Dilandu wrote:RunsInShadows wrote:
almost new? they were completed 1940-42, so they were 15 years old during the korean war, 30 for vietnam, and 50 for kuwait. I wouldn't call those young ships.
.
Yes, almost new. Outdated, but not used a lot. And you make a mistake; the "Iowa"'s were completed in 1943-1944. In 1948-1949, all exept "Missouri" were mothballed after only a 5 years of not-too-extensieve service and reactivated only in 1950-1951, after Korean War started.
After the Korean War, they served only about 4-5 years, and were all again mothballed by 1958. Only "New Jersey" was reactivated to Vietnam War in 1967 (largely because almost all gun-armed heavy and light cruisers were already scrapped) and in 1969 were again mothballed.
So, by the time of their reactivation in 1986, all "Iowa"'s have no more than 10-15 years of active service, and their resources weren't even near limit; they were projected for at least 25 years of active service!
I agree with your dates, however they were still old, as advances in technology made them that way. they were old before their first active duty was over because of aircraft. however, that is subjective and irrelevant to the topic. What matters is the usefulness of their guns, and given no airplanes in Safehold, there is much to say for having a gun that can penetrate so far from the sea or body of water, do so much damage, and have so much control over shot placement.
n7axw wrote:
Haven't you ever heard of the good old American way? BIGGER IS BETTER!
Ain't that the truth! Part of the reason my gun collection keeps getting bigger and bigger.
.