Funny thing is, the Hood was 47k tons heavy and had actually quite solid armor. Ive seen people argue that the brits made the first fast battleship, they just didnt know it yet.
@thehandoftheking33142 жыл бұрын
Ah, the "more descriptions than a Kriegsmarine destroyer" ship.
@AdamosDad2 жыл бұрын
Having sailed aboard a Clevland-class and a Des Moines-class cruiser I found this history very interesting, concise, with a dry British bit of humor. Right good show Drach.
@martinbachmann6283 Жыл бұрын
Brother-Vet AdamosDad, oh my! The Des Moines-class.... THE most beautiful all-gun HEAVY CRUISERS of all time! We should STILL have these magnificent CAs in our Navy today!
@AdamosDad Жыл бұрын
@@martinbachmann6283 I vote for that too brother. It would be great for long range fire support and there was plenty of room say in the hanger bay for missiles, if you wanted to go that way. Thanks for your service brother and "Fair Winds and Following Seas" USS Newport News (CA-148) The last all gun Heavy Cruiser. My time aboard 1968-69-70 Call sign THUNDER flag hoist; November - India - Quebec - Quebec Then onboard the USS Springfield (CLG-7) 71-72 Flag Hoist/Radio Call Sign: November - Whiskey - Delta - Mike
@rjlarose52712 жыл бұрын
I really wish we kept one of these as a museum ship. Its such an interesting concept.
@niclasjohansson43332 жыл бұрын
One of the best looking warships ever, and i do think they would have done just fine if they ever saw proper action....
@nnoddy81612 жыл бұрын
Action against who??? That was their problem.
@Joshcodes8082 жыл бұрын
@@nnoddy8161 At iron bottom sound if it had been ready.
@termitreter65452 жыл бұрын
Its much more likely that they would've been hit by a torpedo and found a miserable end. Or destroyed by aircraft. Heck, their thin armor ment cruiser guns were effective enough in some situations. I guess most likel the US Navy woulda kept them far behind the lines, desperately trying to find something those ships are actually good at...
@jwenting2 жыл бұрын
@@nnoddy8161 Had the war against Japan lasted a bit longer, the Soviet Red Banner Pacific Fleet, defending the Japanese home islands from a Soviet invasion...
@spirz45572 жыл бұрын
@@jwenting And from what navy ? A bunch of destroyers or cruisers ? Maybe a couple of outdated BBs ? Nah. Soviet Navy during WW2 was a joke.
@thevictoryoverhimself72982 жыл бұрын
I can’t help but read SMS Derflinger as “The Flinger” which somehow makes sense for a large gun armed capital ship :)
@Debbiebabe692 жыл бұрын
Apt for the only capital ship ever to sink TWO enemy capital ships in battle.
@sugarnads2 жыл бұрын
Glad im not the only one. I giggle a bit whenevr drac says the name too lol
@scottgiles75462 жыл бұрын
Being at THAT stage of adolescence when I first heard the name "Der Finger" was what it was called. (And lets just avoid Focke-Wulf.....)
@mbryson28992 жыл бұрын
My better half and my son thought one of the heroes in the animated "The Tick" was "Deflator Mouse." Also, when my gaming group played Battlewagon one of them always wanted Derfflinger on his side and called it "Poo Flinger." The Dice Gods definitely blessed that ship on our board, which made him insufferable.
@paulbrogger6552 жыл бұрын
I actually caught the YT closed-caption feature happily casting Drach's pronunciation of Derflinger as "death flinger" -- a nickname of which I imagine her whole crew would have approved.
@GlorfindelofGondolin2 жыл бұрын
I still think that the USN missed a neat trick by not naming them Alaska-class super heavy cruisers. Sounds powerful and deadly.
@jedz51512 жыл бұрын
how about cruiser destroyer... later shortened as destroyers (wait a min)
@zerodecimal32362 жыл бұрын
THIS Large cruiser doesn't sound as powerfull, super heavy cruiser? Anybody would think twice before engaging them
@cnlbenmc2 жыл бұрын
How about Heavy Battlecruiser?
