Tag Archives: vintage warships

Warship Wednesday, Aug 22

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take out every Wednesday for a look at the old steampunk navies of the 1866-1938 time period and will profile a different ship each week.

– Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday,  Aug 22

One of the great mysteries of the Sea is the cruiser Unebi. We may never know what happened to her.

Here we have the brand new protected cruiser Unebi of the Imperial Japanese Navy leaving the harbor of Le Harve.

The Imperial Japanese government, only just recently opened to outside trade, was fast arming itself to become a regional power. With shipbuilding industry in its infancy, the Japanese government contracted for warships all over the world. The Unebi was designed and built in France by Forges et Chantiers de la Gironde. Unebi was named after the 199.2 meter tall Mount Unebi in Nara prefecture, located near the ancient capital of Asuka. Per Meiji period State Shinto mythology, this mountain was home to Japan’s first Emperor, Jimmu Tenno.

Fast and heavily armed, Japan would miss this speedy slugger in coming naval clashes

She was relatively fast and nimble for her time, and could do over 18-knots. This would be the equivalent of almost 40knots today, and few ships on the water could catch her or outrun her. With a huge armament of 10-inch and 6-inch naval rifles, she had large teeth to go along with her fast legs.

Too bad for Japan, who only seven years later could have used her against Chinese warships in the 1894 Sino-Chinese War, or against the Russians in 1904, the Unebi went missing on her delivery trip to her homeland from France.

She was last seen leaving Singapore in December 1886 with 76 French civilian sailors commanded by a French merchant captain. Seven Japanese naval officers were on board to observe while her Japanese crew awaited her safely in Yokohama.

None wreckage of her was ever found. None of the men were ever recorded. The sea is yet to give her location up and she remains one of the greatest mysteries of naval history.

After watching for her to appear for ten months, the Japanese Navy struck her name from the register and declared her missing. Unebi is the only case of a ship vanishing without a trace in the annals of the Imperial Japanese Navy.

Specs:
Displacement:     3,615 long tons (3,673 t)
Length:     98 m (321 ft 6 in) w/l
Beam:     13.1 m (43 ft 0 in)
Draught:     5.72 m (18 ft 9 in)
Propulsion:     2-shaft VTE, 9 boilers, 5,500 hp (4,100 kW), 700 tons coal
Speed:     18.5 knots (21.3 mph; 34.3 km/h)
Complement:     280-400
Armament:     • 4 × BL 10 inch gun Mk I – IV guns
• 7 × BL 6 inch gun Mk II – VI guns
• 2 × QF 6 pounder Hotchkiss
• 10 × quad 1-inch Nordenfelt guns
• 4 × Gatling guns
• 4 × 356 mm (14.0 in) torpedo tubes
Armour:     Deck: 62 mm (2.4 in)
Upper belt: 125 mm (4.9 in)
Barbette, Turret, Casement: 150 mm (5.9 in)

A memorial monument to the missing crew of Unebi is located at Aoyama Cemetery in Tokyo.

Warship Wednesday Aug 15

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take out every Wednesday for a look at the old steampunk navies of the 1866-1938 time period and will profile a different ship each week.

– Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday,  Aug 15


Here we see a good color rendering of the circular battleship Popov

One of the most unusual ships of thier day, or any other, the circular battleship Vice Admiral Popov (originally named the Kiev) and her sistership the Novogrod were designed after delivery to the Imperial Russian Navy of several US-built post-civil war era armored clad monitors. Thier father, Vice Admiral Andrei Alexandrovitch Popov (hmm, the name sounds familar…) came up with the idea of a circular floating platform that could move up and down the seacoast and defened weakspots and choke points. Since they could float in just 10-feet of water, they could hide in shallow esturaries where other larger and stronger ships could not follow. From thier with a pair of 11-inch rifled guns they could dish out some lovin to Turk, Swede, or British ships coming too close to the Motherland. (Remember Germany and Austria were Russia’s closest allies until Kaiser Willy Part II changed that) The two ships were built 1870-74.

