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{{short description|Proposed class of American super-battleships}} {{Use dmy dates|date=August 2021}} {|{{Infobox ship begin}} {{Infobox ship image | Ship image = File:Montana Class.png | Ship caption = A model of a ''Montana''-class battleship, 1944 | image alt = A scale model depicting what the ''Montana'' class would have looked like had they been completed }} {{Infobox ship class overview | Name = ''Montana''-class battleship | Builders = *[[New York Naval Shipyard]] * [[Philadelphia Naval Shipyard]] * [[Norfolk Naval Shipyard]] | Operators = {{navy|United States|1912}} | Class before = {{sclass|Iowa|battleship|4}} | Class after = None | Total ships planned = 5 | Total ships completed = 0 | Total ships cancelled = 5 }} {{Infobox ship characteristics | Hide header = | Header caption = (Design BB67-4) | Ship class = | Ship type = [[Fast battleship]] | Ship tonnage = | Ship displacement = *[[standard displacement|Standard]]: {{convert|63221|LT|t|-1|lk=on}} *[[Full load]]: {{convert|70965|LT|t}} | Ship length = {{cvt|921|ft|3|in|1}} [[length overall|loa]] | Ship beam = {{cvt|121|ft|2|in|1}} | Ship draft = {{cvt|36|ft}} | Ship power = *8 Γ [[Babcock & Wilcox]] [[water-tube boiler]]s *{{convert|172000|hp|MW|abbr=on}} | Ship propulsion = *4 Γ geared [[steam turbine]]s *4 Γ screw [[propeller]]s | Ship speed = {{convert|28|kn|mph km/h||lk=in}} maximum | Ship range = {{convert|15000|nmi|mi km|lk=in|abbr=on|-2}} at {{convert|15|kn|mph km/h|abbr=on}} | Ship complement = *Standard: 2,355 * Flagship: 2,789 | Ship armament = * 12 Γ [[16"/50 caliber Mark 7 gun|{{cvt|16|in|0}}/50 cal Mk 7 guns]] * 20 Γ [[5"/54 caliber Mark 16 gun|{{cvt|5|in|0}}/54 cal Mark 16 guns]] * 10β40 Γ [[Bofors 40 mm Automatic Gun L/60|Bofors {{cvt|40|mm}} anti-aircraft guns]] * 56 Γ [[Oerlikon 20 mm cannon|Oerlikon {{cvt|20|mm}} anti-aircraft cannon]] | Ship armor = * [[Belt armor|Main belt]]: {{convert|16.1|in|mm|0}} * [[Bulkhead (partition)|Bulkheads]]: {{convert|18|in|mm|0}} forward, {{convert|15.25|in|mm|0}} aft * [[Barbette]]s: {{convert|21.3|in|mm|0}}, {{convert|18|in|mm|0}} aft * [[Gun turret|Turret face]]: {{convert|22.5|in|mm|0}} * [[Deck (ship)|Main deck]]: {{convert|7.05β7.35|in|mm|0}} | Ship aircraft = 3 Γ [[floatplane]]s | Ship aircraft facilities = 2 Γ aft [[Aircraft catapult|catapults]] for launch of [[seaplane]]s }} |} The '''''Montana''-class''' was a planned class of battleship for the [[United States Navy]], intended as the successor to the {{sclass|Iowa|battleship|4}}. They were to be slower but larger, better armored, and with superior firepower. Five were approved for construction during [[World War II]], but changes in wartime building priorities resulted in their cancellation in favor of continuing production of {{sclass|Essex|aircraft carrier}}s and ''Iowa''-class [[battleship]]s before any ''Montana''-class [[keel#Structural keels|keels]] were laid. Their intended armament would have been twelve {{convert|16|in|mm|0|adj=on}} [[16"/50 caliber Mark 7 gun|Mark 7]] guns in four 3-gun turrets, up from the nine Mark 7 guns in three turrets used by the ''Iowa'' class. Unlike the three preceding classes of battleships, the ''Montana'' class was designed without any restrictions from treaty limitations. With increased anti-aircraft capability and substantially thicker [[Vehicle armour|armor]] in all areas, the ''Montana''s would have been the largest, best-protected, and most heavily armed US battleships ever, and the only ones to rival the [[Empire of Japan]]'s {{sclass|Yamato|battleship|1}}s in terms of displacement. Preliminary design work for the ''Montana'' class began before the US entry into World War II. The first two vessels were approved by [[United States Congress|Congress]] in 1939 following the passage of the [[Naval Act of 1938]]. The Japanese [[attack on Pearl Harbor]] delayed the construction of the ''Montana''-class. The success of [[naval aviation|carrier combat]] at the [[Battle of the Coral Sea]] and, to a greater extent, the [[Battle of Midway]], diminished the perceived value of the battleship. Consequently, the US Navy chose to cancel the ''Montana''-class in favor of more urgently needed aircraft carriers as well as amphibious and anti-submarine vessels. == Background == [[File:USS Missouri (BB-63) underway in August 1944.jpg|thumb|left|{{USS|Missouri|BB-63|6}} of the {{sclass|Iowa|battleship|4}}, the predecessors of the ''Montana'' class]] During the [[interwar period]], the US Navy was primarily concerned with its rival in the Pacific Ocean, the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]]. The international naval arms limitation system initiated by the [[Washington Naval Treaty]] in 1922 had accorded the US Navy superiority over Japan in terms of total tonnage.