Silverwall wrote:In confined waters Monitor can outmanouver warrior and may - may eventually score a crippling hit on the rudder the one true weak spot on Warrior. Reported tests suggest that even at full power the 15" Dhalgren was Iffy penetration vs the superior British armour. Monitor only had the 11"
http://www.amazon.com/Oscar-Parkes/e/B0 ... ont_book_1
In open water Monitor is dead meat as it is painfully slow, easy to swamp and if the warrior can depress enough to get a downward hit on the deck will wreck the monitor, the pitiful rate of fire cause be the terrifying overcrowding turret of monitor will not scare warrior in the open ocean. 1 shot per 10 minutes is not scary.
a not completely jingoistic discussion of this theoretical fight was held on an alt histroy forum a few years ago based on Harry Harrisons rediculous civil war alt history.
http://www.alternatehistory.com/discuss ... p=10944924
Lets be nice to Harry and say that in terms of naval knowledge he would not be worthy of cleaning mud off RFCs boots.
I also suggest http://www.wargames.co.uk/RandomS/Library/Warrior.htm on the topics of W v M
I haven't seen much about range/penetration tables for Civil War artillery but this webpage gives a pause for thought:
http://www.navalhistory.org/2016/01/11/ ... shell-guns
Just under the diagram of the Monitor type turret is the following passage:
The IX-inch gun was the most common broadside carriage-mounted gun in the Union Navy, and the XI-incher was the most widely used pivot-mounted gun. The latter’s shell could pierce 4.5 inches of plate iron backed by 20 inches of solid oak. The XV-inch guns, which weighed 43,000 pounds and debuted in 1862, were even more powerful and were mounted in the larger Union monitors.
Early on, the Dahlgren guns could have been even more powerful. The explosion of the large “Peacemaker” wrought-iron gun on board the steam sloop PRINCETON in February 1844 had led the Navy to issue a regulation imposing sharply reduced allowable powder charges. This regulation was still in effect when the Union MONITOR engaged the CSS VIRGINIA in Hampton Roads on 9 March 1862. There is considerable truth to MONITOR designer John Ericsson’s claim that had the MONITOR’s two XI-inch Dahlgrens been firing full powder charges with the guns aimed at the Virginia’s waterline, the Confederate warship would have been sent to the bottom.
CSS Virginia had 4" iron armor backed by 20" of oak at a roughly 45 degree incline. HMS Warrior had 4.5" of iron, backed by 18" of teak on the hull plating, BUT WAS VERTICAL.