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词条 Britomart-class gunboat
释义

  1. Design

     Propulsion  Sail plan  Armament 

  2. Ships

  3. References

{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2017}}{{Use British English|date=January 2017}}{{Infobox ship image
Ship image=HMS Cherub (1865).jpgShip caption=HMS Cherub Goderich, Lake Huron in 1866
}}{{Infobox ship class overview
Name = Britomart class Builders =UK}}Algerine|gunboat|4}}Ariel|gunboat|4}} Subclasses = Built range = 1859–1867 In commission range = 1860–1890 Total ships building = Total ships planned = 20 Total ships completed = 16 Total ships cancelled = 4 Total ships active = Total ships laid up = Total ships lost = Total ships retired = Total ships scrapped = Total ships preserved =
}}{{Infobox ship characteristics
Hide header=Header caption=[1]Ship class=Ship type='Crimean' gunboatShip displacement=330 tons{{fraction>82|94}} bm120|ft|0|in|m|abbr=on|1}} (gundeck)
  • {{convert|105|ft|7|in|m|abbr=on}} (keel)
22|ft|0|in|m|abbr=on|1}}Ship height=Ship draught=Ship depth=9|ft|0|in|m|abbr=on|1}}Ship power=*60 nhp
  • {{convert|157|-|277|ihp|kW|lk=in|abbr=on}})
Ship propulsion=*1 × 1-cylinder single-expansion reciprocating steam engine
  • 1 × screw
9|kn|km/h|abbr=on}}Ship range=Ship endurance=Ship boats=Ship crew=36–40Ship armament=*2 × 68-pounder SBML gun
  • or
  • 2 × 64-pounder RML gun
Ship armour=Ship notes=
}}

The Britomart-class gunboat was a class of sixteen gunboats built for the Royal Navy in 1859–1867.

Design

The Britomart class was an improved version of the {{sclass-|Dapper|gunboat|4}} designed by W.H. Walker, and as such comes under the generic group "Crimean gunboats" although this class was ordered and built long after the end of the Crimean War. These were the last Royal Navy gunboats to have wooden hulls: subsequent gunboats were of composite construction, with wooden planking over iron frames.[1]

Propulsion

The class were fitted with a single-cylinder single-expansion reciprocating steam engine. The engines for Britomart and Cockatrice were by John Penn and Sons; the engine builders for the other ships are not recorded. The single screw could be hoisted to give improved performance under sail.[1]

Sail plan

The ships were provided with a three-masted barquentine rig, that is, with square sails on the foremast and fore-and-aft sails on the main and mizzen masts.[1]

Armament

Early ships of the class were armed with two 68-pounder smooth bore muzzle loading cannon (as had been planned, but not implemented, for the Dapper class); but the Heron was fitted with two 112-pounder Armstrong guns. Later ships had two 64-pounder rifled muzzle-loading guns.[1]

{{clear}}

Ships

NameShip builder[1]Launched[1]Fate[1]
Britomart|1860|2}}T & W Smith, North Shields 7 May 1860Served on Lake Erie.[2] Sold to Henry Castle & Sons on 12 January 1892, and resold to S Williams of Dagenham as a mooring hulk. Broken up in June 1946
Cockatrice|1860|2}}T & W Smith, North Shields 24 May 1860 Became luggage lighter YC.10 at Malta in 1882. Sold there in 1885
Wizard|1860|2}}T & W Smith, North Shields 3 August 1860 Broken up at Malta in September 1878
Speedy|1860|2}}C Lamport, Workington 18 July 1860 Sold to Henry Castle & Sons for breaking at Charlton in August 1889
Doterel|1860|2}}Wm. Cowley Miller, Toxteth Dock, Liverpool 5 July 1860 Sold to Marshall, Plymouth on 6 June 1871
Heron|1860|2}}Wm. Cowley Miller, Toxteth Dock, Liverpool 5 July 1860 Served on Lake Ontario.[2] Sold in Jamaica in June 1879 and broken up there in 1881
Pigeon|1860|2}}Briggs & Co., Sunderland 7 June 1860Broken up at Devonport on 29 September 1876
Linnet|1860|2}}Briggs & Co., Sunderland 7 June 1860 Breaking completed at Chatham on 15 July 1872
Tyrian|1861|2}}Courtenay, Newhaven 7 September 1861 Tug in 1883 at Jamaica and sold there in 1891
Trinculo|1860|2}}Joseph Banks, Plymouth 15 September 1860 Wrecked after collision with SS Moratin off Gibraltar on 5 September 1870
Cherub|1865|2}}Portsmouth Dockyard 29 March 1865 Served on Lake Huron.[2] Sold to Castle for breaking at Charlton 5 May 1890
Netley|1866|2}}Portsmouth Dockyard 22 July 1866 Sold at Portsmouth to Castle for breaking at Charlton in September 1885
Minstrel|1865|2}}Portsmouth Dockyard 16 February 1865 Coal hulk at Bermuda in 1874 and sold in 1903
Orwell|1866|2}}Portsmouth Dockyard 27 December 1866 Sold to the Customs Board on 20 December 1890
Cromer|1867|2}}Portsmouth Dockyard 20 November 1867 Sold on 24 August 1886 for breaking
Bruiser|1867|2}} (or Bruizer)Portsmouth Dockyard 23 April 1867 Broken up at Devonport in May 1886
BramblePortsmouth DockyardCancelled 12 December 1863
CrownPortsmouth DockyardCancelled 12 December 1863
ProtectorPortsmouth DockyardCancelled 12 December 1863
DanubePortsmouth DockyardCancelled 12 December 1863 (never started)

References

1. ^Winfield, p.231–232
2. ^A. Preston & J.Major, [https://books.google.com/books?id=80KN6I__JPYC&pg=PA65&lpg=PA65 Send a Gunboat!: The Victorian Navy and Supremacy at Sea, 1854-1904], Conway, 2007, page 65
  • {{Colledge}}
  • {{winfield}}
{{Britomart-class gunboat}}

4 : Gunboat classes|Victorian-era gunboats of the United Kingdom|1860s ships|Gunboats of the Royal Navy

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