On the positive, the ship was stable as a gunplatform, it just sailed like crap and was vulnerable to plunging fire, being effectively a large bullseye floating on the water. Her decks were armored with 60mm of plate steel, which was effective for 1870s era mortars and shells, but by the 1900s was totally ineffective. Thus in 1900 the Popov and the Novorgrod were stricken. Utilised as storeships and for the occasional dockside training they were scrapped in 1912 on the eve of World War One. Thier only war use was briefly in the Danube River Flotilla in 1877 where they traded shots with Turkish land batteries.

Specs:
Displacement:     2,491 tons
2,671 tons at full load
Length:     30.8 m
Beam:     30.8 m
Draught:     3.75 m
Propulsion:     8 coal-fired boilers, 6 screws, 2,000 ihp
Speed:     7 knots
Complement:     128
Armament:
2 × 11 inch guns
2 × 4-pounder guns
16 × 37 mm guns
Armour:
Belt: 230 mm
Deck: 60 mm

The Cossacks Are Coming, Aren’t They?

The misinterpreted Russian Navy mission in the U.S. Civil War may have accidentally helped the North win the conflict.

In 1863, it looked as if the mighty British Empire may intervene in the US Civil War on the side of the Confederate States (CSA). War fever had come to London early in the conflict after the “Trent Affair” placed the Her Majesty’s Navy and Army on alert. British firms such as Enfield and Whitworth sold tremendous amounts of arms of all kinds to Confederate agents and these were in turn often smuggled through the US Naval quarantine via British blockade-runners. Confederate raiders including the notorious CSS Alabama and CSS Shenandoah were constructed in English harbors. British war tourist Colonel (later General Sir) Arthur Fremantle in 1863 had just returned from three months among both the US and Confederate commands fighting the war and loudly pronounced that the Confederates would certainly be victorious.

Relations with the Tsar and the Union

Relations between the United States and Tsarist Russia were warmer than with many other European nations at the time. Cassius Marcellus Clay, a well-known abolitionist, was the US Ambassador to the court of Tsar Alexander II during the conflict. It was Clay’s report on the Tsar’s Emancipation of 23,000,000 Russian Serfs in 1861 helped pave the way for Lincolns own Emancipation Proclamation of the 4,000,000 American Negro slaves the next year. American engineers and railway organizers were helpful in starting the early Russian railway system. Clay openly encouraged a military alliance with between the US and Britain, France, and possibly Spain openly thought of Russia as a hedge between what as a possible intervention on the Confederate side.

Cassius Clay…..the original one not the boxer

The Russians Arrive

Suddenly, on September 24, 1863, two separate Russian naval squadrons arrived in US waters unannounced on both the East and West coasts. The Russian Atlantic fleet on the US East Coast had sailed from the Baltic and arrived at New York under command of Rear Admiral Lesovskii with three large frigates and three smaller vessels. The fleet included the new and fearsome 5,100-ton US-built screw frigate Alexander Nevsky with 51 sixty-pounder naval guns. The Russian Pacific fleet that arrived on the West Coast in San Francisco was under command of Rear Admiral Popov and consisted of four small gunboats and a pair of armed merchants cruisers. The ships were saluted and allowed entry as being on a friendly port call.

The 5100-ton frigate Alexander Nevsky was one of the finest ships of any navy in the Atlantic. This is a portrait of her in New York Harbor in 1863 that was in Harper’s Weekly.

The crew of the Russian frigate Osliaba harbored in Alexandria, Virginia, 1863.

The American media and political machine immediately interpreted the reason for these naval visits as clear Russian support for the US cause. The real reason, however, seems to be something quite different. Poland, largely occupied by Russia, was in open revolt in the summer of 1863. The so-called Polish Crisis followed in which there was a possibility that Britain and or France would intervene on the side of the insurgent Poles. The Tsar, fearing that his isolated Pacific and Atlantic naval squadrons would be seized or destroyed by superior British or French units in the event of war, sent them into the neutral US ports to seek refuge. This fact was held from the Americans and the fleet’s Russian officers simply stated that they were in US ports for ‘not unfriendly purposes”

The respective admirals of the Russian squadrons had sealed orders to place themselves at the disposal of the US government in the event of a joint British or French intervention on both Russia and the United States. In the event of Russia entering into war with the Anglo-French forces alone then the Russian ships were to sortie against the commercial fleets of those vessels as best as they could and then seek internment.

