pokermind wrote:You can always add one fore and aft here's a 10" fore and aft gun on turntable mount I designed for a USE ship in Eric Flint's 1632 verse.
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Fore and aft guns below the fore and aft weather decks while main broad side armaments on same deck but out in the weather
Fore just bow mount should be able to be shoe horned in, and a 30 lb gun is much smaller than a ten inch gun. RFC I was showing a swivel mount I konow Kearsarge's two swivel guns were mounted amidships not in the bow. I was discussing a swivel gun in the bow for a schooner to provide chase armament and adding a larger gun to the broadside armament.
Poker
Look, there are all sorts of problems which people who are trying to figure out how to put heavy weapons on the Desnairian commerce-raiders are overlooking or ignoring.
Just for starters, you're trying to put ten pounds of . . . fertilizer
into a five-pound bag. I will reiterate, these are small, fast,
light displacement vessels. They are not 1,500-ton-plus frigates. That limits the weight of the guns they can carry. It's that simple.
Take the suggested pivot mount, for example. To make a pivot mount work, you have to have immensely strong bracing of the frame — and especially the deck beams — under the mount. The central pivot has to be heavily bushed, which requires a very heavy iron casting. The gun has to be long enough to take the muzzle outboard when it fires, or else you do this interesting little thing called setting fire to your own ship. To get that length of tube requires a heavy weapon. A heavy weapon requires a heavy carriage and heavy breeching, which — again — calls for heavy reinforcement of the vessel's structure.
In the Baltic during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, there were "galleys" armed with single heavy artillery pieces, usually fixed to fire only forward, and usually on skids rather than a conventional carriage. It was possible to mount such a weapon in an oared vessel of light displacement and shoal draft, but they were
fair weather platforms in a body of water which is not exactly noted for the roughness of its
average weather conditions. The majority of galleys – indeed, I'm tempted to say
all of the galleys — which in Real World™ conditions mounted massive forward-firing batteries were built for Mediterrannean or Black Sea conditions, where (again) sea states were going to be very tame compared to typical Atlantic conditions. Among other things, that meant they could be built with different hull forms, much lower freeboards, and poorer stability than anything expected to survive outside the Strait of Gibraltar. Remember that during the Punic Wars virtually the entire Roman Navy was wiped out in a single storm; the galleys of Lepanto weren't a whole lot more stable and seaworthy than the Roman biremes and triremes.
On Safehold, galleys tended to be bigger — more like the "galleass" type, which was sort of a cross between a galley and an early galleon — but continued to carry no more than two masts
and no headsails. That meant, among other things, that the weight of the foremast was farther aft and there was no bowsprit, which weighs about as much as the foremast on a typical sailing vessel. That both reduced weight forward
substantially and cleared a firing arc which a sailing vessel simply does not possess. If you actually look at the bow chasers on most sailing vessels, you'll find that they don't actually fire
directly ahead; instead, they fire either side of the bowsprit and headsails, which means a substantial portion of their firing arc is cut off, whereas a galley's forward batteries, with no rigging in the way, could actually fire at targets dead ahead of her.
(There's another, rather more esoteric difference between galleys and ships powered primarily by sail. Without going into all the abstruse details, when a ship is propelled by rowing, the oars tend to
lift the bow. Sails, on the other hand, tend to drive the bow
down, which decreases its effective buoyancy regardless of specific hull forms. As I say, it gets complicated, because certain sails will have a countervailing
lifting effect under certain circumstances. Which sail does which varies with both weather conditions and the specifics of the ship's sail plan, however, and the rule of thumb that a sailing ship's propulsion drives her deeper into the water is going to govern under most circumstances.)
