AU ALTERNATIVES:
The USN, as a reminder, in the AU Washington Naval Treaty looks like this.
- Tonnage limitations
Country Capital ships Aircraft carriers
British Empire 525,000 tons 135,000 tons
(533,000 tonnes) (137,000 tonnes)
United States 395,000 tons 270,000 tons
(401,338 tonnes) (274,,333 tonnes)
Empire of Japan 315,000 tons 81,000 tons
(320,000 tonnes) (82,000 tonnes)
France 175,000 tons 60,000 tons
(178,000 tonnes) (61,000 tonnes)
Germany 175,000 tons 60,000 tons
(178,000 tonnes) (61,000 tonnes)
Italy 175,000 tons 60,000 tons
(178,000 tonnes) (61,000 tonnes)
That reduces the battle-line to 12 existing US battleships but allows the US to build up to 8 aircraft carriers. This includes 198,000 tons for the Lexingtons and allows 72,000 tons for the two additional carriers after the Lexington conversions enter service. The three converted "experimental" Derfflinger conversions are not counted toward the carrier tonnage. The British keep their four WW I curiosities and their Argus and Hermes are not counted toward their carrier tonnage, while the Japanese are allowed four new builds of their own and keep both the Hosho and the to be built Ryujo as their two "experimentals".
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On the cruiser question, the USN may call their bodyguard ships "frigates" to distinguish these fleet attached units from the traditional "independent" cruisers, but the ships still count toward the cruiser tonnage totals. as amended in the 1930 London Conference.
- Tonnage limitations
Country Cruisers Destroyers
British Empire 339,000 tons 235,000 tons
(344,400 tonnes) (238,771 tonnes)
United States 325,000 tons 270,000 tons
(330,215 tonnes) (274,,333 tonnes)
Empire of Japan 208,850 tons 151,000 tons
(212,201 tonnes) (153,423 tonnes)
France 135,000 tons 105,000 tons
(137,166 tonnes) (106,695 tonnes)
Germany 135,000 tons 105,000 tons
(137,166 tonnes) (106,685 tonnes)
Italy 135,000 tons 105,000 tons
(137,166 tonnes) (106,695 tonnes)
None of the parties could agree on submarines, except that Germany pledged to have none and the Japanese demanded parity. In the end, a compromise was reached whereby signatories pledged not to exceed their destroyer tonnage allotment for the submarine tonnages they would build, but they, except Germany, could build whatever kinds of boats they desired. For France and Italy, this meant small submarines and lots of them. For Japan this meant a defacto limit of 100 boats, because nothing short of a U-cruiser could operate in the Pacific in that AU era. America had her own submarine tradition left over from Mister McKinley's Navy that would practically limit her to about the same number of boats as Japan. Both nations would cheat on this ill-defined area with mixed AU results. Japanese boats would be well-armed and of good quality, but not well used. American submarine boats would be like other American warships, about average in overall; quality with somewhat marginal weaponry in the beginning, but rapidly capable of good use once the bugs in the crews and the weaponry was shaken out.
FRIGATES:
A cruiser by any other name is still a cruiser, unless you designed it to not be a cruiser. The role of the Laredos is somewhat different from the RTL Omaha class they are intended to emulate.
Specifications for the Laredo Class
Type: Light cruiser
Displacement: 8,050 long tons (8,179 mt)
Length: 550 ft (167.64 m)
Beam: 59 ft 1 in (18.0 m)
Draft: 20 ft 0 in (6.10 m)
Installed power: 100,000 shp (74,570 kW)
Propulsion: 12 Manitowoc diesel electric generator sets. 8,333 hp (6,414 kW) ea.
Speed: 35 knots (65 km/h) on trials
Endurance: 9,000 nautical miles (17,000 km) at 10 knots (19 km/h)
Complement: 26 officers and 285 rates
Armament:
Laredo;
8 × 5.9 in (150 mm)/50 cal guns (4x2)
8 × 1.18 in (3 cm)/50 cal Winchester Gatling guns (8x1)
10 × 21.65 in (55 cm) torpedo tubes (2x5)
Lincolnton;
8 × 5.9 in (150 mm)/50 cal guns (4x2)
8 × 4 barrel 1.18 in (3 cm)/50 cal Remington 1q auto-cannon (8x4)
10 × 21.65 in (55 cm) torpedo tubes (2x5)
Lawrence:
10 × 5.9 in (150 mm)/50 cal guns (4x2)
8 × 4 barrel 1.18 in (3 cm)/50 cal Remington 1q auto-cannon (8x4)
10 × 21.65 in (55 cm) torpedo tubes (2x5)
Armor:
Deck: 1.57 in (4 cm)
Belt: 3 in (7.5 cm)
Aircraft carried: 1 catapult and 1 seaplane. for the Laredo and Lincolnton classes.
The Americans build 4 Laredos, 6 Lincolntons, and 10 Lawrences for half their eventual allotted 1931 London Conference Washington Treaty cruiser tonnage. They were authorized 18 "heavy cruisers" to the UK's 12 and Japan's 10; Germany's, France's, and Italy's 7 each. Obviously with 165,000 tons left, the Americans are not going to be able to build 18 of the 10,000 ton cruisers, light or heavy, if they do not cheat. Nevertheless they will try to build 18 and not cheat too much.
