Wasn't that twelve 14" guns, not twelve 12"?Jonathan_S wrote:runsforcelery wrote:The North Carolina class, with a design speed of 27 knots, was considered a very fast ship when she was laid down. (She was also originally designed around a main battery of twelve 12" guns, which became 16" guns only when FDR authorized it after the 1940 elections, since he didn't want to outrage isolationist sensibilities on the run-up to those elections.)
The South Dakotas were supposed to revert to a lower maximum speed, but that was changed during the design process about the time that ONI discovered that the Japanese Nagato-class ships, which they had previously assigned a 23-knot speed, were actually capable of at least 26. (Squeezing enough power to maintain the North Carolina's maximum speed into the stubbier South Dakota hull was a non-trivial challenge
My understanding is the North Carolina was designed for, and armored against, 14" guns and then FDR escalated her to 16" guns (same armor though; making her unbalanced).
South Dakota then kept the same guns but added armor to be "balanced" against her own 16" guns. (And then the super-heavy shell you mentioned came out and she was unbalanced again - hence the much larger Montana)[/quote]
You are correct. Typos creep in when I am posting late at night, and that is even easier with voice recognition software. In this case, though, it was probably a keyboard error… which is also easy to make when posting in a sleep deprived state.