@SportyMabamba2 жыл бұрын
@@cnlbenmc that would be a Battleship
@Augment_Failure2 жыл бұрын
I should of kept scrolling, I just put up a comment suggesting that designation. 👍
@josephpicogna63482 жыл бұрын
Fantastic, I love the Alaska. I had a chance to survey the ship in Newark New Jersey before it was scrapped. I thought they were beautiful and would’ve made fantastic missile shooters. Removing the AA batteries could create an awful lot of space for modern technology and ordinance. Only the scrapping of Kentucky hit me harder. I’m sorry I did not get to do my OD or CDO job for Alaska
@bobkonradi10272 жыл бұрын
They would have worked very well at being flagships. Big enough to hold an Admiral's entire battle staff, yet small enough to not be put in the forefront of a battle formation. Instead of using 8" gun cruisers for flagships, the Alaska's would have been perfect in that role.
@enricomandragona1632 жыл бұрын
Interesting!! I was a new born when it was scrapped in Kearney!! I don't however agree about it being a missile ship! She could of been useful in Vietnam as it was with a Helo deck on the Fantail!!
@Idahoguy10157 Жыл бұрын
The Talos missile conversion proposal would have been interesting. Huge long range very fast anti-aircraft missile which could have nuclear warships
@marckyle589511 ай бұрын
An Alaska Museum would have looked pretty nice near Eathquake Park in Anchorage. Or park it in Juneau as a memorial for her.
@anthonybrown64132 жыл бұрын
I always loved the Alaska class! I wish they would have gotten more love and use post war.
@eriktrimble87842 жыл бұрын
Never going to happen. The 12" guns were much less effective than the BB's 16" guns for shore bombardment, and, in practice, even substantially inferior to the semi-automatic 8" of the Des Moines. The crewing requirements of the Alaskas were so extreme (20% more than the Des Moines, and almost 80% of the Iowas) made them horridly expensive to use. Worse, the Alaskas weren't really possible to upgrade to missile cruisers - the studies looking at them concluded that they were MORE expensive than the BBs to convert, and radically more expensive than the Clevelands and such. They were a White Elephant that never really could find a place - their original mission (anti-surface warfare) was gone, they weren't good at NGS, and they were too expensive to run and too expensive to upgrade. And their AA firepower was soon pointless as gunnery was supplanted by missiles for AA.
@info_fox2 жыл бұрын
Amazing ship. Absolutely beautiful.
@JamesSavik2 жыл бұрын
She was a beauty and had the speed, legs, and sensors necessary to screen the big carrier groups that were swarming around at the end of the war. I doubt the big Japanese treaty-buster cruisers would have liked meeting her at all.
@timclaus83132 жыл бұрын
Especially as the IJN cruisers tended to be a bit fragile to start with. The Alaska and Guam would have torn them apart.
@bkjeong4302 Жыл бұрын
You need more AA and ASW specialists to screen fast carrier task forces, not surface combatants. Building something like this (or the Iowas) to use as a gigantic and needlessly expensive CLAA isn’t a wise investment.
@kenneth9874 Жыл бұрын
@@bkjeong4302 your opinion, which is worth.....
@anantr992 жыл бұрын
When it comes to the argument of where Hood and Iowa fall within the spectrum of battlecruisers and battleships, my opinion is that Hood is, for almost all intents and purposes, a fast battleship. The fact that she had about 6,000 tons added on in her post-Jutland redesign (most of which was armour), and when considering that she carried almost as much armour as a Queen Elizabeth-class battleship (albeit the angling provided better protection at a wide spectrum of ranges) does show that Hood was a fast battleship. However, the Royal Navy classified her as a battlecruiser, and she did have some aspects of her design that were very similar to battlecruisers. Most notably, the extent of her internal subdivision seems to be closer to what earlier battlecruisers did as opposed to contemporary (or slightly older) battleships. Taking this into account, I would call Hood the first proper fast battleship, although she had a few minor compromises / design decisions that were the result of the technology of the time. When it comes to the Iowa-class, I would say that the divide between battlecruiser and fast battleship had blurred out of existence by the time the Iowas were built. Yes, it can be shown quite well that one could get the same armament and armour on a South Dakota-class battleship. However, I would posit the Iowas to be an evolution on fast battleships by trying to create a new bunch of fast battleships, when considering that any modern battleship could do 27-30 knots. The Iowas seem to have at least the line of thinking of having a fast squadron of battleships that could act in a similar way as the Queen Elizabeth-class had been planned for originally. That is, the Iowas would be used to force an engagement against an enemy fleet while the 28 knot battle line sailed in to assist. That being said, this also depends on what her contemporary battleships were. When comparing the South Dakota-class with the Iowa-class, it does seem that the Iowa-class were planned to act as battlecruisers. Had the Montana-class actually been built, a far more compelling case could be made to consider the Iowa-class as battlecruisers (one turret less, and 4-5 knots faster). However, the march of technology also meant that any design decisions that were made in Hood's design when it came to battlecruiser characteristics (for instance, the extent of internal subdivision) were simply rendered redundant. You could get the figurative best of all worlds in a single ship now. A justifiable-ish point would be to say that the Iowas were to the South Dakotas what Hood was to the Queen Elizabeths and Revenges. Very similar armour, same-ish armament, and considerably faster, with the trade-off being that the faster ship is also far heavier (47,800 tons vs 35,000 tons and 41,200 tons vs 27,500 tons).
