Вы не зашли.
Большое спасибо за ответ.
Алекс написал:
#1288695
Тогда расскажите свою точку зрения чем броненосец 2-го класса отличается от броненосца 1-го класса и от броненосного крейсера.
Для линкора второго класса опциональна скорость (до тех пока она не ниже минимальной принятой для линии) и обязательным являются наличие броневого пояса и тяжелых орудий. От первого класса он отличается толщиной брони и тяжестью орудий.
Для крейсера опциональны защита и тяжелые орудия, но обязательна скорость не ниже, чем у вражеских крейсеров.
Каждый линкор - броненосец, но не каждый броненосец - линкор.
Именно это и привело к упомянутому разделению на линкоры (battleships) и крейсера (cruisers).
Самый простой способ различать первых и вторых это энерговооруженность при прочих равных.
QF написал:
#1288768
ля линкора второго класса опциональна скорость (до тех пока она не ниже минимальной принятой для линии) и обязательным являются наличие броневого пояса и тяжелых орудий. От первого класса он отличается толщиной брони и тяжестью орудий.
Для крейсера опциональны защита и тяжелые орудия, но обязательна скорость не ниже, чем у вражеских крейсеров.
И как у Вас тут различаются "Имперьюзы" и "Орланды"?
Алекс написал:
#1288775
И как у Вас тут различаются "Имперьюзы" и "Орланды"?
"Имперьюзы" и "Орланды" - крейсера. В этом отношении они вообще не различаются.
QF написал:
#1288786
"Имперьюзы" и "Орланды" - крейсера. В этом отношении они вообще не различаются.
Интересно, а чего же тогда англичане "Имперьюзы" на момент постройки однозначно относят к броненосцам 2-го класса?
Алекс написал:
#1288747
В 1884 г. корабль было решено превратить в броненосец 2-го класса, добавив пояс по ВЛ. Основная часть проектирования завершена в 1885 г.
На теоретическом чертеже для корабля этого типа, датированном февралем 1885, стоит заголовок "Sheer Drawing for a Twin Screw Belted Cruiser". Поясните, пожалуйста, значит ли это, что от наименования "броненосец 2-го класса", уже отказались к этому времени?
Алекс написал:
#1288798
Интересно, а чего же тогда англичане "Имперьюзы" на момент постройки однозначно относят к броненосцам 2-го класса?
Читайте внимательно англичан:
"She will rank high among cruisers, and high among second-class iron-clads"
rummer59 написал:
#1288799
Поясните, пожалуйста, значит ли это, что от наименования "броненосец 2-го класса", уже отказались к этому времени?
Тут очень забавная ситуация. Согласно программы Нортбрука предстояло построить всего ДВА броненосца и СЕМЬ крейсеров 1-го класса. Но реальный пересмотр проекта начался уже после утверждения программы. Поэтому проектировать броненосцы 2-го класса был явный перебор даже для Англии, тем более как раз тогда была озвучена позиция, что броненосцы скоро исчезнут из флотов всех государств, и тип нового боевого корабля, который станет основным в Адмиралтействе еще не определен. А к лету 1885 г., когда "Орландо" выпрс в водоизмещении почти в 2 раза говорить о том, что мы строим очень дорогие крейсера лля Адмиралтейства стало не выгодно (парламентарии всячески настаивали на сокращении расходов на флот) появилась спасительная версия, что мы строим достаточно дешевый броненосец 2-го класса. Следующий виток возвращения к тому, что мы строим броненосный крейсер стало тогда, когда стало понятно, что броневого пояса над водой не будет и надо что-то делать, чтобы гасить ярость парламентариев.
Алекс написал:
#1288813
А к лету 1885 г., когда "Орландо" выпрс в водоизмещении почти в 2 раза
"The belted cruiser is a ship of about 5,000 tons' displacement, and 3,000 tons' weight of hull, including armour"
До почти десяти тысяч он не рос, вы что-то путаете.
Алекс написал:
#1288813
парламентарии всячески настаивали на сокращении расходов на флот
И здесь вы путаете. Парламентарии настаивали на увеличении расходов на флот. Весь сыр-бор заключался в том, что была попытка поставить под сомнение компетенцию адмиралтейства и недостаточное строительство им кораблей было одним из аргументов критиков.
