the 2 pdr gun system was prone to jamming due to use of cloth belts.
(Missed this post last week).
The WWI era 2Pdr Mk II and the Mk II* used cloth belts, the 2 Pdr Mk II*C used metal link belts, as did the Mk VIII used in all the multiple pom-pom mountings, along with many singles.
Their heavy AA guns were still in transition with the 4.5" being the preferred standard while there were still 4", 4.7" and 5.25" guns in service complicating things.
It is more complicated, much more complicated. Firstly 5.25" wasn't an HAA gun, it's a dual purpose weapon, intended as the main battery on light cruisers (the Didos were
not CLAAs), or the secondary on battleships - that's why it was retained in production and development throughout the war. There were multiple 4.7" designs: the Nelsons and Courageous had 4.7"/40 high angle (90 deg) HAA guns, meanwhile 4.7"/45 was the preferred low angle destroyer mounting, with elevation of between 30 and 60deg depending on the mounting. There was limited introduction of a new 4.7"/50 (50deg) enclosed twin in the L and N classes immediately prewar, but production of the 4.7"/50 turret conflicted with 5.25" production and was not repeated. 4.5"/45 (80 deg) was a new development as the preferred HAA gun in the new carriers and late war replaced the 4.7"/45 as destroyer armament in the
Battles and
Darings, giving them a DP armament. The 4"/45 (80 deg) was the HAA armament on interwar battleships and cruisers, where it was in the process of being doubled from singles to twins as part of the fleet AA upgrade programme; it was also the preferred armament for lighter escorts and some destroyers, though opposed by the gun-club admirals who felt it wasn't heavy enough for anti-surface use.
That last point is probably the primary problem with RN HAA development between the wars, there was a strong clique who wanted all destroyer guns optimised for anti-destroyer use with heavy shells and low barrel axes, while HAA demanded lighter shells for sustained fire and high barrel axes for high angle fire.
The other thing the RN failed to do was design and build a good fire control system for any of this. They were definitely trying but most of what got put in service was a half assed lash up of a system cobbled together on limited funding.
HACS wasn't a lash-up, it was just limited by a conclusion in the early 20s that current technology wasn't up to tachometric systems. Its primary weakness was an inability to deal with diving targets, but that was true of most HAA control systems, even the tachometric ones struggled. A replacement tachometric system was under development in the late 30s, but had to be cancelled on the outbreak of war. With the introduction of the Gyro Rate Unit in 1940 the HACS became effectively a tachometric system. The pre-war fleet AA upgrade programme included additional HACS (where able) as much as additional guns.
Their destroyer force was expected to avoid air attack mainly by maneuver with the AA battery being severely lacking.
Name a destroyer class in service at the outbreak of war with a better LAA suite than a quad pom-pom and 2 quad .50 Vickers? The US had a better HAA gun in the 5"/38, but was behind in LAA. The RN suffered from having evaluated dive-bombing as ineffectual just before the USMC got it sorted out, followed by the Luftwaffe and IJNAF. Against level bombing manoeuvre was effective, and essential vs torpedo attack.
This brings up a second problem they--and every navy except the USN in 1939-40 had: The doctrine for defense against air attack was each ship defending itself with a combination of its AA battery and maneuvering independently as necessary. The USN alone at that time had a doctrine in place of using ring formations and the entire formation operating in unison against an air attack.
"The 1939 Fighting Instructions envisaged a close AA screen to add to the anti-aircraft firepower of the main body, and also to hamper torpedo attacks. The large new destroyers, from the ‘Tribals’ on, were particularly suited to this role; the ‘Tribals’ had been conceived for it. These destroyers would also constitute a sonar (Asdic) screen for the main body. Ships had to be separated sufficiently that pom-pom rounds fired by main body ships would not damage close escorts: minimum safe separation was set by the self-destruction range of the pom-pom shells.
On receipt of air warning, the main body would manoeuvre so as to bring its most powerful anti-aircraft firepower to bear and to present aircraft with the most difficult target."