@michaelpielorz92832 жыл бұрын
Even in some newsreels Hood was called a fast battleship. that didn`t help a lot. As one of Jackie fishers battlecruisers she too had this nasty habit of greeting german ships in a unique way.
@nhancao47902 жыл бұрын
@@michaelpielorz9283 Hood was a great ship. Even though she was not one of the Royal Navy BCs she still celebrated BC's traditions of impressove display of pyrotechnics.
@sse_weston41382 жыл бұрын
This is a great summation
@Wolfeson282 жыл бұрын
I agree almost completely with your explanation. In my opinion, the dividing line between a battlecruiser and a fast battleship is that while they are both faster than typical battleships of the period, a fast battleship is designed to fight other battleships (both "fast" and "normal speed") while a battlecruiser is definitely not. So a fast battleship retains roughly the same armor and firepower of other contemporary battleships, while adding on extra tonnage to gain the higher speed without sacrificing anything else. As you correctly pointed out, that's exactly what we see comparing the Iowas to the South Dakotas as well as comparing Hood to the QEs: roughly a 40% jump in displacement to gain 6-8 knots of speed while keeping essentially the same firepower and protection.
@forcea14542 жыл бұрын
@@michaelpielorz9283 Hood was a well protected as any of the Queen Elizabeth or R class Battleships. They had the same vulnerabilities as Hood, and were much slower.
@Oberkaptain2 жыл бұрын
One of my favorite naval ships of all time, this and the Gearing/Somners.
It's something you don't want to see coming at you if you're not aboard a battleship.
@garychisholm21742 жыл бұрын
This might be my favorite video yet. Good GOLLY I love the deep dives on engineering decisions.
@CharliMorganMusic2 жыл бұрын
It's coming to WT!
@nerva-2 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for this -- I've considered the Alaska class a bit of an oddity for a while and I appreciate your evaluation of whether it was a battlecruiser or a superheavy cruiser, and I definitely agree with it being the latter. I'll also add that it simply reflected where heavy cruisers would have been evolving towards were it not for the temporary hindrance of the naval conventions.
@jermainerace4156 Жыл бұрын
In terms of speed, specifically; I think perhaps it is more relevant to look at how the Alaska's compare to the cruisers they are expected to hunt, and battleships they are expected to run away from, than the contemporary ships of the US fleet, especially since the Iowa class was sort of a unique battleship design in that it only really improved slightly over the previous design and most of that by being faster.
@collinczech12632 жыл бұрын
Been waiting a long time for this from you. Thanks for the content Drach!
@issacfoster11132 жыл бұрын
I think Iowa fills the Battlecruiser category of the Hood Era : Same Characteristics as the Contemporary battleship the South Dakota same with Hood + QE. Shits on Cruisers but can also sht on Capital ships. Faster than their contemporary, Fills the same role as a Battlecruiser. But then again, I personally think a Refitted Hood is a full pledge Fast Battleship & the term Battlecruiser and Fast Battleship just merges as time progresses. Either way, I'll just wait for Drach on the judgment.
@soupordave2 жыл бұрын
I agree. The whole Battlecruiser vs Fast Battleship vs Battleship debate really reminds me of the the light vs medium vs heavy tank development. Eventually technology surpassed the speed vs protection vs firepower triangle and the Main Battle Tank replaced the previous types. And similarly to the old Battleships, the MBT is starting to fall behind modern missile technologies...
@genericpersonx3332 жыл бұрын
Mind, design still matters. HMS Hood, though powerful and tough for a battlecruiser, was still not quite as durable for the tonnage as a battleship of her time and you could only rebuild her so much to compensate for the structural and internal layout differences that meant she couldn't control damage from penetrating hits as well. Iowa, while with armor on the thin side for a battleship, was still built to control the consequences of penetrating hits very well and intended to fight in a Line of Battle against other battleships. The fact that it could meet or beat many cruisers for speed was a bonus, not fundamental to its role as a battleship.