{{sfn|Kuehn|2008|pp=1β3}} After the ten-year construction moratorium that had been imposed by the Washington Treaty expired, the US Navy began building the {{sclass|North Carolina|battleship|0}} [[fast battleship]]s in 1937 to replace old pre-[[World War I]] ships that were by then obsolescent.{{sfn|Friedman|1980|p=97}} But by the late 1930s, the Washington system, which had been extended by the [[London Naval Treaty|First]] and [[Second London Naval Treaty|Second London Naval Treaties]], had begun to break down after Japan refused to sign the Second London Treaty in 1936. This prompted the other major naval powers to begin rearmament programs, beginning in the United States with the {{sclass|South Dakota|battleship|0||1939}} battleships in 1938.{{sfn|Friedman|1985|pp=281β282}} Funding for the first two new ships was provided in Fiscal Year 1937, though work would not commence until 1939.{{sfn|Friedman|1980|pp=88, 98}} The [[Second Vinson Act]] of 1938 added two more ''South Dakota''s; it also authorized the construction of two more battleships yet to be designed.{{sfn|Friedman|1980|p=88}} The US Navy had already begun design work on the successors to the ''South Dakota''s in 1937, which was to become the {{sclass|Iowa|battleship|4}}; the Navy sought larger, faster ships that would handily exceed the {{convert|35000|LT|lk=on}} limit on battleship [[displacement (ship)|displacement]] imposed under the Washington Treaty system. Because Japan had already refused to abide by the terms of the Second London Naval Treaty, the other major naval powers moved to loosen the restrictions on their own new battleship designs. On 31 March 1938, the US, Britain, and France exchanged notes indicating that they would accept increasing the displacement limit to {{cvt|45000|LT}}.{{sfn|Friedman|1985|pp=307β309}} As the US Navy's designers worked on proposals for the new ships, two distinct strains emerged: a comparatively slow, heavily armed and armored variant and a much faster, but lighter-armed and armored vessel that was primarily intended to catch Japanese cruisers and counter the fast {{sclass|KongΕ|battleship|1}}s. The latter type, which eventually emerged essentially as an improved ''South Dakota'', was capable of a speed of {{convert|33|kn|lk=in}}, but work on the former proceeded at the same time. The [[General Board]] intended it to become the next generation of [[standard-type battleship]]s, which was to be set at 45,000-ton ships armed with twelve {{cvt|16|in|0}} guns, and capable of {{convert|27|kn}}, the same speed as the ''South Dakota''s.{{sfn|Friedman|1985|pp=307β311}} By 1939, it had become apparent to the naval leadership that war was approaching, and so the need for new ships had become pressing. The start of [[World War II]] in Europe, and particularly the [[Fall of France]] in June 1940 only increased the pressure to speed construction of new warships. The first two ships ordered to the 33-knot improved ''South Dakota'' designβ{{USS|Iowa|BB-61|6}} and {{USS|New Jersey|BB-62|2}}βwere ordered under the 1939 fiscal year. The passage of the [[Two-Ocean Navy Act]] on 19 July 1940 provided significant increases to the Navy's strength, including an increase of some {{cvt|385000|LT}} for battleships alone, along with hundreds of thousands of tons for new [[aircraft carrier]]s, [[cruiser]]s, and [[destroyer]]s. Under the 1941 fiscal year program, the third and fourth ''Iowa''-class battleships were authorized, but in May, two more ships were added to the program. These were to have been built to the next battleship design, but the [[Secretary of the Navy]], [[Frank Knox]], decided that these should be additional ''Iowa''-class ships to speed up production.{{sfn|Friedman|1980|pp=88β89, 99β100}} == Design == ===Initial design work=== [[File:Battleship Study - BB65 - Scheme 4 - (1940 Studies).jpg|thumb|left|1940 study plan, BB-65 Scheme 4 (BB 65-4)]] Though the 33-knot design had been chosen for ''Iowa'', it was clear to naval leadership that these would be exceptions to normal Navy doctrine, and that a reversion to the 27-knot standard-type battleship would occur with the next design. The primary consideration for this new class was the development of the super-heavy {{convert|2700|lb|adj=on}} [[Armour-piercing ammunition|armor-piercing shell]] that had been developed during the construction of the ''North Carolina'' class. Standard design practice stated that battleships should be immune to guns of their own calibers at expected battle ranges, but the new super-heavy shell had significantly better penetrating power than older, lighter shells. None of the existing designs, from ''North Carolina'' to ''Iowa'', were proof against the 2,700-pound shell, and the General Board wanted the next design to be better protected. They requested proposals from the [[Bureau of Construction and Repair]] (C&R) that conformed to the 45,000-ton limit, armed with twelve 16-inch guns, and capable of 27-knots.