Rear Admiral Lesovskii, now that’s an impressive figure. How could the Union NOT think the appearance of this guy in Washington meant that Russia was on their side?

The Outcome of the Visit

Several historians claim that the British government saw this mysterious visit by the Russians in US waters as an open confirmation of a secret military pact between the two future superpowers. This interpretation further helped deter foreign recognition of the Confederate cause and resulted in the extinguishing of the South’s flame of hope. It can also be claimed that it stalled British intervention in the Tsar’s problems in Poland with the thought that it could result in a US invasion of Canada.

When the Polish Uprising crisis abated in April 1864, the Russian fleets were recalled quietly to their respective home waters. The dozen Tsarist warships had conducted port calls and training cruises in the US and neighboring waters for almost seven months during the war while managing to avoid the conflict altogether. In the late fall of 1863 with rumors of Confederate raiders lurking on the West Coast, Admiral Popov confirmed to the governor of California that he and his fleet would indeed protect the coast of their defacto ally if the raiders did actually appear. The effect of this ‘fleet-in-being’ resulted directly in an increase in US-Russian relations.

The US Navy, on the cutting edge of ironclad steam warship design, passed along plans and expertise to their Russian colleagues who had no such vessels. By 1865, the Tsar had a fleet of ten ultra modern 200-foot long ironclad battleships based on the monitor USS Passaic. These ships, known to the Russians as the Uragan (Bronenosetz) class were completed even with two US-designed 15-inch smoothbore Dahlgren guns and far outgunned any other European navy of the time.

Ten of these Uragan class monitors were built in the US for Russia after the Civil War and were the backbone of the modern Tsarist Navy for decades.

In 1867, Russian Ambassador Baron Stoeckel advised US Secretary Seward that the Russian government would entertain bids for the failing colony of Alaska, which was rapidly accepted. Cassius Clay, still in Russia helped to conduct the negations from inside the Winter Palace. The Russians even rapidly transferred control of the territory, which was seen by many to be worthless nearly a year before Congress ratified the transfer and in effect, couldn’t give it back.

This odd incident of the Russian fleets; visit may have prevented what would have certainly been one of the planet’s first and possibly oddest of world wars. The real reasons for the Russian fleet’s visit were only uncovered and publicized nearly fifty years later in 1915 by military historian Frank Golder.

By that time the Uragan class monitors were long scrapped (except for one), Alaska was a US territory and Russia was finally at war with Britain and France- this time as allies against Germany and Austria in World War One.

On the West Coast, there is also a more lingering reminder.

While in San Francisco, a number of crewmen from the Bogatyr, Popov’s flagship, fought a raging multi-block fire in the city’s burgeoning Finacial District and six lost their lives. Buried in the military cemetery at Mare Island Naval Shipyard, in 2010 the Russian Consulate replaced their U.S. Navy headstones from the 19th Century with (unauthorized) new ones at a cost of $20,000.

Warship Wednesday August 8

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take out every Wednesday for a look at the old steampunk navies of the 1866-1938 time period and will profile a different ship each week.

– Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday,  Aug 8

Here we have the monitor USS Puritan dropping it like its hot shelling the port of Matanzas on the 27th April 1898.

She was laid down ostensibly in 1864 during the Civil War and never completed. However with a smile and a wink naval engineers started a ‘Great Repair’ of this old hulk using all new materials, even on a new graving dock starting in 1874, and just 22 years and a major keel-up redesign later, in 1896 the brand new USS Puritan (BM-1) came down the ways, only 32-years in the making.

By 1896 monitors were passe, kind of like a cop carrying a revolver these days. They still worked if used correctly, but were just dangerously obsolete. Nevertheless, Puritan served admirably (*against rather obsolete Spanish Ships) in the Spanish American War of 1898. Assigned to the Cuban blockade in April, she joined New York and Cincinnati in shelling Matanzas on the 27th. After a stop at Key West in early May, she departed on the 20th to join the force building under Rear Admiral William T. Sampson that would eventually move against Santiago. Puritan linked up on the 22nd and Sampson moved his ships to Key Frances on the Nicholas Channel in order to execute his plan to contain the Spanish Fleet at Santiago. The success of Sampson’s squadron at Santiago on July 3 resulted in almost the complete destruction of the Spanish Fleet. After Cuba, she sailed for Puerto Rico where she landed a party of US Marines and shelled the Spanish positions at the Battle of Fajardo.

