ORIGINAL: vahauser
Here is some more hard data. The cruisers at Surigao Strait fired faster than the battleships. The Louisville opened fire at 0351 (2 minutes before the battleships) at the short range of 15,600 yards. Within minutes, the Yamashiro was a burning wreck reduced to 12 knots. Yamashiro was targeted by 4 battleships and 8 cruisers. A few minutes later, the Yamashiro was reduced to 10 knots and was burning so brightly that she was a sitting duck target. The HMAS Shropshire opened fire at 0356 and fired 32 8"-gun salvoes in 13 minutes. The Phoenix was ordered to fire "rapid and continuous" for a few minutes until being ordered to slow down to conserve ammunition. While firing "rapid and continuous, the Phoenix was firing 6"-gun salvoes 4 per minute.
Note that the crusier data are more telling than the BB data. The BBs just can't get a shell in the air before the last fired reaches the target. But the crusiers can, as the above data show. 4 rounds per minute is a round every 15 seconds; 32 in 13 minutes is one every 24 seconds. The travel time had to be more than a minute at those ranges. Clearly, multiple shells were in the air from each gun.
Here again, the message seems clear. Even firing "rapid and continuous" at a sitting-duck target at very short range (the firing range got down to around 13,000 yards before the burning hulk of the Yamashiro drifted away south to sink), the 6" cruiser Phoenix was only capable of 4 rounds per minute. The 8" cruiser Shropshire was capable of of around 2.5 rounds per minute of rapid fire. Both 4 rounds per minute for 6" naval guns and 2.5 rounds per minute for 8" naval guns are below the theoretical maximum rates of fire for those guns. And that is "rapid and continuous" fire. And also note that only a few minutes of this fire could be managed before orders to slow down to conserve ammunition were given.
Bottom line: you can basically ignore theoretical rates of fire. It doesn't matter that the Bismark can theoretically fire 3 rounds per minute and the Yamashiro can only theoretically fire 1.3 rounds per minute because in actual combat both ships will be firing less than 1 round per minute anyway. And in the rough seas of the North Atlantic in a battle at long range (as opposed to the ideal short-range battle conditions at Surigao Strait), the big guns might only be capable of 0.5 rounds per minute, or even less.
My rough estimate of practical sustained rates of fire in actual combat (at standard combat ranges) based on the above data from Surigao Strait:
Battleships = 0.5 to 1.0 rpm (standard combat range = 25,000 to 30,000 yards)
8" Cruisers = 1.0 to 1.5 rpm (standard combat range = 20,000 to 25,000 yards)
6" cruisers = 1.5 to 2.0 rpm (standard combat range = 15,000 to 20,000 yards)
The WitP rate of fire data were relative values, not theoretical. You're arguing a non-issue.



