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词条 Nelson-class cruiser
释义

  1. Design and description

  2. Ships

  3. Service

  4. Notes

  5. References

  6. External links

{{Infobox ship image
Ship image=HMS Nelson (AWM 302451).jpgShip caption=HMS Nelson anchored in Hobart, 1884
}}{{Infobox ship class overview
Name=NelsonBuilders=UK}}Class before=HMS ShannonClass after=Imperieuse-class cruiserCost=Built range=1874–81In service range=1878–1910In commission range=1878–1904Total ships completed=2Total ships scrapped=2
}}{{Infobox ship characteristics
Hide header=Header caption=Ship type=Armoured cruiser7473|-|7630|LT|t|}}280|ft|m|abbr=on}} (p/p)60|ft|m|abbr=on}}25|ft|9|in|m|1|abbr=on}}Ship propulsion=2 shafts, 2 compound-expansion steam engines14|kn|lk=in}}Ship range=Ship power=Ship complement=56010|in|adj=on|sigfig=3}} rifled, muzzle-loading guns (RML)
  • 8 × {{convert|9|in|adj=on|sigfig=3}} RML guns
  • 6 × 20 pdr guns
6|-|9|in|mm|abbr=on|0}}Ship sail plan=Barque-riggedShip notes=
}}

The Nelson-class cruisers were a pair of armoured cruisers built in the 1870s for the Royal Navy.

Design and description

The Nelson-class ships were designed by Nathaniel Barnaby, Chief Constructor of the Royal Navy, as enlarged and improved versions of HMS Shannon to counter the threat of enemy armoured ships encountered abroad. The ships were not much liked in service as they were deemed too weakly armoured to fight ironclad battleships and not fast enough to catch commerce-raiding cruisers. They were laid out as central battery ironclads with the armament concentrated amidships.[1]

The Nelsons had a length between perpendiculars of {{convert|280|ft|m|1}}, a beam of {{convert|60|ft|m|1}} and a deep draught of {{convert|25|ft|9|in|m|1}}. The ships displaced {{convert|7473|-|7630|LT|t|}}, about {{convert|2000|LT|t|}} more than Shannon. The steel-hulled ships were fitted with a ram and their crew numbered approximately 560 officers and other ranks.[2]

The ships had two 3-cylinder, inverted compound steam engines, each driving a single two-bladed, {{convert|18|ft|m|adj=on|1}} propeller, using steam provided by 10 oval boilers. They generated a working pressure of {{convert|60|psi|kPa kg/cm2|0|abbr=on|lk=on}} so that the engines produced {{convert|6624|ihp|lk=in}} (Nelson) or {{convert|6073|ihp|abbr=on}} (Northampton). The cylinders of the latter's engines could be adjusted in volume to optimize steam production depending on the demand. They were troublesome throughout the ship's life and she was always about {{convert|1|kn|lk=in}} slower than her sister despite repeated efforts to improve her speed. On their sea trials, Nelson reached her designed speed of {{convert|14|kn}}, but Northampton could only reach {{convert|13.17|kn}}.[2]

Ships

The following table gives the construction details and purchase cost of the Nelson class. Standard British practice at that time was for these costs to exclude armament and stores. In the table:

  • Machinery meant "propelling machinery".
  • Hull included "hydraulic machinery, gun mountings, etc."[3]
ShipBuilderMaker
of
Engines
Date of[2]Cost according to
Laid DownLaunchCompletion(BNA 1895)[3]Parkes[4]
HullMachineryTotal
excluding
armament
NelsonElder & Co., GlasgowElder2 Nov 18744 Nov 187626 Jul 1880£303,310£87,545£390,865£411,302
NorthamptonRobert Napier and Sons, GlasgowJohn Penn and Sons26 Oct 187418 Nov 18767 Dec 1878£296,836£98,968£395,804£414,441

Service

Nelson was assigned to the Australia Station in 1881 and became the flagship there in 1885. She remained on station until returning home in 1889 for a lengthy refit. The ship then became guardship at Portsmouth in October 1891 and was placed in fleet reserve in 1894. Nelson was degraded to dockyard reserve in April 1901 and hulked seven months later as a training ship for stokers. She was sold for scrap in July 1910.[5]Northampton became flagship of the North America and West Indies Station upon commissioning in 1879 and remained there for the next seven years. Upon her return, she was assigned to the reserve and made annual training cruises until she became a boys' training ship in 1894. The ship was paid off ten years later and sold for scrap in April 1905.[5]

Notes

1. ^Parkes, pp. 239, 241
2. ^Parkes, pp. 239, 242–43
3. ^The Naval Annual 1895 , pp. 192–200
4. ^Parkes, p. 239
5. ^Parkes, p. 243

References

  • Brassey, T.A. (ed) The Naval Annual 1895
  • {{cite book|title=Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1860–1905|editor1-last=Chesneau|editor1-first=Roger|editor2-last=Kolesnik|editor2-first=Eugene M.|publisher=Conway Maritime Press|location=Greenwich, UK|year=1979|isbn=0-8317-0302-4|lastauthoramp=y}}
  • {{cite book|last=Parkes|first=Oscar|title=British Battleships|publisher=Naval Institute Press|location=Annapolis, Maryland|year=1990|edition=reprint of the 1957|isbn=1-55750-075-4}}
  • {{cite book|last=Silverstone|first=Paul H.|title=Directory of the World's Capital Ships|year=1984|publisher=Hippocrene Books|location=New York|isbn=0-88254-979-0}}

External links

{{Commons category|Nelson class cruiser}}{{Nelson class cruiser}}{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2011}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Nelson Class Cruiser}}

2 : Cruiser classes|Nelson-class cruisers

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