{{sfn|Friedman|1985|p=329}} C&R initially responded with a design labeled "BB 65A", which used ''South Dakota'' as a baseline, but increased the length to accommodate the fourth main battery turret. Displacement was already over the limit at {{cvt|45435|LT}}, and the ship was only protected against the earlier {{cvt|2250|lb}} AP shell. The design staff estimated that more than {{cvt|2000|LT|0}} would be needed to protect the ship against the heavier shells. A second variant, "BB 65B" substituted twelve new {{cvt|6|in|0}} /47 guns in place of the existing twenty [[5"/38 caliber gun|{{cvt|5|in|0}}/38 cal guns]] for their [[secondary armament|secondary batteries]], but this increased displacement even further. Another pair of designs, "BB 65C" and "65D", adopted three quadruple main battery turrets instead of four triple turrets, which accounted for some {{cvt|1600|LT|0}} of weight savings. This latter pair mirrored the first set in the use of 5-inch and 6-inch secondaries. All of these designs were only protected against the 2,250 lb shell, but since "C" and "D" were below the displacement limit, C&R attempted to use the free weight to strengthen their armor with design "BB 65E". They realized that though the deck could be improved to provide a relatively narrow [[zone of immunity]] against [[plunging fire]], strengthening the [[belt armor]] to protect against the heavier shell would increase displacement to as much as {{cvt|55000|LT}}.{{sfn|Friedman|1985|p=329}} None of the initial proposals was deemed acceptable, and there were concerns about the feasibility of the quadruple turrets. Other guns were suggested, ranging from {{cvt|18|in|0}} guns to experimental 16-inch/56 caliber guns. C&R provided another series of studies beginning with "65F". Several of these proposals experimented with mixed quadruple, triple, and double turrets for either ten or eleven guns to save weight but still increase firepower over the nine-gun ''South Dakota''s. One proposal, "65J", suggested adopting a twelve-gun {{cvt|14|in|0}} ship that would be well-protected against the 2,700 lb AP shell. The 18-inch gun was ruled out after a design study demonstrated that only six of the guns could be mounted within the 45,000-ton displacement limit. By September 1939, one of the ten-gun variants had been selected, which carried two triple-turrets forward and a quadruple turret aft.{{sfn|Friedman|1985|pp=329β332}} ===Wartime designs=== [[File: Battleship Study - BB65 - Scheme 8 - (1940 Studies).jpg|thumb|right|One variant of the fast BB 65-8 design scheme from 1940]] The outbreak of World War II in September 1939 radically altered the constraints imposed on C&R. The remaining limits imposed by the Washington and London treaties were now removed entirely; the new ship would only be limited by logistical restrictions of existing naval infrastructure, most significantly the [[Panama Canal]] and available [[dry dock]]s. The Navy had been pushing for a third, wider set of locks for the Panama Canal since 1938, which was approved in 1940.{{sfn|Friedman|1985|p=332}} Nevertheless, some limitations still existed; the length and height of the BB65 designs had to take into account one of the shipyards at which they were to be built: the [[Brooklyn Navy Yard|New York Navy Yard]] slipways could not handle the construction of a ship more than {{convert|58000|LT|}}, and vessels built there had to be low enough to clear the [[Brooklyn Bridge]] at [[low tide]]. Consequently, the yard's number 4 dry dock had to be enlarged and the ships would be floated out rather than conventionally launched.{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|p=162}} In October, the General Board asked for new twelve-gun designs that were sufficiently armored, which was estimated could be accomplished on a displacement of around {{cvt|50000|LT}}. The Preliminary Design department at C&R responded with a design in mid-January 1940 that largely met the General Board's requirements, but displacement was set at {{cvt|51500|LT}}. An option to replace the standard 5-inch/38 secondaries with longer-barrel [[5"/54 caliber Mark 16 gun|5-inch/54 guns]] would add about {{cvt|2000|LT|0}} to the ships.