After reading and rereading the posts, I realised I did a piss poor job of describing the Cruiser
Not really, I got what you were getting at. Just wanted to show off
Now, an idea I had whilst delivering pizzas tonight
Haha, now I know what you do for a living
perhaps fitting either 5 triple mounts with 5"/38s
Certainly doable. Just remember you're going to have a beam-y ship. That's why my ship's so damn long.
or an indigenous 5"/40 cal type
Probably doable without auto-loading, but even a slight increase in caliber-length is going to increase shell weight quite a bit. And even 5/38 got heavy after a while, as I pointed out.
...OR upgunning to 6" Dual Purpose guns.
Definitely out of the question without auto-loading.
Another option here, I suppose, would be for Tequilapoli to license-build either Brooklyn, St. Louis, or Cleveland class cruisers from the US Navy.
Ok but they can't engage aircraft with their main guns. They can theoretically - the Japanese had AA-shells for their
battleship-caliber weapons - but the USN never once even pretended that the CL's can engage aircraft with their main armament. That's why they came out with the Atlanta CLAA's in the first place.
The main reason I like having the 6-8 twin mounts is a better weapons' spread. Having that many mounts does pose the problem of adequate direction, although as klagldsf pointed out I could mount them on the beams, a thought I hadn't considered since I figured having each mount on the centerline meant each director had to likewise be on the centerline.
No. Many ships mounted additional primary directors on the beams. It's a pretty logical place since these ships tended to be "beamy" anyway.
One thing though - radar directors (like the big "drumhead" types I have or the similar types I was clearly inspired by the British use) can direct many, many gun weapons at once. They're very nice to have on a CLAA - but that's beyond the time frame you're looking at
The same technology that really made a CLAA practical (automation, radar direction, etc) also made it obsolete, because a lot of that same technology now meant you can guide a rocket-propelled warhead into an aircraft (like RIM-2 Terrier).
At 66.5 feet, the ship is fairly wide for a light cruiser, considering that the larger Brooklyn, St. Louis, and Cleveland classes (all between 605-610 feet OA iirc) had max beams of around 61 feet. I'm assuming (and please correct if I'm wrong, I promise not to get mad) that a wider beam will better it's seakeeping capabilities. I'm also planning on limiting the height above the deck of the gunmounts to one level to reduce topwieght.
Yeah, but you'd need a hull
at least as large as a Cleveland now if you want decent hull speed (and you probably do, otherwise I can't think of a point to a CLAA). Once again, see my ship. As I keep stressing, there's a reason why it's so damn big.
As a bit of a trivial aside, I was originally going to have six twin turrets on centerline but TimothyC talked me out of it. I might still do it as a Namaqua "what-if" though.