After the war she was soon decommissioned again and spent most of the next twenty years at the disposal of various Naval Militias (the precursor of the Navy Reserve) for training dockside before finally being stricken in 1918. With the hulk of the old USS Plunger aboard (see last week’s Warship Wednesday) she was sold four years later, having served in one form or another in the US Navy for 58 years, only about 9 of them on active duty.

Specs:

Type:     Puritan class Monitor
Displacement:     6,060 long tons (6,157 t)
Length:     296 ft 3 in (90.30 m)
Beam:     60 ft 1.5 in (18.326 m)
Draft:     18 ft (5.5 m)
Depth of hold:     5 ft 7 in (1.70 m)
Propulsion:     Steam engine
Speed:     12.4 knots (23.0 km/h; 14.3 mph)
Complement:     200
Armament:     • 4 × 12 in (300 mm) breechloader rifles
• 6 × 4 in (100 mm) breechloader rifles
• unknown × 6-pounder guns
Armor:     Depth: 5 ft 7 in (1.70 m)
Amidships: 14 in (360 mm)
Barbettes: 14 in (360 mm)
Turrets: 8 in (200 mm)
Deck: 2 in (51 mm)

Sometime after 1898 and before 1909…Not a bad looking ship….for a monitor

Warship Wednesday August 1

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take out every Wednesday for a look at the old steampunk navies of the 1866-1938 time period and will profile a different ship each week.

– Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday,  Aug 1

Here we have the classic old experimental submarine (submersible) USS Plunger SS-2. The tiny ship, only 64-feet long, was only the second official submarine that the US Navy owned. She was commissioned 19 September 1903 and served as an experimental boat. In 1905 she had the distinction of visiting former Secretary of the Navy and then-current President Teddy Roosevelt at Oyster Bay. The Bully Teddy spent three hours aboard, taking the wheel and even submerging five times in the shallow water, the first President to submerge while in office.

Roosevelt wrote from Oyster Bay to Hermann Speck von Steinberg: “I myself am both amused and interested as to what you say about the interest excited about my trip in the Plunger. I went down in it chiefly because I did not like to have the officers and enlisted men think I wanted them to try things I was reluctant to try myself. I believe a good deal can be done with these submarines, although there is always the danger of people getting carried away with the idea and thinking that they can be of more use than they possibly could be.” To another correspondent he declared that never in his life had he experienced “such a diverting day … nor so much enjoyment in so few hours.”

In 1909 she was under the command of one very young and very wet Ensign Chester Nimitz who lead a huge crew of one Chief and five sailors. The small but hearty young boat served for ten years in more or less active duty , then spend almost another ten in mothballs as a target before she was scrapped in 1922. She spent WWI hoisted aboard the hulk of the former Civil War monitor Puritan, then more than 50-years old, a blend of the Navy’s past and future if there ever were one.

Specs:

Displacement:     107 long tons (109 t)
Length:     64 ft (20 m)
Beam:     12 ft (3.7 m)
Draft:     11 ft (3.4 m)
Speed:     8 kn (9.2 mph; 15 km/h) surfaced
7 kn (8.1 mph; 13 km/h) submerged
Complement:     7
Armament:     1 × 18 in (460 mm) torpedo tube

Warship Weds July 25th

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take out every Wednesday for a look at the old steampunk navies of the 1866-1938 time period and will profile a different ship each week.

– Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday,  July 25

 

Here we have the great colro painting by Russian naval master Gleb Vasilyev of the Imperial Russian Navy protected cruiser Askold. Bult in 1902 for the very modrn navy of Tsar Nicholas II by the William Cramp Yard in Phildelphia PA, Askold was was named after the legendary Viking hero Askold. Her thin, narrow hull and maximum speed of 23.8 knots (44.1 km/h) were considered shit hot for the time.
Askold had five thin funnels which gave it a unique silhouette for any vessel in the Imperial Russian Navy. This led British sailors to nickname her Packet of Woodbines after the thin cigarettes popular at the time.

