British Fire Control Systems at Jutland: Difference between revisions
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Let's consider equipment first. While the British ships generally relied on director firing at ranges and deflections calculated on [[Dreyer Fire Control Table]]s informed from the visual estimates of range and bearing obtained by coincidence range finders and similar instruments, not every ship used its director all the time, some few ships lacked a director, some ships lacked a Dreyer table, others used different types of Dreyer table, and a great many reported that their rangefinders did not really work very well in the necessary conditions. The British <em>did</em> have an advanced suite of apparatus for controlling their guns, but it was a general scheme — not a strictly standardised one. | Let's consider equipment first. While the British ships generally relied on director firing at ranges and deflections calculated on [[Dreyer Fire Control Table]]s informed from the visual estimates of range and bearing obtained by coincidence range finders and similar instruments, not every ship used its director all the time, some few ships lacked a director, some ships lacked a Dreyer table, others used different types of Dreyer table, and a great many reported that their rangefinders did not really work very well in the necessary conditions. The British <em>did</em> have an advanced suite of apparatus for controlling their guns, but it was a general scheme — not a strictly standardised one. | ||
As to training, the plurality of battle data the war produced where ships could be seen methodically applying their equipment, training and doctrine — the crucible, if you will & | As to training, the plurality of battle data the war produced where ships could be seen methodically applying their equipment, training and doctrine — the crucible, if you will — occurred during Jutland's "Run to the South", where the British [[Battle Cruiser Fleet (Royal Navy)|Battle Cruiser Fleet]]'s six battlecruisers with tardy, remote support from four super-dreadnoughts of the {{UK-BS|5}} engaged the five battlecruisers of the High Seas Fleet's [[Scouting Group (German Navy)|Scouting Group]]. The British battlecruisers, while being the most battle experienced ships in the Grand Fleet, had the least secure anchorage and this offered them few opportunities to fire their guns in a live firing drill — exactly the type of drill that permitted all aspects of the fire control process to be practised and improved. By contrast, the rest of the Grand Fleet could conduct test firings with relative ease within the guarded confines of Scapa Flow, and the enemy had the Baltic in which to conduct battle practise with threat of a surprise attack. | ||
As to the "en masse" aspect, it is vital to consider that the war seldom offered the two navies the opportunity to throw their entire "team" onto the field to exert their firepower in a test that evenly highlighted the average or mean of their capabilities. Rather, battles often pitted a small subset of one fleet against a subset of the other, and these engagements illustrate not the overall gunnery strength of the fleets, but only those of the ships engaged, with their specific equipment, and under the specific conditions of the engagement. | As to the "en masse" aspect, it is vital to consider that the war seldom offered the two navies the opportunity to throw their entire "team" onto the field to exert their firepower in a test that evenly highlighted the average or mean of their capabilities. Rather, battles often pitted a small subset of one fleet against a subset of the other, and these engagements illustrate not the overall gunnery strength of the fleets, but only those of the ships engaged, with their specific equipment, and under the specific conditions of the engagement. |
Revision as of 20:32, 25 September 2012
The Battle of Jutland continues to be an interesting and controversial topic, in part because of technical arguments surrounding British gunnery and the effectiveness the control of its fire.
This article is going to catalogue the equipment each British ship carried into battle and the conditions under which it was used. The overall impression I find in recording this is that strongly stated conclusions by naval historians who have not closely studied the technical function of fire control systems on the strengths and weaknesses in British gunnery are inappropriate.
To take an informed position on the gunnery results of Jutland, one has to consider many factors. One mistake that can distort impressions taken when historians seek to analyse gunnery effectiveness in this era is to treat the British and German forces as monolithic fleets possessing uniform equipment as well as degree and freshness of gunnery drill, fighting each other en masse under tactical and environmental conditions offering neither force an advantage. Assuming such conditions prevailed can only serve as the basis of a flawed understanding of everything that followed.
Let's consider equipment first. While the British ships generally relied on director firing at ranges and deflections calculated on Dreyer Fire Control Tables informed from the visual estimates of range and bearing obtained by coincidence range finders and similar instruments, not every ship used its director all the time, some few ships lacked a director, some ships lacked a Dreyer table, others used different types of Dreyer table, and a great many reported that their rangefinders did not really work very well in the necessary conditions. The British did have an advanced suite of apparatus for controlling their guns, but it was a general scheme — not a strictly standardised one.
As to training, the plurality of battle data the war produced where ships could be seen methodically applying their equipment, training and doctrine — the crucible, if you will — occurred during Jutland's "Run to the South", where the British Battle Cruiser Fleet's six battlecruisers with tardy, remote support from four super-dreadnoughts of the Fifth Battle Squadron engaged the five battlecruisers of the High Seas Fleet's Scouting Group. The British battlecruisers, while being the most battle experienced ships in the Grand Fleet, had the least secure anchorage and this offered them few opportunities to fire their guns in a live firing drill — exactly the type of drill that permitted all aspects of the fire control process to be practised and improved. By contrast, the rest of the Grand Fleet could conduct test firings with relative ease within the guarded confines of Scapa Flow, and the enemy had the Baltic in which to conduct battle practise with threat of a surprise attack.