@alexdunphy37162 жыл бұрын
@@soupordave that's not what happened with tanks. Doctrine simply evolved to confirm to logistical benefits and everyone compromised their designs
@thatguyfrommars37322 жыл бұрын
"The most heavily armored warship ever built next to Yamato was a battlecruiser." I've seen this argument before and it makes no sense. By that logic South Dakota was a battlecruiser as well!
@onebigchaz2 жыл бұрын
But when you add the Montana class to the mix, there's a strong case under Drach's definition for the Iowas being the battlecruiser to the Montanas' battleship. It's just that the battleship era ended before it came to fruition.
@JmbFountain2 жыл бұрын
Interestingly, Germany also called their Battlecruisers "Large cruisers" (Große Kreuzer)
@nitehawk862 жыл бұрын
Google translate says that in French Große means "Fat". "Fat Cruiser", haha
@JmbFountain2 жыл бұрын
@@nitehawk86 it can also mean that, but it usually just means large/big, as in this case
@General_Cartman_Lee2 жыл бұрын
They also called their battleships Linienschiffe (ships of the line) up to the Bayern.
@piney45622 жыл бұрын
Kind of like how the English word gross, can both mean big, and disgusting.
@williamzk90832 жыл бұрын
@@piney4562 "Gross" is probably just a very recent distortion of the English Language. I think we loose more than we gain from such slangs.
@hkomlr99052 жыл бұрын
19:17 One of the Design shows the 'Puerto Rico' called Heavy CA and you can see it in World of Warships.
@jaybee92692 жыл бұрын
The Alaskas were really lovely ships!😍
@jayvee85022 жыл бұрын
And USS Guam would have been beside USS Missouri as museums.
@francisbusa10742 жыл бұрын
I've always considered the Alaskas among the most handsome ships ever designed, with those 12"/50's looking so menacing compared to the CA's. Such a fascinating study in design tradeoffs. A great tribute to the flexibility of the American shipbuilding industry during the war.
@gunnergoz2 жыл бұрын
They are beautiful ships in any light, footnotes in history reminding us how fast technology and events overcame doctrine and tradition in the 1930-1950 time frame.
@karlmoles65302 жыл бұрын
A Task Group made up of the USS Alaska, USS Guam, USS Iowa, USS Missouri, USS Des Moines, and USS Newport News would have been the ultimate expression of US Navy Gun Power
@Cobra-King32 жыл бұрын
Ah yes, here we have 2 Big stick Battleships Mahan would dream of. 2 Cruisers with a degree in Machine Guns And 2.... what did we call 'em again? Battlecruisers? No? What? Pocket Battleships? No that's stupid, try again. Ultra Cruisers? Stupid, strike 2! Cruiser Hunters? Ehh sounds fine I guess
@johnstudd42452 жыл бұрын
How about all 4 Iowa class? There is a photo of all 4 of them in formation, the only time it ever happened. And you could add some of the slightly older battleships to that task force, they were no slouches.
@IrishCarney2 жыл бұрын
No love for the Atlantas? OK these are light cruisers with 5 inch guns, but so MANY, so SO MANY of those guns. EIGHT twin turrets, SIXTEEN guns. And they're dual purpose, so they can shoot down airplanes and then take out light cruisers and below.
@Alexdlegend2 жыл бұрын
@@IrishCarney Shame that the Name Ship got sunk by a literal destroyer... Oh wait that's literally what happened Note: I'm aware that it took a torpedo, but that's all it took. One torpedo from either Ikazuchi or Inazuma to sink the many gunned glorified destroyer leader. Light Cruisers are not capital ships for a very good reason.
@IrishCarney2 жыл бұрын
@@Alexdlegend Any surface ship is vulnerable to torpedoes. If you're going to take on destroyers escorting convoys, you take that risk. But the Japanese had super long rage torpedoes, which the Allies in the North Atlantic didn't. And the Atlanta was pressed into service into the battle line in a slugfest involving capital ships.
@Deltarious2 жыл бұрын
Regarding classification I've always been a fan and in the 'camp' of the following: A ship's 'class' is defined by whatever the intended, and then the *actual* purpose of the ship is. A ship that is designed to be able to destroy anything it can't out run and run from anything it can't destroy with the protection and guns to back that up is a battlecrusier in my books. Obviously for a 'technical definition' I'd be a bit more stringent on criteria but you get the point. To me this makes the Alaska firmly a battlecrusier, but perhaps not fully refined.