Алекс написал:
#1288813
появилась спасительная версия, что мы строим достаточно дешевый броненосец 2-го класса
Эта версия создана вполне конкретным представителем оппозиции и отнюдь не для спасения адмиралтейства.
Алекс написал:
#1288813
Следующий виток возвращения к тому, что мы строим броненосный крейсер
Это и вовсе загадка, потому как адмиралтейство не меняло своей позиции.
Алекс написал:
#1288813
Тут очень забавная ситуация. Согласно программы Нортбрука предстояло построить всего ДВА броненосца и СЕМЬ крейсеров 1-го класса. Но реальный пересмотр проекта начался уже после утверждения программы. Поэтому проектировать броненосцы 2-го класса был явный перебор даже для Англии, тем более как раз тогда была озвучена позиция, что броненосцы скоро исчезнут из флотов всех государств, и тип нового боевого корабля, который станет основным в Адмиралтействе еще не определен. А к лету 1885 г., когда "Орландо" выпрс в водоизмещении почти в 2 раза говорить о том, что мы строим очень дорогие крейсера лля Адмиралтейства стало не выгодно (парламентарии всячески настаивали на сокращении расходов на флот) появилась спасительная версия, что мы строим достаточно дешевый броненосец 2-го класса. Следующий виток возвращения к тому, что мы строим броненосный крейсер стало тогда, когда стало понятно, что броневого пояса над водой не будет и надо что-то делать, чтобы гасить ярость парламентариев.
Cпасибо.Есть над чем подумать. Особенно над числом 7 у КР.
QF написал:
#1288816
До почти десяти тысяч он не рос, вы что-то путаете.
Так Вы посмотрите на характеристики первоначального проекта, а не сравнивайте с тем, что появилось к ноябрю 1884 г.
QF написал:
#1288816
И здесь вы путаете. Парламентарии настаивали на увеличении расходов на флот. Весь сыр-бор заключался в том, что была попытка поставить под сомнение компетенцию адмиралтейства и недостаточное строительство им кораблей было одним из аргументов критиков.
Это Вы путаете. Там менялось все с головокружительной быстротой.
Алекс написал:
#1288821
Так Вы посмотрите на характеристики первоначального проекта, а не сравнивайте с тем, что появилось к ноябрю 1884 г.
Вы написали:
Алекс написал:
#1288813
Но реальный пересмотр проекта начался уже после утверждения программы.
На первой странице темы дана эта самая программа в том виде, как она была озвучена перед палатой общин. И там, во-первых, крейсера, а во-2х, они в 5000 тонн. На второй странице темы дана речь самого Нортбрука лично. И там тоже крейсера и тоже в 5000 тонн.
Речь Брассея в палате общин:
QF написал:
#1288257
The most powerful which we wish to introduce may be described as the belted cruiser; the other type is a slightly improved scout. The belted cruiser is a ship of about 5,000 tons' displacement, and 3,000 tons' weight of hull, including armour. The total weight of armour is 1,000 tons.
Речь Нортбрука в палате лордов.
QF написал:
#1288368
We now propose to go still further, and improve upon the ships of the Mersey class. We propose to build belted cruisers which will not have inclined decks, but armour belts of 10 inches of steel, with which their vitals will be protected. These ships will have a displacement of 5,000 tons, and the weight of their armour will be 1,000 tons.
Обратите внимание, здесь даже прямо указывается на "первоначальный проект".
Брассей, о размещении контрактов:
"On the 2nd of March we shall be ready to invite tenders for five belted cruisers and two ironclads."
Снова он же, по общим вопросам, 15 марта 1886 года:
"The belted cruisers were more particularly designed under the late Board for the protection of commerce"
Тот самый Шоу-Лафевр. 10 июня 1886 года.