It does kinda look like ……….

However, the five funnels also had a symbolic importance, as it was popularly considered that the number of funnels was indicative of performance, and some navies were known to add extra fake funnels to impress dignitaries in less advanced countries. By today’s standards she would be a slow frigate, but by those of 1900 she was quite impressive.

She fougth in and survived the Russo-Japanese War (and was the last Russian ship to visit Japan before the outbreak of war.) During the Battle of the Yellow Sea, she was flagship for Rear Admiral Nikolai Reytsenshteyn’s cruiser squadron during the failed attempt to escape the Japanese blockade and to link up with forces in Vladivostok. Together with Novik, Askold took heavy damage, but escaped from the pursuing Japanese fleet to Shanghai, where she was interned until the end of the war. During WWI she served admirably with the Allied fleet in the MED bombarding Gallipoli. She was back in Russia just after the Revolution and was seized by the Royal Navy who took her back  to Scotland.

She was scrapped in 1922.

Her Specs:
Displacement:     5910 tons full load
Length:     132.5 m (434.7 ft)
Beam:     15 m (49.2 ft)
Draught:     6.2 m (20.3 ft)
Propulsion:     3 shaft Triple expansion steam engines (VTE), 9 Shultz-Thonycroft Boilers – 19,650 hp
Speed:     23.8 knots (44.1 km/h)
Range:     6,500 nautical miles (12,000 km) @ 10 knots
Complement:     580 officers and crewmen
Armament:

12 – 6-inch (152 mm)/L45 Canet guns
12 – 75-millimetre (3 in)L50 Canet guns
8 – 47-millimetre (2 in) Hotchkiss rapid-fire guns
2 – 37-millimetre (1 in) Hotchkiss guns
2 – 7.62 mm Maxim machine guns
6 – 15-inch (381 mm) torpedo tubes

Krupp armour,

2-inch (51 mm) to 4-inch (102 mm) on sloping deck
6-inch (152 mm) at conning tower

 

Warship Wednesday July 18th

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take out every Wednesday for a look at the old steampunk navies of the 1866-1938 time period and will profile a different ship each week.

– Christopher Eger

Here we have the HTMS Sukhothai (Su-kho-thai) Light Gun Boat/ Coastal Defense ship, built by Armstrong Withworth of England in 1929. She was commissioned 6 June 1930 – After ceremony by King Prajadhipok on 5 June 1930.

In 1926, Vice Admiral Phraia Rachawangsan, Chief of Staff, Royal Siamese Navy, presented a project regarding the naval force called “Memorandum on the Organization of the Siamese Navy” to the Minister of the Navy. He divided the naval force into two fleets as follows:

1). Coastal Defense Division consisting “of four 1000-ton gun boats, three destroyers, four torpedo boats, ten inshore patrol craft, two minesweepers, and a number of minelayers and mines.

2). Offensive Division or Mobile Division consisting of two patrol boats, three destroyers, six speed torpedo boats, four submarines, ten inshore patrol craft, one speed minelayer, and a number of cargo ships and mines.

This project was a guideline for later warship procurement. In 1929, the gun boat HTMS Sukhothai was built with the same design as HTMS Rattanakosin.

She served the Thai Navy for more than forty years including service in the 1940-41 Franco-Thai War, World War Two,  and in protecting the country during the Indochina Conflicts as a SEATO allied naval platform.

She was decommissioned: 15 Dec 1970 after 40 years of service to the crown.

Specs
Length: 53.34 m /175feet OA   Beam  11.21 m/33 feet
Displacement: 886 ton (regular) 1000 Ton (Full)
Armament: Two 152/50 mm cannon, Four 76/45 mm gun, three 20 mm anti-aircraft machine guns, two 40/60 mm gun (additional)
Plant : Two Steam with 3 cylinders 850 HP with twin shafts
Speed: 12.89 knot (max) 10 knot (economical)
Operating range: 1,463 Nautical Miles (max) 1,952 Nautical Miles (economical)
Depth beam: 3.41 m/ 10 feet
complement: 148 men

 

Warship Weds July 11

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take out every Wednesday for a look at the old steampunk navies of the 1866-1938 time period and will profile a different ship each week.

– Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday,  July 11

USS Oklahoma, at her youngest as a brand new battleship at the beginning of World War One

Here we have the old battleship USS Oklahoma in 1917, note the experimental splinter type camoflauge pattern. The Okie was brand new at the time and just narrowly avoided going overseas for service in European Waters during World War One. Instead she served as a member of BatDiv 6, protecting Allied convoys on their way across the Atlantic. After years of spending time in the Pacific and the Scouting Fleets, Oklahoma was modernized from 1927 to 1929. She rescued American citizens and refugees from the Spanish Civil War in 1936; after returning to the West coast in August of that year, she spent the rest of her life in the Pacific. She was sunk by Japanese bombs and torpedoes on 7 December 1941, in the attack on Pearl Harbor, taking 429 of her crew with her as she capsized.

One of those killed—Father Aloysius Schmitt—was the first American chaplain of any faith to die in World War II. Thirty-two others were wounded, and many were trapped within the capsized hull. Julio DeCastro, a Hawaiian civilian yard worker organized a team that saved 32 Oklahoma sailors. Some of those who died later had ships named after them such as Ensign John England for whom USS England (DE-635) and USS England (DLG-22) are named.

USS Oklahoma as a relatively obsolete battleship at age 24 during the first day of the US’s war in the Pacific in World War Two. It would be her only and final battle.

Three Medals of Honor, three Navy and Marine Corps Medals and one Navy Cross were awarded to sailors who served onboard the Oklahoma during the attack.

She was uprighted in 1943, but unlike most of the other battleships damaged in the Pearl Harbor attack, she was never repaired and returned to duty. Instead, Oklahoma was stripped of her guns and superstructure, and sold for scrap. She sank while under tow to the mainland in 1947.

Her sistership, the USS Nevada, had slightly more luck.
Specs:
Displacement:     27,500 long tons (27,900 metric tons)
Length:     583 ft (178 m)
Beam:     95.3 ft (29.0 m)
Draft:     28.5 ft (8.7 m)
Speed:     20.5 kn (23.6 mph; 38.0 km/h)
Capacity:     2,042 short tons (1,852 metric tons) of fuel oil
Complement:     as built:

864 officers and men

from 1929:

1,398

from 1945:

2,220

Armament:     as built:

10 × 14 in (360 mm)/45 cal guns (2×3, 2×2)
21 × 5 in (130 mm)/51 cal guns (soon reduced to 12)

in the late 1920s:

8 × 5 in (130 mm)/25 cal guns
2 × 21 in (530 mm) torpedo tubes were added.

Armor:

Belt: 13.5 to 8 in (340 to 200 mm)
Bulkheads: 13 to 8 in (330 to 200 mm)
Barbettes: 13 in (330 mm)
Turrets: 18 in (460 mm)
Decks: 5 in (130 mm)
Conning tower: 16 in (406 mm), 8 in (203 mm) top

Aircraft carried:     as built:

3 floatplanes, 2 catapults

1941:

2 floatplanes, 1 catapult[

Warship Weds July 4

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take out every Wednesday for a look at the old steampunk navies of the 1866-1938 time period and will profile a different ship each week.

– Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday,  July 4

Here we have the Patoka. This funny looking (the one in the water) ship was laid down about six weeks after the end of WWI as an oiler  at Newport News Shipbuilding and Dry Dock, Co., Newport News, VA. Commissioned as Fleet Oiler No. 9, 13 October 1919, she soon became a balloon tender and was the service’s only one for tw decades.  Patoka was modified as a tender for the Navy’s rigid airships, receiving a distinctive mooring mast on her stern and facilities for handling seaplanes. She was subsequently used as an operational and experimental base by three of the Navy’s great dirigibles, USS Shenandoah (ZR-1) in 1924-1925, USS Los Angeles (ZR-3) in 1925-1932, and USS Akron (ZRS-4) in 1932.

Decommissioned, 31 August 1933 after the loss of her airships, she spent six years without a mission. Redesignated Seaplane Tender (AV-6), and commanded by CDR. Clifton Sprague (later Rear Admiral of Taffy-3 Fame) in 1939. She spend most of the war as a oiler, mine craft tender and was reclassified Miscellaneous Auxiliary (AG-125), 15 August 1944. Decommissioned, 1 July 1946 she was sold for scrapping, 15 March 1948 by the Maritime Commission to Dulien Steel Products, Co.