@stoutyyyy4 ай бұрын
By that definition the USS Constitution is a battlecruiser
@calvingreene902 жыл бұрын
I like Supercruiser, an ill defined classification for a ship that is neither cruiser or battlecruiser.
@TheSchultinator2 жыл бұрын
I too think supercruiser is a better term than "large cruiser"
@hanzzel60862 жыл бұрын
I am partial to 'Grand Cruiser'
@calvingreene902 жыл бұрын
@bruh Not with a WWII American ship.
@PilotTed Жыл бұрын
I think the craziest thing about the rapid development in naval tech and tactics was the fact we went from the era where 12" guns was the max size for the majority of Pre dreadnaughts, to the Dreadnaught era where we had up to 14" guns, to the battleship era where it was 16" (with a few exceptions where it went up to 18" all within 40 years. Not just that, but the fact that Heavy cruisers went from having 4-6" guns to 8" to up to 12", with armor better than the early Pre Dreadnaughts and early Dreadnaughts. That's not even mention the advanced Battlecruisers which blow early dreadnaughts out of the water in armor and armament.
@GrumpyGrobbyGamer2 жыл бұрын
Really very interesting history and conversation. Thank you Drach for being so thorough and entertaining.
@peterschorn12 жыл бұрын
"I shall call her--'Mini-Missouri' " [pinkie smirk]
@williamaittala7700 Жыл бұрын
I really like your videos; and you have a calming voice, I also like the occasional off hand silly comments. sorry the sentence is so messed up
@dcjway2 жыл бұрын
The Alaska class “American’s pocket battleship”.
@jonrolfson16862 жыл бұрын
To be pulled out of one of Paul Harrell’s magically capacious pockets.
@dimitriosvelessiotis68082 жыл бұрын
When Drachinifel lifts the glove and answers to Jingles... I REALLY enjoyed the last part of the video!!! Nice work as always!
@rjlarose52712 жыл бұрын
I really wish we had kept one of these as a museum ship.
@bendampft26472 жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot, Drach. 🙂 I have to admit, I really love the Alaska class. Yeah, they ended up in a weird spot and at the wrong time, and so they never had the opportunity to show their capabilities. But I think they were the pinnacle of (heavy) cruisers and would have given the Japanese something to be really concerned about. And I think they were beautiful ships. I personally like to think of them as Supercruisers. Anyway, they were great ships, but sadly at the wrong time. Very very sad they got scrapped.
@davidbirt84862 жыл бұрын
Well Drac, you sure got them talking on this subject.
@WildBillCox132 жыл бұрын
It occurs to me that the Polaris armed Alaska variant closely mimics the '90s era Kirovs. Big missiles with lots of defensive weaponry.
@connorjohnson78342 жыл бұрын
The Alaska Class Super Duper Cruisers. Can't wait for the Hood v Iowa video, that will be fun
@manythingslefttobuild2 жыл бұрын
33:23 As I recall the V-2 was fueled with about 4 tons of 75% ethanol/25% water. The men would likely be fine 'storing' vast amounts of it.
@IrishCarney2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, race cars in America can only get E98 ethanol racing fuel, not E100. The other 2% has to be poison like methanol or gasoline, to prevent the fuel from being drinkable, which would require the fuel vendor to get a liquor license and the fuel would then have huge liquor taxes on it.
@richardjosephus68022 жыл бұрын
perfect sized hull for a modern arsenal ship.
@B1900pilot2 жыл бұрын
The largest warship designed by the naval architect firm ofWilliam Francis Gibbs. He later designed the SS United States, which incorporated some of the hull technology incorporated into the Alaska-class. The Alaska main drawback was it was it cost as much to operate and run as an Iowa. Ironically, had they survived into the 60, they’d have been a good NGFS ship. They were still very “new” by ship standards with only a few years of active service. Both Alaskas were in the Atlantic Reserve Fleet in Bayonne, NJ. A real shame that their full potential wasn’t realized. Lovely, unique and powerful ships that performed well as fast carrier escorts at the end of the war when the primary threat was the kamikaze.
@rdfox762 жыл бұрын
As a note towards that Iowa/Hood video, Drach, if you check your Friedman, during the period after the South Dakotas were ordered in '38, the USN polled the battleship captains (and squadron commanders) as to which of the two options they had should be pursued first, with the understanding that the other would be built as a follow-on. Option one was the "conventional battleship" design that ended up evolving into the Montanas. Option two, which won handily as a special-purpose design for countering the Kongous (and Kongou replacements), was what became the Iowas... and was referred to as the "battlecruiser option." So even the US Navy, at least at one point, agreed with your assessment that a 1938/39 battlecruiser design would have looked a hell of a lot like Iowa...