Here is what they did about it to get 18 heavy cruisers. (For pictures of the results see above.)
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General characteristics of the Sacramento Class (as built)
Class and type: Sacramento-class heavy cruiser
Displacement: 8,390 long tons (8,520 t) (standard) 10,490 long tons (10,660 t) (full load) (See note.)
Length:
555 ft 2 in (170 m)
Beam: 58 ft (17.7 m)
Draught: 16 ft 8 in (5.1 m)
Installed power: 12 Manitowoc/Westinghouse diesel electric generator complexes at 6,705 hp (5000 kW) each
80,460 shp (60,000 kW)
Propulsion: 4 × shafts; 4 × General Electric electric motors
Speed: 32 knots (59 km/h; 37 mph)
Range: 10,000 nmi (19,000 km; 12,000 mi) at 14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph)
Complement: Peace 25 officers , 400 rates; War, 30 officers, 480 rates
Armament: 4 × twin 7.91 in (20 cm)/L50 BLNR naval rifles Mark 7 (4x2)
32 Remington 1.18 in (3 cm)/L50 Mark 1 Q AAA guns (8x4 quad mounts)
10 × triple 21.67 inch (55 cm) torpedo tubes (2x5) (no reloads)
16 K-gun depth charge throwers (4x4), 80 depth charges (5 patterns of 16 or 10 patterns of 8)
1 x 6 tube ASW mortar (forecastle mount)
Armor:
Waterline belt: 2.9 in (7.5 cm)
Deck: 1.8 in (4.0 cm)
Barbettes: 1 in (2.55 cm)
Gun houses: 1 in (2.55 cm)
Magazines: 2.9–5.9 in (7.5–150 mm)
Bulkheads: 4.373 in (11.0 cm)
Aircraft carried: 1 × seaplane
Aviation facilities: 1 × aircraft catapult
Notes: Called the Union Iron Works or West Coast cruisers, these warships were officially listed for the Washington Treaty cruiser clause as being of 8,500 tons in displacement. Stuffed with a full war complement of fuel, fools and flammables and with ½ fuel onboard as they should have been tested for compliance; the ships were closer to 11,000 tonnes standard than to 10,000 tonnes and would be 12,000 tonnes deep load.
General characteristics of the Tallahassee class (as built)
Class and type: Tallahassee-class heavy cruiser
Displacement: 8,120 long tons (8,250 t) (standard) 10,500 long tons (10,688.5 t) (full load)
Length:
548 ft 6 in (167 m)
Beam: 65 ft 3 (19.8 m)
Draught: 16 ft 5 in (5.0 m)
Installed power: 10 General Motors/Westinghouse diesel electric generator complexes at 8000 hp (5,965 kW) each
80,000 shp (59,650 kW)
Propulsion: 4 × shafts; 4 × General Electric electric motors
Speed: 32 knots (59 km/h; 37 mph)
Range: 10,000 nmi (19,000 km; 12,000 mi) at 14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph)
Complement: Peace 25 officers 400 rates; War 32 officers, 500 rates (see note)
Armament: 3 × twin 7.91 in (20 cm)/L50 BLNR naval rifles Mark 7 (3x2)
2 x twin 3.9 in (10 cm)
8x1 Winchester 1.18 in (3 cm)/L50 Mark 3 AAA Gatling guns (8x1)
10 × triple 21.67 inch (55 cm) torpedo tubes (2x5) (two sets of reloads for 30 torpedoes carried.)
Armor:
Waterline belt: 2.9 in (75 mm)
Deck: 1.5 in (40 mm)
Barbettes: 1 in (25.5 mm)
Gun houses: 1 in (25.5 mm)
Magazines: 2.9–5.9 in (7.5–150 mm)
Bulkheads: 4.373 in (110 mm)
Aircraft carried: 1 × seaplane
Aviation facilities: 1 × aircraft catapult
Note: Called the Cramp ships or East Coast cruisers, partly because of the pun on William Cramp and Sons where they were built, and also because the crew spaces were extremely tight so that in wartime the 110 extra men actually had to hot-bunk or else sleep in hammocks rigged anywhere they could find room. These warships were officially listed for the Washington Treaty cruiser clause as being of 8,000 tons in displacement. Stuffed with a full war complement of fuel, fools and flammables and with ½ fuel onboard as they should have been tested for compliance; the ships were closer to 11,500 tonnes standard than to 10,000 tonnes and would be 13,000 tonnes deeply loaded.
For supposedly smaller ships, the Tallahassees actually displaced more than the Sacramentos.
MORE FLUFF: CHEATING ON THEIR OWN TREATY, DAMN IT.
The Americans got around the destroyer angle by building two sets of destroyers; slow ones for commerce protection (the "shorts" which could be used in a pinch as fleet escorts at a cost in tactical speed.) and fast ones intended for fleet work. (the "longs" which were intended for pacing with the carriers and battleships.) There was a ten knot average difference between the two types, but it was expected that commerce defense would play a major role in any future British-Japanese-American dustups so the two tier approach was used.