{{sfn|Friedman|1985|p=332}} During a meeting on 16 February 1940, the Board requested a new series of proposals. These included a modified version of the nine-gun ''Iowa'' design that was two knots slower but better protected, an enlarged ''Iowa'' variant that maintained the 33-knot speed but displaced {{cvt|53500|LT}}, and several twelve-gun designs that had speeds ranging from 28 to 33 knots. These were given designations from "BB 65-1" to "BB 65-8". Displacement on these proposals increased to as much as {{cvt|67000|LT}}. All of these designs were armed with the 16-inch/50 gun, and were well protected against the super-heavy shell. During discussions in March, the decision was made to revert to externally applied belt armor, since the internal armor belts of the ''South Dakota'' and ''Iowa'' classes were more difficult to install and repair in the event of battle damage, and the weight savings associated with them no longer mattered now that displacement limits were gone. Two additional designs were produced in June: 65-9 and 65-10, which were 28-knot ships.{{sfn|Friedman|1985|pp=333β335}}{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|p=158}} By July, Navy's senior leadership still could not agree on design priorities, and disagreed sharply on points ranging from top speed to the cost and logistical challenges of the larger designs. The Board requested another round of design studies from Preliminary Design, which responded with nine-, ten-, and twelve-gun ships that, again, included slow and fast variants. The Board finally selected one of the designs, "BB 65-5A", which was armed with twelve guns on a displacement of {{cvt|57500|LT}}, and capable of 28 knots. The Board submitted the design to Knox, which he approved on 19 August. The ships were not actually authorized at that point, and design work continued. Because the battleships that would have received the BB-65 and BB-66 [[hull number]]s had been assigned to the ''Iowa'' class, the next design was labeled "BB 67-1". This design shortened the hull to {{cvt|880|ft}} at the waterline, likely to keep the length within the limits of the new [[slipway]]s being built at the [[Norfolk Navy Yard]] and the [[Philadelphia Navy Yard]]. This variant displacement increased to {{cvt|61200|LT}}. Further iterative improvements of the armor layout produced "BB 67-2", which had a slightly reduced displacement of {{cvt|59700|LT}}. This version incorporated an internal lower belt that provided additional protection against underwater shell hits.{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|p=158}}{{sfn|Friedman|1985|pp=336β337}} Detail work on the design continued well into 1941, which included replacing the original battery of light anti-aircraft guns, which were to be the ineffective {{cvt|1.1|in}} guns with [[Bofors 40 mm L/60 gun|Bofors {{cvt|40|mm}} guns]]. The [[searchlight]]s were rearranged, the navigational [[rangefinder]]s were removed, and the waterline hull length was increased slightly to {{cvt|890|ft}}. Displacement was increased slightly, to {{cvt|60500|LT}}, while the designers discovered that the propulsion system could be reduced in power, from {{convert|212000|to|172000|shp|lk=on}}, which allowed smaller and lighter propulsion machinery. These changes provided further savings in weight that allowed the bomb [[deck (ship)|deck]] to be extended further aft, and improvements to the light anti-aircraft battery. Protection of the propulsion shafts also changed from an extension of the belt and main armored deck aft of the citadel to armored tubes around the shafts, with the steering gears becoming its own armored compartment. This design was immune to the super-heavy shells when fired at ranges between {{convert|18000|and|31000|yd|m}}; their resistance to standard 16-inch AP shells extended to {{convert|16500|and|34500|yd|m}}. The final version of the design, dated March 1941, was designated "BB 67-4".{{sfn|Friedman|1985|pp=338β342}}{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|pp=163β164, 170, 173}} ==Construction and cancellation== [[File:USS Montana line drawing.svg|thumb|upright=2.5|Line drawing of a ''Montana''-class battleship]] The General Board planned to build four ships to the new design, which would have constituted a single battleship [[division (naval)|division]], but five were authorized by the Two-Ocean Navy Act on 19 July 1940. Work was intended to begin later that year, but shortages of the necessary steel caused delays. Work on the new locks for the Panama Canal was also halted in 1941, also owing to a shortage of steel due to the changing strategic and material priorities.