@johnshepherd86872 жыл бұрын
There is no doubt that Alaskas are not Battlecruisers. We think of 12" as capital ship armament because it was at the beginning of the Dreadnought era. However, 12" guns as capital armament became obsolete when the Queen Elizabeth and the first Standards hit the water. At that point a 12" gun could not penetrate the armor of the latest superdreadnoughts at anything close to practical battle ranges. So I think you can say that 12" guns ceased being capital ship armament before WWI was over and such ships were rapidly decommissioned before the Washington Naval was signed. By the time the Alaskas were designed 12" guns were cruiser grade weapons as both capital ship armament and armor exceeded the penetration capability of even the new US 12" gun.
@JLPicard1648 Жыл бұрын
As nature has carcinization, wherein many crustaceans who are not crabs slowly evolve to be very similar to crabs, the navies of WWII have Panzerschlieffenization, wherein several broad design concepts and studies who are not battlecruisers slowly get iterated and developed into battlecruisers
@hurnn15432 жыл бұрын
I would put forth that If you include the Montana's along with the Iowa's the Alaska' are heavy cruisers and the Iowa's are Battle cruisers. The Montana's were going to be 73k tons with a speed planed for 28 knots 12 16"/50's 16.1 inch armor. Which when taken of context of how Drach described battle cruisers gives you an Iowa.
@battleship61772 жыл бұрын
The thing is is that that'd be the new Contemporary Battleship, and the Iowa's are the Contemporary Battleships before it. A contemporary battlecruiser design for the Montana's would be designed after or with it and would weigh much more.
@michaelpiatkowskijr10452 жыл бұрын
You made a great comparison between these ships and battle cruisers. One key factor is overlooked, however. After World War I, we had the treaties to limit an arms race. The loophole in the first part was to make a cruiser under the terms of a capital ship and put large guns on it. Basically, a large cruiser or a cruiser killer. The Alaska was heavy enough to be classified as a capital ship if I remember correctly, but it could have been apart of an escalator clause found with battleships. As for the Iowas, you did make a great comparison between them, South Dakota, and a contemporary battle cruiser. I would have went one step farther. About the same time as the Iowas were being designed, the Montanas were being looked at. Montanas technically took a step back in speed, but added armor and extra guns. Two distinctions between a battleship and battle cruiser. You also have to take into consideration the treaties were still in effect with the Iowas even if America was the only ones going by it. One of the escalator clauses I've heard about was for a 45,000 t battleship design. That fits the Iowas. America just went crazy with them to see what they could do. In other words, the battleships were just a step up based on clauses until completely thrown out.
@jamesbuds48032 жыл бұрын
Super on the weekends, just large during the week.
@Isolder742 жыл бұрын
So they wear glasses most of the week.
@dougtaylor77242 жыл бұрын
My uncle served on the Alaska. Fire control number 2 turret was his assignment.
@AsbestosMuffins2 жыл бұрын
King "I'll have a Number 2 Cruiser" Shipyards "Would you like to supersize that sir?"
@MultiZirkon2 жыл бұрын
"...third tranche..." -- I just love that expressions. Sounds classy. -- I bet the author and presenter hangs around with someone who is really into modern fighter planes!...
@toepopper2 жыл бұрын
I tend to think that all weapon systems need to be classified according to their use and not their physical design characteristics. This means that both their doctrinal use and their actual use need to be taken into account. The classic example is Chieftain talking about the M10 in US use vs UK use; the exact same vehicle is a tank destroyer in US use but an SP AT gun in UK use. One is meant for mass use against breakthrough, the other for supporting infantry against tanks and so they should be classified according to that use, not just because of the weapon systems. On that basis, the Alaskas pretty clearly seem to be, well, large cruisers given that there doesn't seem to have been a USN doctrine for battle cruisers :)
@curlus2 жыл бұрын
This is my favorite video title by Drach.
@willarth91862 жыл бұрын
No matter what you would classify the Guam and Hawaii, I'd call the simply beautiful ships.