Another reason that galleys could carry heavy weapons forward was that in addition to a rather different distribution of internal weights as compared to a sailing vessel designed for oceanic conditions, the guns themselves were very crude. They were slow-firing, they had
smaller crews than typical broadside-carriage mounted guns had a century or so later, and because they had no wheels on their carriages, they actually needed less room in which to recoil and damped recoil energy faster. The friction between the wheeless carriage and the deck braked weapon both more quickly and (contra intuitively) more
gradually. On a wheeled carriage, the gun recoils relatively freely, with very little friction, until it hits the end of the breeching tackle, at which point all of the recoil energy which hasn't been absorbed by the sheer inertia of driving the gun back is transferred directly to the side of the ship in a single, massive shock. On a carriage without wheels, the entire bottom of the timber frame is in contact with the deck and friction begins adding itself to the weapon's inertia the instant it begins to recoil. What this means is that for a given weight of metal, a broadside weapon on a wheeled carriage — or in any other position on a wheeled carriage — requires a stronger structure in order to absorb the heavy jolt of recoil forces transferred
abruptly to the fabric of the ship. The same thing is true with a pivot mount. Although the gun can be arranged to recoil on skids on the pivot (which helps), when that recoil energy is transferred to the ship far more of it is concentrated on the pivot pin of the mount, which is why the framing has to be so extraordinarily heavy under a pivot gun and why the pivot itself has to be so heavily bushed.
In order to build an effective oceanic commerce-raider, you have to produce a vessel which: (1) can survive typical "Atlantic" conditions and (2) is fast enough and handy enough to both overtake merchantmen and evade enemy warships
or (3) powerful enough to defeat —
easily — any convoy escorts/warships it's likely to encounter. (If it can't defeat the aforesaid escorts/warships without taking major damages and/or personnel losses of its own, it will be forced to return to base even if it scores a significant tactical victory. Sort of like what happened with
Bismarck after she sank the
Hood.) This means that you have to build either all-up Safehold "galleons" (i.e., vessels which are as powerful as the big American 44's of the War of 1812) or else small, agile, shallow draft,
relatively cheap vessels (i.e., preferably schooners, but possibly 18- to 22-gun brigs). Anything which falls between those extremes is very poorly suited to the commerce-raiding role, and anything
bigger than the galleon is going to be too slow in average wind conditions and far, far,
far too expensive (and not in money alone) to be used in a guerre de course strategy in anything like useful numbers.
For all practical purposes, that means that any mainland-built commerce-raider is going to be no bigger than 500 to 800 tons at the outside. By the time that vessel is built, rigged, provisioned, and manned for any sort of extended operational endurance (especially if it's going to carry sufficient personnel to provide a useful number of prize crews), the space left over inside the hull for armament is going to be limited. By the time that vessel is designed for speed and maneuverability — even more important, in many ways, than armament for a commerce-raider — the tonnage and volume constraints get far worse because of the hull forms required to provide those qualities.
As far as mounting weapons "on the weather deck" and "on the main deck,"
you can't do that on a ship of this light a displacement. Even if you could, the "below the weather deck" mount would be
maybe three feet above the waterline . . . which means that if the vessel heeled or rolled, the gun muzzles would be underwater and the ship would be filling through the open gunports, and that would be in
calm weather.
A warship — for that matter,
any ship — is a complete, complex package in which seaworthiness, stability, displacement, freeboard, weatherliness, speed, maneuverability,
and armament are all vital components. This is especially true for any
sail-powered warship, and no one's galleys on Old Earth were
ever designed to survive in typical Atlantic conditions. For that matter, not even
Charis' galleys were designed to do that on Safehold; they were simply designed to fight in heavier weather conditions
than anyone else's. So comparisons between what might have been possible with a galley design using cruder guns on completely different mountings and a vessel intended to survive, maneuver, and (hopefully) fight in actual
oceanic conditions are, to put it as simply as possible, meaningless.