"In 1884, in spite of this reduction, there arose an alarm in this country on the subject of the French building, and in consequence of that, and in deference to public opinion, a large addition was made by Lord Northbrook's Board to the building of iron-clads. In that year they undertook to lay down no fewer than seven now iron-clads, of which five were to be belted cruisers, and two large vessels of the Admiral class. They laid down the five belted cruisers; they contracted for two vessels of the large type; and in 1885 my hon. Friend the then Secretary to the Admiralty—the Member for Hastings (Sir Thomas Brassey)—proposed to this House, on behalf of his Board, to lay down two more iron-clads. The following year the noble Lord the Member for Middlesex (Lord George Hamilton), then First Lord of the Admiralty, carried this policy still further, for he laid down four new iron-clads, two of which were belted cruisers, and two vessels of the larger type. I shall presently have something to say upon the type of vessel; meanwhile I have to raise the question whether the policy being pursued is a proper one. It will be seen that, during the last year and a-half, we have laid down no fewer than 11 iron-clads.
[Lord GEORGE HAMILTON: They are not all iron-clads.]
I venture to call them iron-clads because they have armour plates on their sides to protect them against shot; at all events, they rank against the second class of French iron-clads."
Ответ Рида в рамках тех же прений:
"There are some people, into the interior of whose minds I am unable to penetrate, who seem to think it would be a reasonable thing to send human beings into battle in vessels composed of steel less thick than this paper without any protection against the arms of the enemy. I consider that people who would do that approach very nearly to the criminal classes, and I hope we have not arrived at the time when we cannot afford to find for the seamen who fight for us abroad some degree of protection.
The First Lord under the last Administration (Lord Northbrook) consented to lay down a number of cruisers with an armour belt to protect them against the first and worst effects of gun-fire; they were vessels with a belt as the first element of protection; they have no protection for their guns, and no protection for that part of the crew employed in an engagement with the enemy; they are solely cruisers protected around the waist; they are to be employed in protecting commerce and in overhauling privateers, and in those respects I have no doubt they will perform their service well. But it is entirely misleading the Committee to come down and include these vessels in the number of our iron-clads, and talk about their engaging the second-class iron-clads of France. I beg leave to state that they could do nothing of the kind. They have no gun protection, and are unfit to engage iron-clads of any class. It is entirely misleading the Committee to persuade us that the iron-clads are of the dimensions which the right hon. Gentleman states."
Собственно, начало конца.
20 августа 1886 года.
"ADMIRAL FIELD (Sussex, Eastbourne) asked the First Lord of the Admiralty, with reference to the new armour-belted cruiser Impérieuse at Portsmouth, now fitting for trial at sea, Whether it is a fact that when her stores are all on board she will be immersed three feet deeper than her design warrants, and her armour-belt entirely under water; whether her torpedo lower portsills will then be flush with the water, and her armoured deck in the same position; whether she was designed to have three feet of armoured freeboard, which has thus been destroyed; whether she was designed to carry 1,100 tons of coal, which has since, under the circumstances, been reduced to 900 tons; whether the ship is to be sent to sea in the condition described, with her stability thus seriously affected, and her efficiency as a seaworthy fighting ship destroyed; whether the cost of hull and machinery amounts in round numbers to £485,000; whether there is reason to fear that similar errors may exist in the designs of the other belted cruisers now in course of building; and, whether he will cause strict inquiry to be made with a view to ascertaining upon whom really rests the responsibility?"
"THE FIRST LORD (Lord GEORGE HAMILTON) (Middlesex, Ealing) The alleged difference between the actual and designed draught of the Impérieuse has been carefully investigated by the present Board of Admiralty, and we have ascertained that—(1) when the ship is complete with all her stores and coal on board, as designed, she will be 11½ inches deeper than her original designed line. This is due to known additions of weight of armament, machinery, &c, which have been accepted during the building of the ship, by which her speed has been increased to 17 knots as against 16 knots in the design. (2) In this condition the height of the three torpedo ports (lower edge) will be respectively—forward, 2 feet 10½ inches; amidships, 3 feet 2½ inches; aft, 2 feet 4½ inches. The height of the armour or belt deck will be 2 feet 3½ inches. (3) She was designed to have 3 feet 3 inches armoured freeboard, and this has been reduced, as above stated, to 2 feet 3½ inches. (4) She was designed to carry 400 tons of coal (as an average quantity) at her normal draught, with power to stow 900 tons when required.
