Use a dome shape, utilizing continuous curvature (utilizing curved surfaces with a constantly changing radii). And try to find a way to shroud, shield or retract the guns (A mind boggling proposition to be sure, due to the size of the guns). Regardless of whether the guns can be partially concealed, a dome turret could reduce RCS to a point. Whether or not it's greater than a box turret would be pointlessly debatable. I just thought I'd like to play with the concept a little in this design, and use domes instead of a more conventional AGS like turret design.
As for how many guns can fit in there, I just said 4, since that seemed feasible for a 20m turret. However it could also be 3. It doesn't really matter to me. However, I'm not sure I agree with you about there being 3 at best, since I was using the KGV's quad turrets as examples, scaled up slightly to account for the bigger guns which are equipped.
Tell me, did you pass geometry in highschool? Because it's rather painfully look like you didn't internalize it. Here, I'll show you:
This is why you didn't draw quads.
Also - guess the one shape that will always generate a 0° incident angle no mater how you look at it?
That's right a sphere. Your turrets are going to be nice and visible from airborne radars.
Saturation attacks are considered to be a weakness of AEGIS like systems.
The fastest way to saturate an AEGIS ship is to shoot it dry, which you would understand if you bothered to learn about the systems in question.
one thing again: your spyski's....... the SPY-1 is only an search radar. so you can't do guidance with it, you'll need other systems for that, for example directors or an APAR type radar.
Uhm, Ace, you can if you know what you're doing (it involves doing some tricks with the radar beam).
Doesn't really matter, since so far both the DD(X) and this BBG are both paper designs. It doesn't really matter if the've tested them for that yet, since they designed the DD(X) that way in the first place. Professional ship engineers would probably anticipate such a problem, if it was a problem. The fact that the ship is designed the way it is, tells me that it isn't.
I've heard the following by people in the know - "Zumwalt is what you get when you have a ship designed by electrical engineers, not marine engineers".