{{sfn|Friedman|1980|p=100}}{{sfn|Friedman|1985|p=342}} The final contract design was issued in June 1942. Construction was authorized by the United States Congress and the projected date of completion was estimated to be somewhere between 1 July and 1 November 1945.{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|p=164}} In October 1942, work on the ships was again delayed by the order of some eighty destroyers, which were badly needed for the [[Battle of the Atlantic]] against German [[U-boat]]s that were raiding the supply [[convoy]]s to Britain.{{sfn|Friedman|1980|p=89}} Additional work on the design continued into 1942, including detail work on the anti-aircraft batteries to be carried. The [[Bureau of Ships]] suggested the armor decks could be increased in thickness, but these changes were not pursued.{{sfn|Friedman|1985|p=342}} All five ships were ultimately cancelled on 21 July 1943, as production priorities had shifted decisively toward aircraft carriers, destroyers, and [[submarine]]s.{{sfn|Friedman|1980|pp=89, 100}} The time spent refining the ''Montana'' design was not entirely a waste, as the arrangement of the propulsion system was modified for the {{sclass|Midway|aircraft carrier|1}}s.{{sfn|Friedman|1980|p=100}} ==Specifications== [[File:USS Montana bb67.jpg|thumb|An artist's impression of the ''Montana'' class]] === General characteristics === As authorized, the ''Montana''-class ships (design "BB 67-4") would have been {{cvt|890|ft}} [[long at the waterline]] and {{cvt|921|ft|3|in}} [[long overall]]. At the waterline, their [[beam (nautical)|beam]] was to have been {{cvt|115|ft}}, but their maximum beam increased to {{cvt|121|ft|2|in}}. The ships were to have had a [[standard displacement]] of {{cvt|60500|LT}}, with a designed trials displacement of {{cvt|68317|LT}}. [[Full load]] displacement increased to {{cvt|70965|LT}}, and emergency load grew further to {{cvt|71922|LT}}. At their standard displacement, the ships would have had a [[draft (hull)|draft]] of {{cvt|35|ft}}, while at emergency load, the draft increased to {{cvt|36|ft|10|in}}. The ships would have had a [[metacentric height]] of {{convert|8.2|ft}}. Their projected crew was to have amounted to 115 officers and 2,240 enlisted men; this grew to 189 officers and 2,789 enlisted men while serving as a [[flagship]].{{sfn|Friedman|1985|p=450}}{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|pp=171β175}} The ''Montana'' design shares many characteristics with the previous classes of American fast battleships starting from the ''North Carolina'' class, such as a [[bulbous bow]], a [[Double hull|triple bottom]] under the [[armored citadel]], and twin skegs in which the inner shafts were housed. The ''Montana''s{{'}} overall construction would have made extensive use of welding for joining structural plates and homogeneous armor, which saved weight compared to traditional [[rivet]]ing. Like all of the US interwar designs, the ''Montana''s would have had a [[flush deck|flush]] [[main deck]] that was steeply flared at the bow to reduce the amount of water taken on in heavy seas. The ''Montana'' class would have carried three aircraft for [[Aerial reconnaissance|reconnaissance]] and gunnery spotting. They would have been operated from catapults on the ship's fantail, as was standard for US battleship designs of the period.{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|pp=171β175}}{{sfn|Friedman|1980|pp=97β100}} ===Propulsion=== [[File:Montana-Klasse Modell.jpg|thumb|left|Model of the ''Montana'' class]] The propulsion plant of the ''Montana''s would have consisted of eight oil-fired [[Babcock & Wilcox]] two-drum boilers with a steam pressure of {{cvt|565|psi}} and a steam temperature of {{cvt|850|F}}. The boilers supplied steam to four geared [[steam turbine]]s, each driving one [[screw propeller]].{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|pp=174β175}} The boilers were vented through a pair of [[funnel (ship)|funnels]] placed on the centerline [[amidships]].{{sfn|Friedman|1980|p=100}} To meet the high electrical loads anticipated for the ships, the design was to have ten 1,250 kW ship service turbogenerators (SSTG), providing a total of 12,500 kW of non-emergency electrical power at 450 volts [[alternating current]]. The ships were also to be equipped with two 500 kW emergency diesel generators.{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|p=170}} The turbines were rated to produce {{cvt|43000|hp|MW}} each, for a total propulsive power of {{cvt|172000|hp|MW}}. The propulsion system was intended to produce a design speed of 28 knots at 70,500 tons displacement.