runsforcelery wrote:They used a 12-pounder (or possible even a 6-pounder; I don't really recall which) against a replica of a typical merchant ship's hull (i.e., planking about 2" thick). This is a far cry from a 24-pounder or 32-pounder punching through 36" or so of seasoned oak. You get, ah . . . somewhat larger splinters moving at higher velocity from the latter. Neither the round shot nor the planking really fitted what would have happened in a naval action of the period and, in fact, the thinness of the planking undoubtedly skewed the test much more than the lightness of the shot did.
Also, a ship that had been at sea constantly, would not have a lot of wood that were in any way even close to DRY.
And that adds weight to splinters, as well as change how the wood splinters.
It's worth noting that Vasa wasn't really designed to face heavy artillery in a pounding match. As Thucydides pointed out in an earlier post, she was a transitional design from a time at which boarding actions were primary and artillery actions were secondary.
More importantly though, is that the Wasa is a failed design.
I would not classify her as a transitional ship however, the ship simply does not have the attributes of a boarding-focused ship(or perhaps more correctly, those attributes are not primary factors). If nothing else, because the second gundeck precludes it.
It´s effectively a failed design exactly because it was built as an artillery platform first.
It was also built with the knowledge of the demise of the Spanish armada 40 years earlier well in mind, where cannonfocused ships proved the better choice.
The ship was built to carry 48 24lb guns and was in fact rather an early attempt at a 2-decker heavily focused on artillery, than on boarding.
Being built as a Dutch design just by itself clearly shows the preference(as the Dutch outfought the Spanish to a large extent by focusing on artillery early), then, looking at it:
http://www.vasamuseet.se/sv/Skeppet/Vasas-delar/Compare to this one, half a century earlier:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Jacob ... 909%29.jpgWhile the rear of the Wasa is still somewhat raised, it is part of the main deck and completely lacks a raised fore- or aft-castle.
There´s also a clearly shown preference from the artillery carried, just 6 heavy carronade-like guns and another 10 light guns(1 and 3lb).
Compare that to how the 2nd ship i linked to was somewhat similar in size but had only 9 24lb and 10 12lb, but over 50 light guns as well as 20 6lb cannons, with over a hundred total. That´s how it looks when you arm primarily for boarding actions.