@xthetenth2 жыл бұрын
My preferred hot take, which is seriously dubious but makes a twisted type of sense, is that the Alaskas are proper non-treaty heavy cruisers, being fast ships designed for cruising roles with guns above a significant firepower breakpoint at the expense of rate of fire, the Des Moines are non-treaty light cruisers, being ships with the heaviest guns that allow for the fastest loading technology of their time, and the Worcesters are non-treaty CLAAs, being armed with dual purpose main guns. Also the Iowas are battlecruisers where the NCs and South Dakotas are battleships not because of any difference in speed but because the Iowas were still being designed when the superheavy shells entered consideration, so with basically identical armor and very similar guns, the Iowas had a very dubious IZ against their own guns where the other battleships had a decent one. Please ignore that the shells were rapidly brought up to the same standard on all three classes.
@sylentlight67712 жыл бұрын
I believe that if the war had gone on and the Montanas had been built, the question of "are the Alaskas battlecruisers or large cruisers?" wouldn't even exist. To put it simply, the Montanas would be the battleships, which by comparison would make the Iowas battlecruisers, and the Alaskas would simply be large cruisers. I believe this to be the safest way of thinking about it. BUT since the Montanas were never built, that kinda throws everything off
@SirLoinTheBeefy2 жыл бұрын
beat me to it.
@lancethompson6839 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating and well-researched, as ever. Thanks for posting!
@bharlan20027 ай бұрын
I wish one of these ships survived as a museum ships, they are such beautiful warships.
@oldtimer4272 жыл бұрын
Served on the USS CHICAGO (CG-11) starting in 1976, a guided missed cruiser converted in 1958. All I ever heard it called in its previous format was a " heavy cruiser ". ( Baltimore Class )
@GenocideWesterners2 жыл бұрын
1976 ? Even my mother wasn't born yet in 1976.
@oldtimer4272 жыл бұрын
@@GenocideWesterners what can I say other than I'm really old.....😂
@enricomandragona1632 жыл бұрын
Heard wrong
@scotteggert98202 жыл бұрын
Since I was a kid, I have always loved the Alaska Class when I first read about them. When I got into fleet miniatures I passionately argued that they were battlecruisers. But as time and my service in the US Navy went on I have come to rethink that. The Alaska's, in fact, did have a mission when they were launched. It was just not one anyone thought of. And I used all the ones I built in miniatures wars for that mission. Shore Bombardment. The 12 inch/.50 Mk 8 Gun was really good at hitting smaller targets and I blew up a lot of shore emplacements with them. So in simulations, I could say that the Alaska Class were Battlecruisers just they were Shore Bombardment Battlecruisers as they could shrug off almost all coastal gunfire or any land-based howitzer fire that could fire back at them. So to end this long-winded explanation of a loved Ship Class. The Alaska Class at Sea were Large Cruisers. But in the Shore Bombardment Role they were Battlecruisers.
@theswampangel36352 жыл бұрын
Great presentation! I’ve been waiting a long time for the Alaska’s to be covered. I still prefer to call them battle cruisers as it has more panache.
@IrishCarney2 жыл бұрын
Definitely the coolest ship classification type name
@SirLoinTheBeefy2 жыл бұрын
I'm not saying Drach made this as a response to Jingles' Alaska replay but.... Ultra Mega Cruiser "shh... is only legend"
@theroadbackhome20222 жыл бұрын
IMO the fast battleships (starting with Hood) represent a merger of the battleship and battle-cruiser as classes, while ships like the Alaska and Dunkirk were cruisers that were built without any restrictions.
@Archie2c2 жыл бұрын
I have a soft spot for the Alaska the hanger swapped for a CIC after the Canal battles is my preferred. Ah what she could have been if only started 2 years earlier Thanks Drach.
@KevekGaming2 жыл бұрын
I have been waiting for this!
@ronaldknauss28662 жыл бұрын
Me too
@richardbennett185611 ай бұрын
This class of ship is my favorite flagship Gaming wisr, for solo missions the Alaska class was Hard to kill at long range for anything smaller or slower than a Kongo class, fast enough to flee, great AAA layout. Better than any Scharnhorst class. They should have laid down the hulls and figured out the armament later in 1939 But it was for lack of resources when war broke out. So now, its too late for them. Admiral Lee didn't want them.A respected Naval genius who wasn't a yes man. So now, finally King had to give in and agree....like not enough Essex class carriers or the 6 planned Iowas being delayed..
@MarkJoseph812 жыл бұрын
I have a love/hate with my Alaska in World of Warships: Legends (PS4). It is maxed out, both the upgrades and the perfect legendary commander for it plus permanent custom camo, but is a glass cannon. I get killed all too quickly in 90% of battles with her.