You could, if you so chose, build a schooner with a pair of
moderately heavy pivot-mounted muzzleloaders between the fore and mainmasts. You could probably get them all the way up to the Church's 28-pounders, which would permit you to fire a fairly anemic explosive shell. They would be usable only on the broadside, however, and they would eat up the tonnage needed for any useful broadside weapons, which means a commerce-raider so armed would be a sitting duck for any of the Charisian schooners (with carronade broadside armament and a single, conventional long gun on the pivot) it was likely to meet. It simply wouldn't have the weight and volume of fire to fend off the Charisian, and the rate of fire would be overwhelmingly in the Charisian's favor . . . not to mention the fact that
all of the schooner's carronades would be capable of firing explosive shells —
heavier explosive shells — once she got into range. And I should also point out that the difference between the
effective range of long guns and carronades is nowhere near so great as the simple numbers might seem to indicate, and that the effective range comes
down rather drastically as the size of the vessels mounting the weapons decreases and they become increasingly lively gun platforms. So, in theory, your 28-pounder would have a maximum range of about 2,500 yards compared to the carronade's maximum range of about 500 yards. In fact, the long gun would have an
effective range of about 1,200-1.500 yards, and the carronade's maximum range would stay 500 yards, because the factors decreasing the long gun's range apply
equally to both guns. That is, accuracy begins dropping off very steeply after about 500 yards . . . which happens to be the carronade's maximum range, anyway. Further, carronades tended to be more accurate across their range because the shorter gun tubes both allowed
and required bores that were "truer" when the guns were reamed out at the foundry
and they had reduced windage because (1) with the truer — and straighter — bores their tolerances could be made closer without risking a gun that "choked" on a mis-sized round shot once it began fouling in action and (2) additional care could be/was taken to make their shot as tight-fitting as possible to trap more of the propellant's powder behind it
and improve accuracy specifically because they were shorter-raged.
What this means (he said, apologizing for the digression
) is that there are very few examples from Real World™ naval actions
between similarly sized combatants in which an armament of long guns gave one of them a significant range and/or tactical advantage over the other. The most famous example of the weakness of a carronade armament against one of long guns was USS
Essex's engagement in the War of 1812, which basically was fought out
at anchor inside the harbor of Valparaíso against
two opponents (HMS
Phoebe and HMS
Chubb:40x32-pounder carronades and 6 long 12s for the Americans versus 20 long 18-pounders, 10 long 9-pounders, 2 long 6-pounders, 18x32-pounder carronades, and 10x32-pounder carronades for the Brits). That is scarcely the model which is going to apply to a blue water commerce-raider on Safehold.
You folks are just going to have to trust me when I tell you that you cannot build a sail-powered pocket battleship. For that matter, the Germans' Real World™ pocket battleships turned out to be far less effective than their designers and proponents had hoped (or their adversaries had feared) they would be. In order for a commerce-raiding strategy to succeed, you must have presence over a wide area, and the investment in a ship large enough and powerful enough to carry the armaments people are suggesting will simply be too expensive in both time, money, materials, and weapons to permit that sort of presence.
The American privateers of the War of 1812 were as effective as they were primarily because, at the beginning of the war, the Brits were still tied down in European waters by the need to protect their commerce closer to home and worry about the French Navy. By 1814, when Napoleon had begun his involuntary vacation at Elba and the French Navy was no longer a problem, the privateers had been driven almost entirely from the seas by a combination of convoy tactics, aggressive "hunter killer" operations (as we'd probably call them today), a close blockade of the Chesapeake (where most of the privateers were built), and landing operations to burn privateers on the stocks and to eliminate the shipyards capable of building more of them. Great Britain never managed to completely eliminate them, but she certainly managed to transform them from a major threat into a minor (if occasionally painful) irritant.
The Church doesn't have the advantages which the Americans enjoyed in 1812-1813. The Desnairians and other mainland practitioners of guerre de course are much more in the position of the French in both the monarchy's and Napoleon's wars against the United Kingdom, and those strategies — while painful to the English and capable of constraining Britain's operations — were never decisive. It's extremely unlikely that the similar operations being carried out by Desnair will be any more successful (if as successful
as) was the case for France. They do pose a significant threat to Charis' ability to support army operations on the mainland
flexibly and efficiently, and they will have a major impact on the availability of Charisian naval forces for
offensive operations in places like the Gulf of Dohlar, which is much farther from the decisive combat theaters. They will also constrain Charisian building, manning, and deployment strategies, and
in proportion to the investment they require in men, money, and materials they are almost certainly the most
cost effective means of attacking the commerce and maritime flexibility which are critical to Charis' success and survival.
The problem for the Desnairians is that the "
most cost-effective" strategy is not necessarily the same thing as a
winning strategy.
Edited because I realized I'd posted the wrong draft of the original post. What happens when little things like your daughters' volley ball team's end-of-season dinner intervenes.