Dilandu wrote:runsforcelery wrote:Actually, no. The Russo-Japanese War exactly demonstrates the validity of what I'm saying about entire navies and infrastructures. What doomed the Russians (and I realize you have a dog in the fight, which I don't
)
Er... I didn't understand the last statement
It's an American idiom. "I don't have a dog in the fight" means that I'm, neutral in whatever's under discussion. In this case, it means that since I'm neither Russian nor Japanese, I'm not invested in demonstrating that "my" side (whichever it might be) was right/better/smarter/etc. Now, if the
USN had been a belligerent, things would be different, of course!:lol:
runsforcelery wrote:was the huge distance the Baltic Fleet had to sail just to engage the IJN in the first place, coupled to the difference in quality of personnel,
Dilandu wrote:Well, but could the japanese knew that in advance?
When they started the war, they were forced to deal initially with the First Pacific Squadron in Port-Artur. And despite the two great japan sucsesses (the damage of "Retvisan" in initial nigh torpedo boat attack, and the sinking of "Petropavlovsk") they were unable to destroy it in Yellow sea.
Not only did know it but planned on it from the very beginning. Their entire war plan was based on taking out the Port Arthur fleet in detail (which they did, if not quite the way they'd planned) and then having time to refit and repair before taking on anything the Russians might send from the Baltic. They had a hard count on the number of reasonably modern battleships in the Baltic and figured they'd have parity or a little better. The loss of two of their own battleships to mines screwed up their calculations, which is why they were so busy looking for additional armored cruisers to make up the deficit, but from the very beginning they calculated that --- especially without Port Arthur --- the Russians would have to fight their way through the IJN (which would have torpedo boats while the Russians didn't) in ships with badly fouled bottoms and machinery that was likely to need servicing badly . . . and that didn't even count the fact that they knew the Russians would have to sail with heavy deckloads of coal. They had a very, very good notion of what that was going to mean in material terms. Their intelligence on the human material of the Russian Navy was less good and they couldn't have counted on how bad it was actually going to be at Tsushima, but they calculated that they would have a significant advantage there, as well, especially with the experience they'd accrued earlier. The Russian decision to include the "auto-sinkers" only augmented the advantages which were already central to the Japanese calculations. And by the time the Baltic Fleet actually reached Asian waters, they'd had plenty of reports --- from the press and from the British --- which told them just how poorly officered and manned that squadron was. They may not have had that sort of intelligence at the beginning of the wart, but they certainly had it long before the first shot was fired at Tsushima.
Dilandu wrote:The main problem in Tsusima was that the new battleships of Second Pacific Squadron was new. Their crews were not even nearly sufficiently trained by any standart (and the russian gunnery practice in that time was superior - with all respect - even to the Royal Navy. The latter clearly admitted that in WW1) and the ships themselves was completed in great rush, with a large number of technical defects.
I'll give you that Russian gunnery was very good --- indeed, much better than most non-Russian sources allow --- but it wasn't
that much better than other navies. And black powder shell fillings went a
long way towards offsetting any superior accuracy they might have obtained. My sources (admittedly, none of which are Russian) would seriously dispute the fact that Russian gunnery was better than the RN and the French. And by the time of Tsushima, not only was the Baltic Fleet's gunnery below average by Russian standards but the Japanese standards of gunnery had improved considerably from the opening stages of the war.
The sources I have in which British observers comment on Russian gunnery say that the long base Russian range finders gave more accurate readings at long range and agree that the predreadnoughts in the Baltic shot very well
during World War One; I'm not at all sure that that would have been true in 1905 when no one (including the Russians)expected true long-range gunnery engagements. In addition, the Russian 12" in the
Borodinos and the 10" in the earlier classes were inferior to the Japanese 12" in shell weight, rate of fire, and penetration. (The Russian 12" AP weighed 730 lbs and the 10" AP weighed 496 lbs; the Japanese 12" weighed 850 lbs. At 5,000 yards, the Russian 12" penetrated 9.8" of Krupp Cemented armor (vertical); the 10" penetrated 8.6"; and the Japanese 12" penetrated 12". All of the above assuming, of course, that the shell didn't premature when it hit armor, which happened a lot to
both sides.
Russian rates of fire for both guns were on the order of 1 round every 90 seconds; the Japanese 12" fired once per minute.