Note how big the Zepplins were…..Patoka herself is over 400-feet long…

Specifications:
Displacement 5,400 t.(lt) 16,800 t.(fl), 17,820 t.(lim)
Length 447′ 10″
Beam 60′ 3″
Draft 27′ 8″(lim)
Speed 11.2 kts.
Complement
Officers 29
Enlisted 272
Largest boom capacity 40 t.
Cargo Capacity
Navy Standard Fuel Oil 62,300 bbls
Gasoline 309,000 gals
Armament
two single 5″/38 dual purpose gun mounts
four twin 40mm AA gun mounts
four twin 20mm AA gun mounts
Fuel oil capacity 4,780 bbls.
Ships’ service generators
four turbo-drive, 60kW 120V D.C., 1 75kW 120V D.C.,
two diesel-drive, 100kW 450V D.C.
Propulsion
one Newport News vertical quadruple expansion engine
two Yarrow boilers, 265psi Sat°
single screw, 2,800 shp.

Warship Wednesday, June 27

Here at LSOZI, we are going to take out every Wednesday for a look at the old steampunk navies of the 1866-1938 time period and will profile a different ship each week.

– Christopher Eger

Warship Wednesday,  June 27

Here we have the Sardegna (Sardinia) was a Re Umberto-class pre-dreadnought battleship built for the Italian Navy in the 1880s. She came from the ways at La Spezia and was completed after more than 11 years under construction.

Sardegna was 411 feet 9 inches (125.5 m) between perpendiculars and 428 feet 10.5 inches (130.7 m) long overall. She had a beam of 76 feet 10.5 inches (23.4 m) and a draft of 29 feet (8.8 m). Normally she displaced 13,641 long tons (13,860 t) and displaced 15,426 long tons (15,674 t) at full load. She was built with a ram bow.

Sardegna was the first Italian warship fitted with two three-cylinder vertical triple expansion steam engines with a total designed output of 22,800 indicated horsepower (17,002 kW). Eighteen cylindrical boilers provided steam to the engines. On trials, the ship had a top speed of 20.3 knots (37.6 km/h; 23.4 mph). She carried enough coal to give her a range of 4,000–6,000 nautical miles (7,408–11,112 km) at 10 knots (19 km/h; 12 mph). She had three funnels, but, unusually, the two forward funnels were side-by-side.

Sardegna’s main armament consisted of two pairs of breech-loading British BL 13.5-inch (343 mm) Mk I–IV 30-caliber guns mounted in twin barbettes fore and aft. These guns had a maximum elevation of 13.5° and could depress to -3°. They fired a 1,250-pound (570 kg) shell at a muzzle velocity of about 2,016 ft/s (614 m/s) to a range of about 11,950 yards (10,930 m) at maximum elevation. They had a rate of fire about 2–3 minutes per round.

The eight 6-inch (152 mm) 40-caliber guns were mounted on pivot mounts on the upper deck. They were protected by gun shields 2 inches (51 mm) thick. The anti-torpedo boat armament consisted of sixteen 4.7-inch (120 mm) 40-caliber guns. Twelve of these were in casemates on the main deck and four were mounted in the fore and aft superstructures, protected by gun shields. Twenty 57-millimeter (2.2 in) six-pounder and ten 37-millimeter (1.5 in) one-pounder guns were mounted in the superstructure. Sardegna carried five 17.7-inch (450 mm) torpedo tubes, all above water

Sardegna’s steel armor was made by the French company Schneider et Cie. The side of the hull between the barbettes was completely protected with a maximum thickness of 4 inches (102 mm) of armor. The barbettes were 13.75 inches (349 mm) thick and she was the only ship of her class to receive 4-inch gun shields for her main armament. The conning tower had 11.8 inches (300 mm) walls. The armor deck was 3 inches (76 mm) thick

She served in much colonial service in the Meditteranian and then in World War One before being stricken on 4 January 1923 after nearly thirty years service

« Older Entries Recent Entries »