As to the "en masse" aspect, it is vital to consider that the war seldom offered the two navies the opportunity to throw their entire "team" onto the field to exert their firepower in a test that evenly highlighted the average or mean of their capabilities. Rather, battles often pitted a small subset of one fleet against a subset of the other, and these engagements illustrate not the overall gunnery strength of the fleets, but only those of the ships engaged, with their specific equipment, and under the specific conditions of the engagement.
The final bias to consider is how the tactical position and prevailing environmental conditions dealt the various fighting formations at different phases of the battle a different hand of cards. John Brooks has illustrated how Vice-Admiral Beatty's command decisions imposed unnecessary burdens of smoke interference on his ships and denied them the full use of the numerous rangefinders they carried. Many have commented about the inequitable lighting that the opponents faced during both the Run to the South and when the battlefleets met, and certainly the fading day creates a difference in character between conditions during these two component engagements. It is foolish to consider them in an aggregate analysis without examining their differences.
Battle Conditions
Naturally, a navy has to fight (or decline to fight) under whatever conditions fate offers it, and the people who create a navy must answer for any deficiencies that arise out of whatever circumstances reveal them. It does not suffice to say, "Well, we never expected them to fight downwind of us!"
One argument about World War I fire control is particularly sensitive to the impact of the poor visibility that dominated much of Jutland's fighting: the controversy of Arthur Pollen's rejected Argo Aim Correction equipment versus the Frederic Dreyer's Fire Control Tables which the Royal Navy had chosen to adopt. Both systems were much more advanced than the system of control employed by the enemy, but the higher aspirations of both degraded sooner and more dramatically under sub-optimal visibility conditions than did the more to-the-point methods of the German fleet. However, when the virtues and faults of Argo and Dreyer solutions are compared under conditions where the input they are supplied becomes sparse and noisy as opposed to abundant and precise (or at least answering to Gaussian error patterns), it becomes clear that the differences between the two approaches become almost immaterial. This realisation makes the continued acrimony seem the moot fodder of partisans who have not really examined the problem of the tests fire control systems actually faced in the Great War.
Caveats and Sources
Airtight and detailed information on these particulars is thin. While there is good documentation overall, much is dated significantly distant from the battle, and this introduces the possibility that upgrades or alterations occurred between the battle and the document's creation regardless of which came first. Of course, the creators of most such documents were human, and some would even confess as much when pressed.
This page will have fuzzy edges and may contain errors. However, it should be substantially correct in aggregate.
The Run to the South
Ship | Dreyer Table |
Director | FTP | 9-ft R.F.s | 15-ft R.F.s |
Lion | III | yes | yes | 4 | 0 |
Princess Royal | III | yes | yes | 4 | 0 |
Queen Mary | II | yes | yes | 6 | 0 |
Tiger | IV | yes | yes | 7 | 0 |
New Zealand | none? | yes | yes | 3 | 0 |
Indefatigable | none? | yes | yes | 3 | 0 |
Barham | IV* | yes | yes | 1 | 5 |
Valiant | IV* | yes | yes | 1 | 5 |
Warspite | IV* | yes | yes | 1 | 5 |
Malaya | IV* | yes | yes | 1 | 5 |
Collecting the Data for a Post-Mortem
Various calls from above were issued to ask subordinate commands to submit their best accounts of what had transpired during the battle. Gunnery details played a prominent part in the story. When replies were in hand, one thing seemed clear: rangetaking varied from poor to none at all, and spotting was also often problematic for many ships at critical junctures.
