Captain Seafort wrote:I've never disputed that it's a major advantage - my argument is that the Forrestals and Kitty Hawks can and have performed the same missions as Enterprise and Nimitz. The latter two do it better, largely due to being nuclear, but that isn't as big a step-change as the supercarrier concept itself.
Going from needing a resupply every week, being out of action for one or two days everyone week... to being in action and without needing resupply for as long as a year at a time is a MAJOR advancement to naval power. Even if you have a mile long super carrier with a thousand super stealth uber fighters, if its useless for any amount of time while it waits for its next resupply then all the tech on it becomes useless. A carrier can only earn its keep while its aircraft are in operation.
Captain Seafort wrote:You've still got an oil-based fleet. If the Enterprise, Long Beach, Bainbridge task force had been the shape of things to come rather than a one-off that never came to anything, then you'd have a much stronger case, but as long as the nuclear carriers are reliant on non-nuclear escorts then they'll never have the sort of strategic mobility you ascribe to them.
Rotating escorts out for resupply isn't the same as rotating a carrier every week for resupply. They aren't even close to being the same matter. A cruiser or destroyer can resupply in a matter of hours, food can be delivered by helo, fuel by a tanker over lunch, mail transmitted mostly by email now with solid packages being a once a month transfer, all this because you have a crew of a few hundred at most. A carrier is a totally different matter of resupply. You can't air deliver food stores for a carrier, you need a dedicated ship for that, refuel takes an entire day if it goes perfectly and also requires a dedicated ship. Flight operations have to be totally locked down before the resupply starts and can't restart until the resupply is not only completed but packed away. Having a non-nuclear carrier doubles or even triples the cost of a supply line for the simple numbers involved with caring for a carrier and crew. It also means that you have to have a second carrier or you lose your CAP which is the last thing a Carrier Group should ever do. This again increases the supply needs as you're now supplying yet another carrier.
Captain Seafort wrote:It's the concept we're looking for, not the current ultimate expression of it, and all the factors that allow the Nimitz-class to perform their role were introduced with Forrestal. Even if you consider nuclear power to be a game-changer rather than simply allowing them do perform the same role better then the key ship would be Enterprise rather than Nimitz.
The list is "Weapons that changed the world" not "things that were a start of a good idea but might be improved later so we can pass credit back in time due to the success of a future design."
Also, I have been pointing that in my opinion the Enterprise CVN-65 should have taken the "Carrier" position on the list. However, CVN-65 wasn't a game changer because while as a single device it was impressive... it was to costly to copy. The Nimitz won out because it was everything the CVN65 was but able to be reproduced in large numbers.
Captain Seafort wrote:At about two knots.
Doesn't matter, the ability to cross the globe isn't the game changer... the ability to cross the globe nonstop while maintaining 24/7 combat effectiveness for as much as a year at a time is.
Captain Seafort wrote:I'm not disputing that it was an important development - what I'm disputing is your assertion of it's relative importance.
And I understand your dispute of the facts at hand, however they remain facts. The ability for a single carrier to operate for up to a year where before it would require two carriers and a large supply fleet for each of those carriers cannot be countered. The change allows for more of the budget and personnel to be directed towards more Carrier Groups, more combat personnel and longer deployment cycles.
Captain Seafort wrote:Guns had been increasing in range and firepower for a very long time. Aircraft simply introduced a huge step in that progression. I agree that it was easily the most important development of the 20th century, but in terms of all of naval history it still comes second to steam power.
Its your opinion that steam should be more important and I can understand why you'd think such. However, yet again your opinion do not mesh with the facts at hand. Rowing allows the same thing as steam power, a tug allows the same thing as steam power. Nothing on earth can mimic the effects of nuclear power. This is why the Nuclear powered super carrier is listed and not a steam boat.
Mikey wrote:Hell, if you want to talk about carrier classes that changed the way naval war was fought, the Essex-class would be the one.
I would argue it was the RN's Carrier based attack on Taranto (spelling?), Italy that had the greatest effect in carrier use. It was this attack that proved the effectiveness of Carriers, that led to the IJN's attack on Pearl Harbor, that then led to the USN's relying on Carriers, that then led to the USA becoming the world's naval super power.