Two ASW Exercises
Posted: Fri Apr 08, 2022 10:38 am
I played a couple of scenarios from the Community Pack a few weeks ago and thought I might as well review them. The first was ASW Exercise 1971 (Spanish Coast). Franco's Navy has recently taken delivery of the former US WW2 light carrier Cabot, re-named Dedalo. As an exercise, she sails from W of the Balearic Islands to Barcelona with four destroyers for escort and three diesel subs have to try to 'sink' her en route. You can play either side. The briefing says that the escorts win if Dedalo reaches port without damage and the subs win by damaging her.
None of the escorts have sonar with a range of more than 3nm and their ASW torpedoes are outranged by the subs' weapons. The carrier has some choppers, but they have no buoys and only two have dipping sonar and a magnetic anomaly detector. Under the circumstances and knowing that the subs would be randomly placed, I figured that the best strategy was just to make for Barcelona at Flank. Chances were that no sub would be encountered and, if one was, it would have a very small window for an attack.
This approach worked, though it won't always due to the random factor. Unfortunately, 'getting to Barcelona' is imprecisely defined (there are some area markers) and, no matter what I tried, nothing yielded any VP. So I 'won' in real terms, but the score remained at zero.
Played it again as the subs. The random placement left two boats about halfway, with the third in a decent position to sail on the surface to the entrance to Barcelona Harbour and wait there. As it happened, the first pair of subs managed an intercept, but were handicapped by poor sensors, even at periscope depth. They sank the destroyer Marques de Ensenada, but this scored no points. Both subs were then lost, probably to choppers, for a punishing 100 VP each.
The third sub, the Isaac Peral, had better sonar, made her intercept outside Barcelona and sank the carrier with five torpedoes, taking two choppers down for good measure. She then dove and escaped. Appallingly, this scored no points whatever, so it was officially a Major Defeat, with a score of -200. This strongly suggests that there is no way the player can score points for either side.
Overall, a half-decent scenario, but the scoring needs to be sorted-out.
None of the escorts have sonar with a range of more than 3nm and their ASW torpedoes are outranged by the subs' weapons. The carrier has some choppers, but they have no buoys and only two have dipping sonar and a magnetic anomaly detector. Under the circumstances and knowing that the subs would be randomly placed, I figured that the best strategy was just to make for Barcelona at Flank. Chances were that no sub would be encountered and, if one was, it would have a very small window for an attack.
This approach worked, though it won't always due to the random factor. Unfortunately, 'getting to Barcelona' is imprecisely defined (there are some area markers) and, no matter what I tried, nothing yielded any VP. So I 'won' in real terms, but the score remained at zero.
Played it again as the subs. The random placement left two boats about halfway, with the third in a decent position to sail on the surface to the entrance to Barcelona Harbour and wait there. As it happened, the first pair of subs managed an intercept, but were handicapped by poor sensors, even at periscope depth. They sank the destroyer Marques de Ensenada, but this scored no points. Both subs were then lost, probably to choppers, for a punishing 100 VP each.
The third sub, the Isaac Peral, had better sonar, made her intercept outside Barcelona and sank the carrier with five torpedoes, taking two choppers down for good measure. She then dove and escaped. Appallingly, this scored no points whatever, so it was officially a Major Defeat, with a score of -200. This strongly suggests that there is no way the player can score points for either side.
Overall, a half-decent scenario, but the scoring needs to be sorted-out.