Vice-Admiral Beatty was quick on the mark, asking for a gunnery report from each of his battlecruisers and light cruiser squadrons on 7 June. The amount of detail in the reports submitted varied considerably, in part because not all ships had engaged in much gunnery. These reports did not appear in the Jutland Despatches, but some of them can be found in the Beatty Papers at the National Maritime Museum, specifically those for Indomitable,[1] Inflexible,[2] First L.C.S.[3] and Third L.C.S.[4]
On 24 September, Jellicoe asked his commanders to furnish more detail on their fire control during the battle, specifically asking that the paper range plots from the Dreyer tables be included with this report. Such material would comprise the most informative trove of forensic data by which we could evaluate British equipment and their use of it. However,
All ships did not furnish plots, transmission station records or other notes : reasons are explained in some of the following letters.Template:UKJutlandOfficialDespatches
Ship | Submitted Plots |
Summary |
---|---|---|
Revenge | No | No records maintained in action. No mention made of range cuts — only ranges on sights. |
Benbow | No | From notes, Gunnery Officer Lieutenant Commander F. Elliott reported "obtained ranges on ship with 3 funnels" at 6.14. However, hits were obtained on a target an hour later after spotting down a full 1,600 yards. Implication is terrible range data, it not merely guessing. |
Ajax | Yes | "Owing to the mist and smoke, this was all that could be obtained." "The trainer in Gun Control Tower had very great difficulty in seeing the object." |
Erin | No | "only six ranges were taken altogether, at considerable intervals and no value could be obtained from them." |
Monarch | No | No mention of even range on sights offered in report |
Conqueror | Yes | "Very few ranges were taken." |
Bellerophon | No | "very few ranges were obtained and though a small plot was made, the record has not been kept." |
Malaya | Yes | Plot provided was from 4.00 to 4.33. "During the later stages of the action with the High Sea Fleet, ranges were few and isolated owing to low visibility." "No additional information is available." |
Warspite | No | "neither the Dreyer Table chart nor any range and bearing records have been retained" |
Princess Royal | No | No plot was submitted, but a detailed record of the action (profusely so, for some phases) from the fore T.S. is supplied, including timed relative bearings to the degree and timed ranges on the transmitters at 100 yard granularity. |
Tiger | No | No plot was submitted, but a very detailed record of the action from the T.S. is supplied, including timed relative bearings to the degree and timed ranges on the transmitters at 100 yard granularity. Specific mention is made of rangefinder ranges as they compare to gun ranges, and of more than one rangefinder working |
New Zealand | No | No plot was submitted, but a detailed record of the gun ranges is supplied at 50 yard granularity. Rangetaking is clearly occurring at the outset, but by 5.58 visibility seems too poor for spotting, let alone ranging. |
Lion | Yes | Though this is not mentioned in the Despatches, Captain Chatfield submitted 2 range rolls and 3 bearing rolls on October 3rd.[5] |
Oddly, a few light cruisers were included in Jellicoe's appeal for data and offered the following in reply:[6]
Ship | Summary |
---|---|
Calliope | Ranges are all divisible by 1,000 yards except one to 500 yards. No mention as to how obtained. |
Constance | "all times, bearings and distances are approximate" |
Inconstant | A total of 8 ranges only. |
Falmouth | An outline of gun ranges and deflections of seven different target engagements from 6.07 to 8.38. After 6.30, all notes end with variations of "enemy lost to sight" despite ranges as low as 6,000 yards. |
Birkenhead | Four separate impressions of worthless nature (e.g., "Smoke of enemy ships" bearing "North" at "10,000 yards (approx.)") recorded over 165 minutes. |
The zeal for more information was intense, spurring Jellicoe to again ask on behalf of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty that ships should remit any last scintillae on 23 October, asking that replies avoid repeating data already offered. The request was specifically to provide:[7]
- bearings and ranges to enemy capital ships from friendly battleships from 6.15 to 6.45 pm and 7.00 to 7.30 pm, and from the battlecruisers from 3.30 to 7.30 pm.
- range on sights, spotting corrections, and initial difference between plot range and gun range
- bearing plots where not already supplied
The appeal was to include cruisers and light cruisers.
See Also
Footnotes
- ↑ Beatty Papers (BTY 6/6), item 3. Caird Library.
- ↑ Beatty Papers (BTY 6/6), item 4. Caird Library.
- ↑ Beatty Papers (BTY 6/6), item 5. Caird Library.
- ↑ Beatty Papers (BTY 6/6), item 6. Caird Library.
- ↑ Beatty Papers at the National Maritime Museum's Caird Library (BTY 6/6), item number possibly being 11.
- ↑ Admiralty. Battle of Jutland Official Despatches. Appendix I.
- ↑ Beatty Papers at the National Maritime Museum's Caird Library (BTY 6/6), item number possibly being 12.
Bibliography
- Admiralty, Gunnery Branch (1918). Handbook of Captain F. C. Dreyer's Fire Control Tables, 1918. C.B. 1456. Copy No. 10 at Admiralty Library, Portsmouth, United Kingdom.
- Elliott Brothers, London (1916). Captain F. C. Dreyer's Fire Control Apparatus, Mark IV. Copy 19 "as fitted in H.M.S. Royal Oak" at H.M.S. Excellent Library, Portsmouth, United Kingdom.
- Dreyer, Frederic; Usborne, Cecil through Gunnery Branch, Admiralty. (1913). Pollen Aim Corrector System, Part I. Technical History and Technical Comparison with Commander F. C. Dreyer's Fire Control System. P. 1024. in Admiralty Library, Portsmouth.
- Admiralty, Gunnery Branch. C.B. 1245. Range Tables for His Majesty's Fleet. Volume I. 1918. (9.2-inch Guns and Above.). Pub. No. OU 6089 (late CB 1245), Vol. 1 The National Archives. ADM 186/236.
- Admiralty, Gunnery Branch (1916). The Sight Manual. 1916. O.U. 6026 (late C.B. 1243). Copy No. 1749 at the The National Archives. ADM 186/216.
- Admiralty, Gunnery Branch (1930). Pamphlet on Turret Dreyer Table as Fitted in the Turrets of H.M. Battleships, and in the Transmitting Stations of Certain Cruisers. O.U. 6196 (A). Copy at Admiralty Library, Portsmouth, United Kingdom.