doug941 wrote:Draken wrote:So what about World War II heavy cruisers designs?
The answer to that question would depend on if you are talking about Treaty cruisers or post-Treaty cruisers.
The Treaty cruisers tended to be barely better off than a up-dated protected cruiser while post-Treaty were the evolutionary children of the armored cruiser. Compare the USS Pensacola and the USS Wichita.
I might consider WICHITA the last treaty cruiser, trying really hard for 10,000 tons and not quite making it; NO treaty gets you to DES MOINES, but also to something that's heavily affected by fear of air attack affecting designs derived from spending nigh-forty years worried about increasingly large fast hulls making torpedo attacks, which is why cruisers have to make better than 30 knots. If it's ok if your cruisers have a 25 knot top speed, you get a lot of hull back for things other than machinery.
Until someone else on Safehold builds a steam engine, pretty much nothing can threaten an ocean-going steel-hulled steamship. They don't even have to be armed, they can run away. Stick some 4" quick-firers on them if you feel nervous or naval.
Until someone else on Safehold invents steel breech-loading artillery with nitrocellulose propellants, aircraft engines, or the torpedo, neither naval, air nor torpedo attacks are problems and neither air nor torpedo is likely to be a problem pre-Post-Proscriptions. (Post-Proscriptions there are death rays.) Torpedoes are much more likely than effective aircraft -- no spark plugs makes aero engines difficult -- but what does the delivery platform look like? (Presumably either another cruiser or some sort of PT-boat for coastal defense.) Really long-range torpedoes aren't all that likely, but you're not going to have particularly long-range gunnery, either, due to no radar and no Admiralty-Table style fire control.
So until we see what the KING HAARAHLDs are needed to fight, I don't think we've got a clue where the surface navy designs are going to go. Much too different from historical models.
And in the meantime, move the merchies into steel hulls and oil-fired engines. Dazzle the world with your passenger liners. Move the perceived force requirements to take you on ever further and ever upward and always out of reach.