In subsequently settling the details of internal arrangements, it has been found possible to stow as much as 1,130 tons. Any quantity carried beyond the 400 tons of course means increased immersion. The extra immersion due to carrying 900 tons of coal is 14 inches beyond the 11½ inches above stated, or 2 feet 1½ inches. (5) The ship is to be sent to sea for an experimental cruise in company with the Colossus, starting with 900 tons of coal. The designers are quite satisfied with the stability, which is not at all appreciably affected by the increase of draught. (6) The cost of hull and machinery is about £485,000. (7) The sister ship Warspite will be in the same position. The Constructors' Department inform me that there is no reason to anticipate that the other belted cruisers will exceed their designed draught."
Other belted cruisers это наши герои, "Орланды".
This is the end. Honorable friend. This is the end.
18 июля 1887 года. Рид. Как обычно:
"For these seven now belted cruisers were simply traps in which to take officers and men to destruction, and traps in which to destroy the reputation and power of this country. Indeed, it would have been, vastly bettor for the Navy if those cruisers, the Impérieuse and the Warspite, and the other useless belted cruisers, had never been constructed, when they could not perform efficient service. The noble Lord the First Lord of the Admiralty had, no doubt, made out the best case that he could for the Department over which he presided, and even went so far as to indulge in apologetic remarks in regard to the Impérieuse and the Warspite.
He also stated, after describing frankly enough the condition of the vessels, that while some authorities disapproved of the belted cruisers, yet others claimed a certain compensation for them, because they had a coal protection of 6½ feet. But this was an argument which would not stand examination. He might just as well say that a floating water-tank of thin iron would keep afloat longer if filled with coal. The fact was, it would sink all the sooner. But this was, unfortunately, the sort of logic to which the Naval Service of the country was committed. The Government had been warned that some of these vessels would, if constructed, prove failures; but they had gone on with their construction after reasonable warning. Both vessels had proved signal failures, and the country had lost the money invested in them."
Лично Гамильтону:
"There is another thing. We are actually told that certain ships of a most important character, and costing £2,000,000 sterling, are safe because of their armour having been sunk below the water-line, and have got a lot of coal on the top of the armour to help to sink them. I expected better things of the noble Lord, and even yet I expect better things from him."
Вот уж срезал так срезал.
Итого.
С первого представления этих кораблей в парламенте и вплоть до печальной развязки, они характеризовались крейсерами всеми, за исключением Шоу. И даже он, будучи одёрнут, вынужден был начать использовать общие определения.
Алекс написал:
#1288821
Это Вы путаете. Там менялось все с головокружительной быстротой.
Я пересказываю содержимое всех эти занимательных прений и сопровождавшей их газетной шумихи.
"It was due to this paper that attention was called to naval deficiencies in October or November last; and it was certainly strange that while Admirals and various officials connected with the Admiralty had been pointing out to the Government the danger that existed, their complaints were entirely passed by; but the moment that the articles appeared in this journal, the Government paid them immediate attention, and such attention, too, that they actually came down to the House and submitted proposals for increasing the Naval Estimates by no less a sum than £5,525,000. I have no hesitation in saying that that increase appeared to be due wholly to the agitation of The Pall Mall Gazette.
With regard to that £5,525,000, I am sure I, for one—I hope I do not show an undue curiosity—should like to know what has taken place in the official circles of the Government. Report says that a Committee of the Admiralty was appointed, and that they recommended an expenditure not of £5,525,000, but of something like £11,000,000 sterling.
Now, we know that the hon. Gentleman the Secretary to the Admiralty (Sir Thomas Brassey) is a Gentleman whom we can respect, and he always shows great respect to this House by coming down here with carefully prepared speeches. I had the pleasure of listening to his speech when he proposed the Estimates, and the whole of us formed the idea that a sum of £10,000,000 or £11,000,000 would be spent in remedying the deficiencies of the Navy. Yet the hon. Gentleman has now come to the lame conclusion that only £5,525,000 is to be spent, and that not at once, but to be spread over five years. That is the proposal of the Government through him, and it comes merely to this, that in five years another £1,000,000 is to be added to the Naval Estimates. That shows the Government have never realized the gravity of the naval condition of this country, and have no adequate idea of our naval defences.
...