{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|pp=174β175}} The ''Montana''s were designed to carry {{cvt|7500|LT}} of [[fuel oil]] and had a nominal range of {{cvt|15000|nmi|-2}} at {{cvt|15|knot}}. Two semi-balanced rudders were placed behind the two inboard screws. The inboard shafts were housed in skegs, which, while increasing hydrodynamic drag, substantially strengthened the stern structure.{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|p=171}} While less powerful than the {{cvt|212000|hp}} powerplant used by the ''Iowa''s, the ''Montana''{{'}}s plant enabled the machinery spaces to be considerably more subdivided, with extensive longitudinal and traverse subdivisions of the boiler and engine rooms. The machinery arrangement was reminiscent of that of the {{sclass|Lexington|aircraft carrier|4}}, with the boiler rooms flanking the two central turbine rooms for the inboard shafts, while the turbine rooms for the wing shafts were placed at the after end of the machinery spaces.{{sfn|Friedman|1985|p=339}} ''Montana''{{'}}s machinery arrangement combined with increased power would eventually be used on the ''Midway'' class.{{sfn|Friedman|1983|p=219}} === Armament === [[File:Iowa 16 inch Gun-EN.svg|thumb|right|Cutaway of a 16-inch gun turret]] The primary armament of a ''Montana''-class battleship would have been twelve [[16"/50 caliber Mark 7 gun|{{convert|16|in|mm|0|adj=on}}/50 caliber Mark 7 guns]], which were to be mounted in four three-gun turrets. The turrets were placed in two [[superfire|superfiring]] pairs, one forward and one aft.{{sfn|Friedman|1980|p=100}} The guns fired two types of shells: a {{cvt|2700|lb|kg}} armor-piercing shells and {{cvt|1900|lb|kg}} high capacity (HC) shells that carried a larger [[Shell (projectile)#High-explosive shells|high-explosive]] bursting charge. The shells had [[muzzle velocity|muzzle velocities]] of {{cvt|2500|ft/s}} and {{cvt|2690|ft/s}}, respectively. Firing AP shells at the maximum elevation of 45 degrees, the guns could reach targets out to {{cvt|42345|yd}}, while the lighter HC shells had a slightly reduced range of {{cvt|41604|yd}}. The shells had a flight time in excess of eighty seconds at those distances. At a realistic engagement distance of {{cvt|20000|yd}}, the AP shells could penetrate {{cvt|20|in|0}} of steel armor. The guns had a [[rate of fire]] of two shots per minute, and had a rate of train of four degrees per second. They had to be returned to 5 degrees elevation for reloading.{{sfn|Campbell|1985|pp=117β118}}{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|pp=310β311, 326β327}} The secondary armament for the ''Montana''-class ships was to be twenty {{cvt|5|in|0}}/54 cal Mark 16 [[dual-purpose gun]]s housed in ten two-gun turrets along the superstructure.{{sfn|Friedman|1980|p=100}} These guns, designed for the ''Montana'' class, were intended to improve the effective range over the shorter-barreled Mark 12 guns then in service. They fired a {{cvt|70|lb}} projectile at a muzzle velocity of {{cvt|2650|ft/s}} and had a maximum range of {{cvt|25909|yd}} against surface targets and a maximum ceiling of {{cvt|51600|ft}} against aerial targets. The guns had a rate of fire of fifteen shots per minute.{{sfn|Campbell|1985|p=143}} Each ship would have carried a light anti-aircraft armament of thirty-two [[Bofors 40 mm Automatic Gun L/60|{{cvt|40|mm}} Bofors guns]] and twenty [[Oerlikon 20 mm cannon|{{cvt|20|mm}} Oerlikon guns]]. The Bofors guns were to be carried in eight quadruple mounts, while the Oerlikons were to have been mounted individually, although the number of Bofors and Oerlikon mounts would likely have increased considerably had the ships been built.{{sfn|Friedman|1980|p=100}} The Bofors guns fired {{cvt|1.98|lb}} shells at a velocity of {{cvt|2890|ft/s}}, and they had a maximum ceiling of {{cvt|22800|ft}}. The Oerlikon guns were supplied with {{cvt|.27|lb}} shells, which they fired with a muzzle velocity of {{cvt|2740|to|2770|ft/s}}.