Английская Википедия:Ardent-class destroyer
Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use dmy dates Шаблон:Use British English
Шаблон:Infobox ship imageШаблон:Infobox ship class overviewШаблон:Infobox ship characteristicsThe three Ardent-class torpedo boat destroyers ("Thornycroft Шаблон:Convert ") were ordered by the British Admiralty on 12 October 1893 [1] and served with the Royal Navy. Built by Thornycroft for a contract price of £110,520 for all three vessels, they displaced 301 tons fully laden, and were Шаблон:Convert long overall.
As part of the 1893–1894 Naval Estimates, the British Admiralty placed orders for 36 torpedo-boat destroyers, all to be capable of Шаблон:Convert, the "27-Knotters", as a follow-on to the six prototype "26-knotters" ordered in the previous 1892–1893 Estimates. As was typical for torpedo craft at the time, the Admiralty left detailed design to the builders, laying down only broad requirements.[2][3]
The Ardent-class were derived from the preceding Шаблон:Convert Daring class,[4] but were larger and more powerfully engined. It was originally intended that they would be armed with one 12-pounder quick-firing gun forward and three 6-pounder guns, mounted on the broadside and aft, and three 18-inch torpedo tubes, one fixed in a bow mount and two on a revolving mount abaft the two funnels;[5] however the fixed bow tube fitted in the preceding '26-knotter' type had subsequently been found to throw up too much spray and was removed, and in October 1893 it was agreed that the bow tube should be omitted, giving "a clean sharp stem with no projections"[6] and instead two extra 6-pounder guns were installed en echelon amidships. These three ships - and the similar three Charger Class destroyers (ordered from Yarrow in the same week) - were the first TBDs to omit this fixed bow tube. They carried a complement of 2 officers and 48 ratings (comprising 20 deck department and 28 engine room compartment).[7]
These three ship met the speed requirement of 27 knots for which they were designed. Over the measured mile and in three-hour trials they averaged the following power (ihp) and speed:
Name | Trials ihp (measured mile) |
Trials speed (knots) |
R.P.M. | Trials ihp (three hours) |
Trials speed (knots) |
R.P.M. | Displacement (tons) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ardent | 4,343 | 27.84 | 399 | 4,306 | 27.973 | 396.4 | 245 |
Boxer | 4,487 | 29.076 | 412 | 4,543 | 29.175 | 412.7 | 243 |
Bruiser | 4,681 | 27.809 | 372 | 4,257 | 27.97 | 372.8 | 259 |
At her second preliminary trial, Ardent reached 29 knots with 407 r.p.m., the engines developing 5,044 ihp. However, Boxer was the fastest British destroyer among all the 27-knotters, her best run over the measured mile being 30¾ knots.
In September 1913 the Admiralty re-classed all the remaining 27-knotter destroyers as A Class; this applied to both Boxer and Bruiser, although the Ardent herself had already been scrapped. Bruiser was sold for scrap eight months later, prior to the start of WW1, while Boxer was the oldest destroyer in service in the Royal Navy during the First World War, although the oldest destroyer-type vessel was the large 'torpedo boat/torpedo boat chaser' TB.81 (ex-Swift), a destroyer precursor.
Vessels in class
Name | Builder | Yard Number |
First cost |
Laid down | Launched | Completed | Fate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ardent | John I. Thornycroft | 297 | £39,555 | December 1893 | 16 October 1894 | 25 March 1895 | Sold 10 October 1911 |
Boxer | John I. Thornycroft | 298 | £39,505 | February 1894 | 28 November 1894 | June 1895 | Sunk in collision 8 February 1918 |
Bruiser | John I. Thornycroft | 299 | £39,406 | April 1894 | 27 February 1895 | June 1895 | Sold 26 May 1914 |
Notes
Bibliography
- Шаблон:Cite book
- Шаблон:Cite Colledge2006
- Шаблон:Cite book
- Шаблон:Cite book
- Шаблон:Cite book
- Шаблон:Cite book
- Шаблон:Cite book
Шаблон:Ardent class destroyer Шаблон:A class destroyer (1913)
- ↑ Lyon, op. cit., p.43
- ↑ Chesneau and Kolesnik 1979, p. 87.
- ↑ Manning 1961, p. 39.
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ David Lyon, The First Destroyers, p.98.
- ↑ David Lyon, The First Destroyers, p.206.