Robert61267 wrote:
Quote:
she did keep their attention while the Washington lined up to pummel the Kirishima into a burning wreck.
The timing of Washington's salvos against Kirishima indicates a sufficient time lag to view them as different events. The Japanese also sighted Washington several times and were aware that they were up against two battleships. Captain Davis simply handled his ship more smartly than Captain Gatch, allowing her to remain more or less undetected when the penultimate moment came. The good news for the navy was that while riddled, SoDak was more or less a soft kill, and was never in any real danger of sinking. Had her damage control teams handled things better, she likely never would have lost electrical power at the crucial moment; the South Dakotas may have had the most rugged design of any treaty battleship. Part of me wonders how much of this was due to experience from operating with the Royal Navy and if any hard won lessons had been passed on, or if it was simple luck? Any ideas?
Several sources consider the
South Dakota class to be better armored ships than the
North Carolina class. Or at least more survivable. (still not
Iowa tough!) Had the SoDak not had the electrical issue it most likely would have been her that put the
Kirishima on the bottom. The So Dak fared pretty well from the hits on her. That class was a tough class of ships.
Some sources state that the
Kirishima was scuttled. Yet some Japanese sources dispute this. A good summary of what is believed to have happened:
http://www.navweaps.com/index_lundgren/ ... alysis.pdf There also were most likely more than nine 16"hits on the
Kirishima.
There is some online speculation as to "what if" the Japanese navy had sent the
Yamato (or
Mushashi) in place of the
Kirishima. First there has to be a belief that the IJN would risk the "hotel Yamato" in battle.
Though the Battle of the Coral Sea, Midway and the battles off Guadalcanal are separated by months it is logical to see the progression of naval battles leading through all of them. It would be interesting to see the wrecks of the Japanese carriers at Midway as well as the
Wasp and
Hornet.
For anyone interested in the battles off the Canal as viewed by the Japanese I would recommend the book
Destroyer Captain by Tameichi Hara. It is a good read and the first source that I read giving Admiral Nagumo a fair treatment. Many of the engagements described took place off shore of islands that my father was engaged in combat on!
_________________
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CB
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