The cruiser question was more problematic and sticky for the Americans. The British had figured out that they would have tonnage for 40-45 cruisers. Japan could build ~ 22-24 cruisers under the Washington rules and the Americans could build between 33 and 36 cruisers, the British estimated. Britain was aligned with France in Europe so she had assured superiority in home waters over the next three European navies combined (Italy, Germany and Russia). The Indian Ocean was a defacto British lake, so she felt she could maintain the Empire in the region as long as she held the Suez Canal and the Anglo-Egyptian satrapy that went with it. It was once past Singapore that things became very dicey. The Americans were noxious, ambitious, and powerfully present in the Philippines and the South Chine Sea. They sort of regarded the Pacific Ocean the way the British of 1923 regarded the Indian Ocean. It, the Pacific, was their lake by right of conquest. The British had used the Japanese to pack off the imperial Russian navy. And though Admiralty House and Whitehall did not publicly declare it, they needed Japan more than ever to balance off the Yanks. The Americans were aware and they were privately diplomatically quite angry about it, especially their navy officials. Part of the diplomatic infighting at Washington and later at London during the naval disarmament conferences, was about the Anglo-Japanese alliance. Although she had privately assured the Americans that she would abrogate the Anglo-Japanese Treaty, the Yanks after reading Japanese crypto with regards to the Sempill Mission and his subsequent pass-ons to the Japanese, the Americans were not buying that ship's bill of British guff at all.
Whether RTL or in this AU, the Americans are going to build those 18 heavy cruisers. it is the how in the AU that I wondered about.
The RTL cruisers fitted an emerging independent mission doctrine that the American armored cruiser had originally been designed to undertake. Long range commerce raiding, show the flag, and added punch to the line of battle was the armored cruiser, the intended battlecruiser mission and now that both of those types were obsolete, it fell to the heavy cruiser. Since the Hawkins class were the initial definition of a heavy cruiser for the British and that was the agreed upper bound limit to which the Americans stipulated in the Washington NAval Treaty, that was the RTL initial set of conditions the USN set to overmatch.
In the AU, the problem is how to build 18 heavy cruisers within 165,000 tonnes. Something has to give. The RTL American heavy cruisers all had huge for their size aviation complements and had foresworn torpedoes to get those seaplanes and attendant cranes and catapults. This chews up deck space, and hull volume like you will believe, when you carry 3-4 aircraft. The Japanese treaty cheaters to match such an aviation detachment and gun-power and also keep their torpedoes could not do it under 12,000 tonnes. it just could not be done. They tried with the Mogamis. See how that turned out?
For this AU, I figured that with the Laredos, Lincolntons and Lawrences already sporting single seaplanes and single catapults, that it might as well become doctrine: that American cruisers carry 1 floatplane each, and that American cruisers operate together in pairs or groups of four. The aircraft can joint share missions that way. Since it was likely that it would be the Americans who hunted and the foreign enemy who raids and runs, this seems to me a logical starting point for what an American cruiser in this AU should look like.
She will be on the smaller side of things. The USN already starts with a cruiser tonnage shortfall. It should come as no AU surprise (since Mr. McKinley's Navy had such success with them.) that torpedoes will be part of the armament almost as important as the guns. As for the guns, I think that mutual interference in flight of three shell salvoes is so well established post WWI that given a druther, the cruiser designer would go for a twin turret if he can squeeze another one in instead of the 3x3 arrangement. AAA is starting to be a concern. Even by the RTL late 1920s, the British have at least provided a mixed battery of HA and MA guns to handle anti-aircraft duties. For the Sacramentos, the AAA guns will be the ubiquitous 3 cm Remington Mk 1q quad mounts. As for the main battery (4x2), it will be as close to the 8 inch bore gun limit as the AU USN can achieve.
The Sacramento class you see, is the result. No torpedo reloads of course, since her role is primarily as a flagship for a task group. The Union Iron Works and the Portland Navy Yard will build 10 of them. Over the course of time, experience leads to the landing of the almost useless torpedo battery and the addition of several 10 cm DP/ASh/AAA guns in the voided spaces to beef up her air defenses as her eventual role will be as a carrier task force screen flagship and a fighter intercept director. (That silly foretop house will finally have a purpose.)
The Tallahassee class will be more successful, I think in this AU. She has a good mix of guns and torpedoes on her rather light displacement. Six 7.9 inch guns may be a light battery for a heavy cruiser but HMS Exeter seemed to hit hard enough with hers. What she lacked was torpedoes and an adequate AAA battery. The Tallahassees have those features. These cruisers will be the better general purpose cruiser during the treaty years, with that more balanced armament among air, surface and underwater threats. Cramp and Sons and Bath Iron works are scheduled to make 10 of these, on the fiction that the 5 of them that come from the Portland Navy Yard are armed with the easily replaceable 15 cm bore/L45 Mark 2 guns are actually "light cruisers".