Friedman,
Naval AA Guns and Gunnery
As for the USN's circle formations, there was considerable debate over them which wasn't settled until PAC-10 was issued in June 1943. Additionally they're primarily an AA formation, whereas RN formations had to make greater allowance for the ASW role of the escort and the increased likelihood of surface action in the Med.
with the exception of the USN, every navy relied on drills for AA practice but had little or no actual live fire practice against aerial targets other than occasionally firing at a towed target sleeve flying parallel to the ship. This was very unrealistic and the US, too, was doing this up until drones became available in late 1938.
The RN actually had drones in service as of 1935 - the De Havilland Queen Bee, however the Queen Bee was fairly limited and didn't have the ability to conduct diving attacks.
Against the Japanese or for that matter the less experienced Luftwaffe, the RN didn't stand much of a chance at sea when attacked by large numbers of aircraft. Crete proved that, just as the IJN's Indian Ocean excursion did, or the sinking of PoW and Repulse. Individual ships defending themselves stood little chance against a determined air attack.
Crete - counter-invasion operations and then an evacuation of 16,500 troops out of 28,000 to Egypt, and unlike Dunkirk 350 miles from the nearest friendly airfield, so little air cover. To which problem Cunningham remarked “It will take three years to build a new fleet … it will take three hundred years to build a new tradition”
21st May: 4 hour air attack on Force C (RAdm King,
Naiad, Perth, Calcutta, Juno,
Kandahar,
Kingston, and
Nubian), starting at 0630,
Kandahar counts being targeted by 5 waves in an hour and a half, but neither she nor her consort
Kingston are hit. First loss is
Juno at 1300, hit by three high-altitude bombs while trying to evade. Carlisle joins at 1400.
22nd May: Force C again engages invasion fleet north of the island.
Calcutta shoots herself dry defending the damaged
Naiad from air attack.
Greyhound - sunk by 8 Ju 87 while trying to rejoin Force A1 after detaching to finish off a caique.
Gloucester and
Fiji - sent to cover the rescue of survivors from
Greyhound, RAdm King hadn't realised they were almost out of AA ammo, both sunk while attempting to rejoin.
Fiji was down to firing starshell by the end.
Kelly and
Kashmir - three K class DDs (the other was
Kipling) caught on their own by 24 Ju 87s, the only HAA able to bear being a twin 4" on each. In the next three hours
Kipling rescues 279 men from the water while under continuous air attack
28th May
Imperial, steering gear disabled by near misses, crew taken off and scuttled by
Hotspur.
29th May
Hereward, sunk after being separated from Force B with 450 troops from Heraklion aboard.
1st June
Calcutta (alone with
Coventry), dive-bombed out of the sun by two Ju-88s and sunk
Operation C - as noted elsewhere in the thread, the only losses were to ships caught in pairs with no air support by large numbers of dive bombers.
Force Z - the screen wasn't large enough, or capable enough, with only four old destroyers,
Electra and
Express (1931 programme, 4x1x4.7" IX on CP XVIII, 40 degrees, 1x12 Pdr 20 cwt, no Pom-Pom) ,
Vampire (1916 programme, 4x1x4" Mk V on CP II, 30 degrees, 2x1x2 pdr) and
Tenedos (1917 programme, 3 (or 2?) 4" Mk IV on PIX, 20 degrees, 1x1x 2 Pdr), while
PoW was suffering from tropicalization issues affecting her HACS they might have fixed with a few days in dock. Meanwhile
Repulse had possibly the worst AA fit of any capital ship in the fleet (6x1x4" Mk V, 2x4x 2 Pdr)
On top of everything else,
Tenedos wasn't with the screen during the attack, having been detached due to her fuel state. And then when the attack started, Philips didn't order up his waiting fighter screen, while
PoW was incredibly unlucky to take a hit early in the battle which knocked out almost her entire AA capability bar the single Bofors on the quarterdeck.
None of these are typical operations. What Crete and Operation C show repeatedly is the vulnerability of ships operating alone or in very small groups, while Force Z lost most of its already limited HAA to a single golden BB. I really don't see any evidence that any other navy would have performed better in similar circumstances.