Battlecruiser
A battlecruiser
is a large gunship, larger than a cruiser
and of comparable size to a battleship.
It has the size and guns
of a battleship but substantially thinner armor, the weight saving
allowing more powerful engines to be fitted to give it greater
speed than a battleship.
The idea
was that the big guns would allow it to take out destroyers,
cruisers, and other smaller ships before the battlecruiser ever
got into the range of their smaller guns or torpedoes, while its
speed would enable it to escape enemy battleships. The idea was
mainly conceived by Admiral Jackie
Fisher.
The first
battlecruisers were HMS
Inflexible, HMS Invincible and HMS Indomitable,
all completed in 1908.
They had armor 6 or 7 inches thick along the side of the hull
and over the gunhouses, whereas a comparable battleship of the
period had armor 11 or 12 inches thick. Originally known as battle
cruisers, these ships had a top speed of 26 knots compared
to 20 - 21 knots for a contemporary battleship. They were armed
with 12 inch (305 mm) guns, just like battleships. Soon after
the British, the Germans started building their own battlecruisers,
the first was SMS Von der Tann of 1911.
They had only 11 inch (280 mm) guns, but were better armoured
than the British ones.
In practice,
the original battlecruiser concept largely failed.
It was successful
at the Battle
of the Falkland Islands during World
War I when the British battlecruisers HMS Inflexible
and HMS Invincible annihilated a German
cruiser squadron commanded by Admiral
Maximilian Graf Von Spee. But as soon as battlecruisers encountered
enemy battlecruisers (or more modern battleships which could keep
up with them), their speed advantage would be lost and the thin
armor then meant that they were highly vulnerable to their opponent's
gunfire. They were also at grave risk if they tried to take on
battleships.
At the Battle
of Jutland two years later, the British battlecruisers engaged
the German battlecruisers and battleships before the arrival of
the battleships of the British Grand Fleet, with disastrous results.
The battlecruisers HMS
Invincible , HMS
Queen Mary and HMS
Indefatigable exploded with the loss of all but a
handful of their crews, and HMS Lion only survived by
intentionally flooding one of her magazines. The German battlecruisers
were better armoured, but SMS Lutzow sunk from the damage,
and SMS Seydlitz was heavily damaged. No British or German
battleship was sunk during the battle, but one old pre-dreadnought.
Thereafter, the Royal
Navy de-emphasized battlecruisers. HMS
Hood was launched in 1920,
and was the last British battlecruiser to be built. Between the
wars, it was the biggest warship in the world. Her armour was
stronger, than of earlier battlecruisers, but it also proved a
fatal weakness, as she exploded and sank in a duel with Bismarck
during World
War II.
Other navies
persisted with the battlecruiser concept somewhat longer. The
US
Navy aircraft carriers USS
Lexington and USS
Saratoga were built on battlecruiser hulls repurposed
after the Washington
Naval Treaty of 1922.
The US later built the battlecruiser-like "large cruisers" USS
Alaska (CB-1) and Guam (CB-2), which served
effectively in WWII,
but a planned additional four in the class were cancelled after
the war. The German Panzerschiffe (pocket battleships)
(Deutschland,
Admiral
Scheer, and Admiral
Graf Spee) were another attempt at the concept, and displayed
the same weakness in the lack of armour at the Battle
of the River Plate, while the German Scharnhorst
and Gneisenau
were labelled battlecruisers, but they traded lighter armament
(11-inch main guns) rather than thinner armor for speed.
Improved
engine technology also worked against the battlecruiser formula.
The ultimate limit on ship speed was drag from the water displaced
(which increases as a cube of speed) rather than weight, so heavier
armor slowed World
War II battleships by only a couple of knots over their more
lightly armored brethren. As it turned out, however, aircraft
carriers made both battleships and battlecruisers largely obsolete.
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