@tcofield19672 жыл бұрын
Always a fun discussion as to whether the Alaskas were battlecruisers or big cruisers. There are arguments for both. If we go by Fisher’s mission plan for the Invincible then yes, these are battlecruisers. But if you look at what the BC morphed into then no they really aren’t. It could also be said that the advent of the 28plus knot battleship made the battlecruiser obsolete anyways so the Alaskas took back the designation, at least for a few years, and fulfilled the original plan for the ships.
@johngregory48012 жыл бұрын
I like the appellation Super Cruiser, a fully found ship somewhere between a heavy cruiser and a battleship. She's in her own class. But I also consider the Iowa class as battlecruisers because their armor, although proofed against 16"/45's, isn't a battle-range match to their own 16"/50's. As you said, Drach, they're the battlecruiser version of the South Dakota class.
@battleship61772 жыл бұрын
Except they were made to withstand their own armour with the additional 12 degrees of angle.
@johngregory48012 жыл бұрын
@@battleship6177 If you're talking about the Iowa class, they mimicked the SoDaks both in armor thickness (12.2") and inclination (19°). That armor scheme was proofed against the 16"/45 guns of the SoDaks, not the 16"/50 guns of the Iowa.
@inyobill2 жыл бұрын
I finally remembered that Alaska and Hawai'i would not be states for over a decade after this period.
@rring442 жыл бұрын
It seems like the perfect ship for the Guadalcanal campaign. It would have been able to kill all the heavy cruisers of the IJN and maybe even hold its own vs the old battleships like the Hiei.
@ph897872 жыл бұрын
But then the trade off is South Dakota taking hits like a champ. While Ching Lee turns Washington into a giant sniper rifle
@issacfoster11132 жыл бұрын
Bad Torpedo Defense is also a negative
@rring442 жыл бұрын
@@ph89787 would it have been better to have battleships in the battles or have an Alaska class as the flagship of the cruiser battles of the campaign? I really don't know.
@CSSVirginia2 жыл бұрын
If it had good radar, and commanders/crew trained in it's use.
@bluemarlin81382 жыл бұрын
@@rring44 Probably a battleship due to the Alaska class’s cruiser-level torpedo defense system.
@emilymeyerding33922 жыл бұрын
Your discussion of cruiser debate reminds me of Admiral King's characterization of the Navy Boards as being populated by "the best minds of the 19th century" - a statement he made in 1941, I believe.
@randybentley26332 жыл бұрын
If they'd stuck around long enough to be potentially turned into amphibious LHDs that could provide their own gunfire support instead of the proposed Iowa class conversions.
@nonna80252 жыл бұрын
i found a navy printed from the 40's where the navy called them battle cruisers. every thing i have read is calling them "large cruisers" was an attempt to keep them from the excess battleship queue for the breakers in the 50's.
@rodneymccoy81082 жыл бұрын
Just my two cents worth, they were some of the most beautiful ships the US Navy ever built. As to what they actually are, large cruisers. Nothing more really. Would have been interesting if the slightly lighter CA-2A design had been chosen, only 6.5 inches belt armor, and the Baltimore’s abandoned and instead this CA-2A design had been built in larger numbers, 15 to 20.
@diverdannavyvet96722 жыл бұрын
I served on USS CHICAGO CG-11. A converted Guided Missile Cruiser. Twin Talos fore and aft. Twin Tarter port and starboard. Single, open mount 5" 38 guns port and starboard. ASROC. Triple torpedo launchers port and starboard and RBOC. She was actually listed in the Guinness Book Of World Records as the world's most powerful Guided Missile Cruiser.
@ariancontreras43582 жыл бұрын
Also could an Alaska take on a Kongo class and win?
@kemarisite2 жыл бұрын
Very likely. Scharnhorst has almost 6" more armor on the belt than a Kongo, so there are practical battle ranges where the Scharnhorst is protected against the 12"/50 Mark 8 gun. There is no practical range where the Kongo's armor really resists the Alaska's guns. Add in US advantages with remote power control for the guns and the Mark 8 fire control radar, allowing it maneuver a lot more freely without throwing off the firing solution, and that fight is the Alaska's to lose.
@crownprincesebastianjohano7069 Жыл бұрын
@@kemarisite Quite right!
@devinhallsworth5531 Жыл бұрын
Take a shot everytime drachinfel says "Another meeting was held." In this video.
@Jon.A.Scholt2 жыл бұрын
White rum, dark rum, who cares?! It's Wednesday Rum Ration, let's go!