That's kinda what I was getting at. Correct me if I am wrong, but at the time of the 2nd Naval Battle of Guadalcanal, the US was down to 1 operational fleet carrier in the Pacific (
Enterprise).
Saratoga was at Pearl Harbor repairing torpedo damage until 12 Nov 1942,
Wasp had been sunk in Sept 1942,
Hornet sunk in Oct 1942 and
Essex did not reach the Pacific until the summer of 1943 so for about a 6 month period, the US was down to 1 or 2 carriers in the Pacific (+ Henderson Field), with torpedoes that were borderline useless and shipborne dive bombers that couldn't carry heavy AP loads - seems like an opportune time to use the most powerful battleships in the world. If, and I say again if, the IJN had benched the
Kirishima,
Hiei and some of the lesser ships to find fuel for the
Yamato and
Musashi, I wonder how the campaign would have turned out. The odds were never going to get any better for the IJN.
Thought this article was pretty good discussing the effectiveness of anti-aircraft fire.
During World War II, aircraft are depicted as being the prime defense against other aircraft. However, was naval anti-aircraft firepower just as effective?
www.navygeneralboard.com