{{sfn|Campbell|1985|p=147}} === Armor === [[File:USS Montana (BB-67) Stern.jpg|thumb|right|Stern view of a ''Montana''-class battleship model]] As designed, the ''Montana''s used the [[All or nothing (armour)|"all or nothing"]] armor philosophy, with most of the armor concentrated on the citadel that includes the machinery spaces, armament, magazines, and command and control facilities. The belt armor would be {{cvt|16.1|in|0}} Class A face-hardened [[Krupp armor|Krupp cemented]] (K.C.) armor mounted on {{cvt|1|in}} [[Special Treatment Steel]] (STS), inclined at 19 degrees. Below the waterline, the belt tapered to {{cvt|10.2|in|0}}. To protect against potential underwater shell hits, the ships would have a separate Class B homogeneous Krupp-type armor lower belt, {{cvt|8.5|in|0}} by the magazines and {{cvt|7.2|in|0}} by the machinery, that would also have served as one of the [[torpedo bulkhead]]s, inclined at 10 degrees; this lower belt would taper to 1 inch at the triple bottom and be mounted on {{cvt|0.75|in}} STS. The ends of the armored citadel would be closed by Class A traverse bulkheads {{cvt|18|in|0}} thick in the front and {{cvt|15.25|in}} in the aft.{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|p=173}} The deck armor would be in three layers: the first consisting of {{cvt|0.75|in}} STS laminated on {{cvt|1.5|in}} STS for a total of {{cvt|2.25|in}} STS weather deck, the second consisting of {{cvt|5.8|in|0}} Class B laminated on {{cvt|1.25|in|0}} STS for a total of {{cvt|7.05|in|0}}, and a third {{cvt|0.625|in|0}} splinter deck. Over the magazines, the splinter deck would be replaced by a {{cvt|1|in}} STS third deck to protect from spalling. Total armor thickness on the centerline would therefore have been 9.925 in (252 mm) over the citadel and 10.3 in (262 mm) thick over the magazines. The outboard section would have had {{cvt|6.1|in|0}} Class B laminated on {{cvt|1.25|in|0}} STS for a total of {{cvt|7.35|in|0}} second deck and a {{cvt|0.75|in}} splinter deck. The total thickness for the outboard section of the deck would have been 8.1 in (206 mm).{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|p=173}} The main batteries were designed to have very heavy protection, with turret faces having {{cvt|18|in|0}} Class B mounted on {{cvt|4.5|in|0}} STS, resulting in {{cvt|22.5|in|0}} thick laminated plate. The turret sides were to have up to {{cvt|10|in|0}} Class A and turret roofs would have {{cvt|9.15|in|0}} Class B. The barbettes would have been protected by up to {{cvt|21.3|in|0}} Class A forward and {{cvt|18|in|0}} aft, while the [[conning tower]] sides would have {{cvt|18|in|0}} Class A.{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|pp=173β174}} ''Montana''{{'}}s torpedo protection system design incorporated lessons learned from those of previous US fast battleships, and was to consist of four internal longitudinal torpedo bulkheads behind the outer hull shell plating that would form a multi-layered "bulge". Two of the compartments would be liquid loaded in order to disrupt the gas bubble of a torpedo warhead detonation while the bulkheads would elastically deform and absorb the energy. Due to the external armor belt, the geometry of the "bulge" was more similar to that of the ''North Carolina'' class rather than that of the ''South Dakota'' and ''Iowa'' classes. The design of the ''Montana''{{'}}s torpedo defense system addressed a potential vulnerability of the ''South Dakota''-type system, where caisson tests in 1939 showed that extending the main armor belt that tapers to the keel to act as one of the torpedo bulkheads had detrimental flooding effects due to the belt's rigidity. ''South Dakota''{{'}}s and ''Iowa''{{'}}s systems were modified in light of these tests, and ''Iowa''{{'}}s system was also further reinforced.{{sfn|Jurens|Morss|2016|pp=289β294}} Like on the ''South Dakota'' and ''Iowa'' classes, the two outer compartments would be liquid loaded, while two inner ones be void with the lower Class B armor belt to form the holding bulkhead between them. The greater beam of the ''Montana''s would allow a higher system depth of {{cvt|20.5|ft|2}} compared to {{cvt|18.5|ft|2}} of the ''North Carolina''s.{{sfn|Garzke|Dulin|1995|pp=168β169}} == Ships == {| class="wikitable plainrowheaders" |+ Construction data |- ! scope="col" | Ship name{{sfn|Friedman|1980|p=100}} ! scope="col" | {{abbr|Hull no.|hull number}}{{sfn|Friedman|1980|p=100}} ! scope="col" | Builder{{sfn|Friedman|1980|p=100}} ! scope="col" | Authorization{{sfn|Friedman|1980|p=100}} ! scope="col" | Suspension{{sfn|Friedman|1980|p=100}} ! scope="col" | Cancellation{{sfn|Friedman|1980|p=100}} |- ! scope="row" | ''Montana'' ! scope="row" | BB-67 | rowspan="2" |[[Philadelphia Navy Yard]], [[Philadelphia]], Pennsylvania | rowspan="5" | 19 July 1940 | rowspan="5" | April 1942 | rowspan="5" | 21 July 1943 |- ! scope="row" | ''Ohio'' ! scope="row" | BB-68 |- ! scope="row" | ''Maine'' ! scope="row" | BB-69 | rowspan="2" |[[New York Navy Yard]], [[New York City]], New York |- ! scope="row" | ''New Hampshire'' ! scope="row" | BB-70 |- ! scope="row" | ''Louisiana'' ! scope="row" | BB-71 |[[Norfolk Navy Yard]], [[Norfolk, Virginia]] |} ==See also== * [[Maximum battleship]] - an unrelated series of designs produced at the request of United States senator Benjamin Tillman in the 1910s and 1920s ==Footnotes== {{Reflist|20em}} == References == * {{cite book | last = Campbell | first = John | year = 1985 | title = Naval Weapons of World War Two | publisher = Naval Institute Press | location = Annapolis | isbn=0-87021-459-4 }} * {{cite book |last1=Garzke |first1=William H. |last2=Dulin | first2=Robert O. Jr. |title=Battleships: United States Battleships 1935β1992 |year=1995 |edition=Rev. and updated |location=Annapolis |publisher=Naval Institute Press |isbn=978-0-87021-099-0 |url=https://archive.org/stream/battleshipsunite00garz |name-list-style=amp }} * {{cite book | last = Friedman | first = Norman | chapter = United States of America | pages = 86β166 | editor1-last = Gardiner | editor1-first = Robert | editor2-last = Chesneau | editor2-first = Roger | date = 1980 | title = Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1922β1946 | location = Annapolis | publisher = Naval Institute Press | isbn = 978-0-87021-913-9 |author-link=Norman Friedman }} * {{cite book |last=Friedman |first=Norman |title=U.S. Aircraft Carriers: An Illustrated Design History |publisher=Naval Institute Press |location=Annapolis |isbn=0-87021-739-9 |year=1983 }} * {{cite book |last=Friedman |first=Norman |title=U.S. Battleships: An Illustrated Design History |location=Annapolis |publisher=Naval Institute Press |year=1985 |isbn=0-87021-715-1 }} * {{cite journal |last1=Jurens |first1=W.J. |last2=Morss |first2=Strafford |year=2016 |title=The Washington Naval Treaty and the Armor and Protective Plating of USS Massachusetts |journal=Warship International |publisher=International Naval Research Organization |location=Toledo |volume=53 |issue=4 }} * {{cite book |last=Kuehn |first=John T. |title=Agents of Innovation: The General Board and the Design of the Fleet that Defeated the Japanese Navy |date=2008 |location=Annapolis |publisher=Naval Institute Press |isbn=978-1-61251-405-5 }} ==Further reading== * Muir, Malcolm Jr. (October 1990). "Rearming in a Vacuum: United States Navy Intelligence and the Japanese Capital Ship Threat, 1936β1945". ''The Journal of Military History'', Vol. 54, No. 4. * {{cite book |last=Stille |first=Mark |title=Super-Battleships of World War II |year=2022 |location=Oxford |publisher=Osprey |isbn=9781472846709 }} * {{cite journal |last1=Wright|first1=Christopher C.|title=Question 7/81 |journal=Warship International |date=1982 |volume=XIX |issue=2 |pages=198β202|issn=0043-0374}} *{{cite journal |last1=Wright|first1=Christopher C.|title=Question 1/58: Concerning the Apparent Omission of an Armor Backing Compound Behind the Main Armor Belt on the Design for the USS ''Montana'' (BB-67) Class Battleships |journal= Warship International |date=March 2021 |volume=LVIII |issue=1 |pages=27β36 |issn=0043-0374}} *{{cite journal|last1=Wright|first1=Christopher C.|title=Question 1/58: Concerning Cement Backing for Armor on ''Montana'' (BB-67) Class Battleships|issn=0043-0374 |journal=Warship International |date=June 2021 |volume=LVIII |issue=2 |pages=118β120}} *{{cite journal|last1=Wright|first1=Christopher C.|title=Question 9/58: Concerning Alternative Designs to the ''Montana'' (BB-67) Class|issn=0043-0374 |journal=Warship International |date=June 2021 |volume=LVIII |issue=2 |pages=116β118}} *{{cite journal|last1=Wright|first1=Christopher C.|title=Question 9/58: Concerning Alternative Designs to the ''Montana'' (BB-67) Class|issn=0043-0374 |journal=Warship International |date=September 2021 |volume=LVIII |issue=3 |pages=185β192}} == External links == {{Commons category}} * {{cite web|url=https://www.history.navy.mil/our-collections/photography/us-navy-ships/battleships/montana-class-bb-67-71.html|publisher=Naval History and Heritage Command|title=Montana Class (BB-67 through BB-71) 1941 Building Program. Construction Cancelled 1943|website=history.navy.mil}} * {{cite web|url=https://warshipprojects.com/2017/03/17/montana-class-genesis/|title=Montana Class Genesis|date=17 March 2017|website=warshipprojects.com}} * {{cite web|url=http://www.navsource.org/archives/01/67.htm|title=NavSource Online: Battleship Photo Archive BB-67 USS Montana|website=navsource.org}} {{Montana class battleship}} {{Late battleships}} {{WWII US ships}} {{Featured article}} [[Category:Montana-class battleships| ]] [[Category:Battleship classes]] [[Category:Cancelled ships of the United States Navy]]
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