Some kinds of naval warships have belt armor thinner than actually necessary for protection against projectiles. This is common especially with battlecruisers and aircraft carriers to reduce their weight, thus increasing their acceleration and speed. For battlecruisers, sacrificing armor for speed and firepower was a valid tradeoff as long as they were pitting against smaller weaker opponents like cruisers whose guns were unable penetrate the reduced armor of battlecruisers. Another possible reason is to meet treaty restrictions on ship displacement; one such method is
all-or-nothing armoring, where belt armor is stripped from areas deemed non-vital to the functioning of the ship in battle. Agility gained from such processes is a great asset to offensive warships, which seek to quickly bring their heavy striking power to the enemy.
Aircraft carriers Aircraft carriers typically had even thinner belt armor than battlecruisers and cruisers, despite being expected to face the threat of dive bombers and torpedo bombers more so than other warships. The
Washington Naval Treaty and subsequent treaties all imposed tonnage limitations that made it extremely difficult to build a fleet carrier that was fast and could carry a large airwing, unless protection was sacrificed. Unlike battleships and battlecruisers, aircraft carriers were not expected to face torpedoes and naval artillery from other surface ships, instead being deployed at a stand-off distance while being escorted by a screen of destroyers and cruisers. The
fleet carrier's main hope of survival were fighters (often organized into a
combat air patrol) which aimed to intercept enemy planes before they could get through. For point defense, there were anti-aircraft guns on the escorting ships and the carrier itself, while the carrier's high speed and maneuverability (see below - originally meant to facilitate
launch and recovery of its airwing) would enable them to dodge torpedoes. In carriers, the maneuverability is exploited when deploying and recovering aircraft. Since planes take off and land most easily when flying into the wind, the aircraft carrier steams rapidly into the wind in both maneuvers, making take-off and landing safer and easier. To this end, nearly all fleet aircraft carriers have had speeds of 30 knots or more: for example, the
sister ships and , the second and third aircraft carriers to enter the
U.S. Navy, in 1927. The emphasis on speed over armor meant that carriers had a much lower survivability, such that a damaged carrier could not remain in the combat zone, unlike a battleship which usually has sufficient armor and buoyancy to survive the initial hits and able to withstand further attacks. For instance, was twice sent home after being crippled by single torpedo hits. The
Shōkaku-class (two members) and
Taihō were the first Japanese carriers to have a
torpedo belt system as they were designed free of treaty tonnage limitations. However, the torpedo defense system failed to save either of these three ships. During the
Battle of the Philippine Sea,
Shōkaku was refueling aircraft (an extremely vulnerable state for any carrier to be caught) when struck by several submarine-launched torpedoes, the impact which shattered and ignited the aviation fuel mains, leading to an uncontrolled hangar fire which set off stored ammunition. The weight of ''Taihō's
armor immersed her hull so deeply that her lower hangar deck was barely above the load waterline and the bottoms of her two elevator wells (which formed the roofs of her fore and aft aviation fuel tanks) were actually below the waterline and thus more vulnerable to shocks from underwater hits; at Philippine Sea a single submarine-fired torpedo hit on Taihō
ruptured two aviation fuel tanks which spread avgas vapors through the hangar; hours later these fumes was eventually ignited by a spark from an electric generator, triggering a series of catastrophic explosions. Having sustained heavy aircraft losses at Philippine Sea, Zuikaku
was being sacrificed as a decoy at Cape Engaño, where she had too few aircraft to form an effective combat air patrol, so she was overwhelmed and sunk by the attacking dive bombers and torpedo bombers. The Shinano'', originally laid down as the third member of the s, had structural weakness in her hull, being hastily constructed near the end of the war and having been equipped with incomplete belt armor and unsealed watertight compartments, at the time of her sinking by an American submarine. == See also ==