) The Japanese had a
lot of trouble with prematures and (IIRC) lost several gun tubes to them in the Yellow Sea and (I think)
Mikasa lost one to the same cause even at Tsushima. By the same token, however, that represented a considerable improvement over the Yellow Sea; they'd redesigned thneir fuzes by Tsushima and got much better performance out of their gunnery there. (It wasn't so much that the new fuzes improved penetration which --- admittedly --- wasn't as good as the Japanese wished (and had hoped) it would be, but more of their shells
reached the target rather than detonating prematurely.
runsforcelery wrote:The Japanese fleet was excellent and generally superior in quality to the Russians
Dilandu wrote:Well, the battle in Yellow Sea didn't demonstrate it at all. The japan fleet exausted their ammunition, their accuracy was lesser than for russian, and their shisp was damajed more The only thing that allowed for Japan to claim the victory was the lucky chance by hitting the brige of "Tsesarevitch", that killed the Witgeft and all high commad crew, and desorganised the fleet.[/quoyte]
The Russians were in trouble even before Witgeft was killed, although I will certainly agree that thw hit on his flagship's bridge was the decisive moment of the engagement. Russian formation discipline was poor, compared to that of the IJN. And if the IJN "exhausted their ammunition," what were they using to shot at the Russians after the Russian formation came apart and ships started running for home? Beer bottles?
As for problems with the Japanese artillery, see my paragraph above
runsforcelery wrote: (and don't forget their introduction of better bursting charges),
Dilandu wrote:Let's don't forget, that the japanese shells was a completely HE and didn't penetrate any armor effectively. The IJN was most dissatisfied by the preformance of their artillery during the war.
Again, with all respect, that statement is inaccurate according to all of my sources. Yes, the Japanese were dissatisfied with the performance of their artillery; that doesn't mean it was any worse than --- or as bad as --- their opponents managed,. American accuracy in the Spanish-American War was
terrible . . . it was just three or four times as good as anything the Spanish produced. And it was the poor accuracy of USN gunnery at Manila Bay that led Admiral Sims, the American equivalent of Percy Scott, to first specialize in gunnery and then begin the radical, even revolutionary overhaul of American gunnery standards. As for the IJN's use of HE, they had plenty of AP --- and used it --- at Tsushima, but they
also used HE (deliberately) because their earlier experience had suggested to them that it would shatter their targets' upperworks and effectively "mission kill" the Russian ships . . . which is pretty much what happened. Between WW I and WW II, the British reached very similar conclusions after analyzing their experience 1914-1918. The Americans, on the other hand, drew the opposite conclusion and took the lead in developing "super heavy" shells which probably made their AP rounds --- size for size --- superior to those anyone else deployed. My sources suggest that both Russia and Japan were unhappy with their respective gunnery results during the Russo-Japanese War and both took steps to address the shortcoming post-1905.
runsforcelery wrote: Had it simply been a matter of drawing the two navies up in line-of-battle and going at it, the Russians might legitimately have expected to win.
Dilandu wrote:The problem is, that before the Tsusima, there was a Second Pacific Squadron, based on Port-Arthur. And the IJN have enough problems with them. The IJN simply cannot be sure that the russian Baltic crews were poorly prepared.
In short, the whole war was sucsessfull for Japan only because of sheer luck, not because of some particular planning. In 1905, japan was completely exausted and on the edge of collapse; their economy was exausted. Their army after Mukden was clearly unable to deal even with the russian Far East troops - and they were NOT the best of russian army (actually, the russian forces on the Far East was the reserve, territorial and irregular forces). Before Tsusima, Togo wasn't at all shure that he would be able to deal with mighty (in theory) russian Baltic Navy; after all, Togo wasn't been able to deal effectively with lesser (in theory) russian Pacific Navy! He clearly wasn't able to predict that the russian crews would be unexperienced.
As I've explained above, the Japanese knew that the fight between their entire navy and the Port Arthur squadron would be long over (Ione way or the other) before the Baltic Fleet ever put in an appearance. In addition, they could be --- and were --- certain that any fleet sent from the Baltic would be in lousy condition for action which it arrived and that, especially with Port Arthur already reduced, any Russian reinforcement would have to fight its way through what would then be a battle-hardened and experienced Japanese fleet with the advantage of freshly services ships, lots of scouts, and torpedo boats to help equalize the odds. They couldn't count on the execrable state of the personnel aboard the Russian battleships when they arrived, but even if the crews had been adequately drilled and trained --- which there was time to do during the lengthy passage --- their
ships would still have been in sufficiently poor condition to give the IJN a decisive edge. It was part of their war plan from the beginning, and they were right.
Now, as to the military potential of the two sides post-Tsushima and post-Mukden, neither one of them was in good shape to continue the war. Russia was on the verge of Revolution; Japan was on the verge of collapse. Russia had no Navy left; the Japanese Army was at full stretch and the Russians were shipping in supplies. Both sides later resented Teddy Roosevelt's role in brokering the peace treaty at Portsmouth, but --- at the time --- both sides were glad to accept it before something even worse happened to them!