Joat42 wrote:Relax wrote:Blue highlighted flies directly in the face of reality. Chuck up one more Honorversism. In catastrophic damage, the joints almost never fail as fasteners are always doubled up for crack propagation requirements due to fatigue. In some rare instances it is possible, but overall? No. Only reason welded armor today on ships is preferred over fastened armor is because of a little thing called water. It helps keep the ship afloat. Tanks on the other hand are welded because they are so thin that adding all that extra structural mass for fasteners would literally add "tons" to the design. Welding and grown in place ARE lighter. What it is NOT is "vastly improved integrity against damage." In many instances, allowing the "ends" of a structural member to "float" via fasteners is actually MORE damage tolerant than welding as it allows more DEFLECTION and therefore more ENERGY ABSORPTION.
Anyways, for anyone actually interested in reality
It all depends on the material the armor is constructed of and how it behaves under stress and how it absorbs energy. Theoretically you could use cotton for armor, it just have to be a very very thick layer but there would be no need for joints and fasteners.
IIRC with iron-clads the rivets could be a weak spot. Repeated battering could break the rivets (or hits on them could cause them to energetically spall into the interior) eventually causing plates to fall off, without ever being pierced.
(Of course once the attack changed from very heavy, but relatively slow, spherical iron balls to high velocity armor piercing shot, or shells, the rivets weren't your main concern anymore)