jemhouston wrote: ↑Fri Apr 12, 2024 1:00 am
I thought during the Fleet Exercises they decided carriers getting into gunfights were a bad idea.
Quite right.
Fleet Problem IX saw both
Lexington and
Saratoga sunk by 'enemy' battleships. Blue Fleet's
Lexington was steaming upwind to launch planes when she blundered in the Black Fleet's BatDiv5, which was steaming downwind. The 'engagement' was at short range, and
Lexington would have undoubtedly been sunk, but it was so early in the wargame the umpires ruled her 'damaged' so she could continue to take part.
Later,
Saratoga of the Black Fleet encountered Blue's BatDIv2 instead of her own BatDiv5, and 'sunk' under heavy fire at short range. She was also 'sunk' again by four torpedoes from a submarine shortly thereafter. Prior to the encounter with the battleships, she destroyed one of her own planes, a T3M with her 8in guns firing on an 'enemy' destroyer. It was spotted in the hangar 68 feet from the gun muzzle and suffered 36 cracked ribs and ripped fabric.
Fleet Problem XIV saw poor weather shut down
Lexington's flight operations. The next morning, as her planes were warming up, sunrise revealed an 'enemy' battleship at short range. As she turned to escape, a second battleship appeared, and she was 'out of action.'
More on the carriers in the Fleet Problems here:
https://www.history.navy.mil/research/h ... riers.html
Regards,