If we are to be respected we must be strong; and I say the proposals made by the Government last December are not sufficient to meet the requirements of the case. We want to spend something like £7,000,000 or £10,000,000 at once, in order to bring us up to the relative position which we held in 1868"
16 марта 1885 года.
_________________
Спустя год.
"A few nights ago he had asked the hon. Gentleman the Secretary to the Admiralty (Mr. Hibbert) for a Return to be laid upon the Table of the 846 House showing the cost of the armoured, unarmoured, protected, and partially protected ships of the British Navy; and he informed him that the getting out of such a Return would involve so much labour that he regretted he could not give it to the House. He had, therefore, to obtain this information from other sources; and he found that the Fleet, excluding the old type of wooden vessels, had cost the country about £42,000,000.
Another part of his Question to the hon. Gentleman was as to what was the estimated present value of the Fleet. That also, he informed him, the Admiralty had no record of. The present value of the ships he took it to be was the cost at which fighting ships of their character could be built to replace them, measured by the standard of offensive power, defensive power, speed, and coal-carrying capacity; and he estimated that a Fleet combining superior capabilities to the present Fleet could be built for the sum of £12,000,000.
He thought, if they considered the requirements of the British Navy, that it had to protect our shores, our Colonies, our commerce, and our £140,000,000 of Mercantile Marino, a Fleet valued only at £12,000,000 was insufficient for those obligations. That became more apparent when they took into consideration that other nations had of late years been building ships of the modern type, and some of them not only having greater fighting qualities, but also superiority in regard to speed.
Other nations seemed to have recognized earlier than our own officials had done that speed was one of the great factors in the war ships of the future. Only a year ago this country was in a state of semi-panic because a war was thought to be probable between ourselves and another European Power.
The first thing then that was done by the Board of Admiralty was to look to the first line of defence, and what was the result? They found the Fleet was wofully deficient in fast cruisers, and they had to hire an amateur Fleet, selected from the fastest ships in the Mercantile Marine, to make up the deficiency. And what did the hire of this amateur Fleet cost us? Why, it cost the country £500,000 in six months. If, in time of probable war only, the country had to pay at the rate of £1,000,000 per annum for its deficiency in one respect in the constitution of the Fleet, what would it have to pay when the reality came? In his opinion, unless we altered the present method at once, we should have to rush in with £20,000,000 to put the Navy into such a state of efficiency as to comply with the obligations which would be imposed upon it."
15 марта 1886 года.
_________________
Закончилось всё это программой 1889 года и потому никак не может быть отнесено к маргинальным воззрениям.
Если честно, я даже не знал, что на "Имперьюзы" изначально собирались воткнуть локомотивные котлы:
"The circumstances which have caused this apparent loss are—firstly and chiefly, the changes involved in the adoption of a modified type of boilers. It was intended, in the first instance, to fit them with a locomotive type of boiler, and then it was decided after the trial of the Polyphemus to change the type."
Также, если кому-либо нужно, то могу привести занимательный текст на тему общих принципов принятия решений в адмиралтействе. Но там реально стена текста.
QF написал:
#1288879
Также, если кому-либо нужно, то могу привести занимательный текст на тему общих принципов принятия решений в адмиралтействе. Но там реально стена текста.
Если честно, то во всей дискуссии хотелось бы читать тексты, которые оппоненты приводят в пример
я худо бедно знаю немецкий, английский для меня темный лес... массивы выкладываемого текста просто выводят в ступор, мне интересна тема, но... такое ощущение, что дискуссия ведется между двумя игроками, как в покере - все остальные скинули карты - осталось только двое, которые в теме
Отредактированно Сумрак (20.06.2018 00:19:09)
Сумрак написал:
#1288884
я худо бедно знаю немецкий,
Захватите копированием, киньте в гугл переводчик, переведите на русский, потом на немецкий. Этого достаточно для понимания, я так поначалу мучал испанские , немецкие и итальянские тексты, так и переводчик намного тупее был.
Сумрак написал:
#1288884
такое ощущение, что дискуссия ведется между двумя игроками,
Я просто путешествовал
Сумрак написал:
#1288884
хотелось бы читать тексты
Для полноты картины не хватает более подробной истории развития проекта в стенах Адмиралтейства Отдела Главного Конструктора. Может быть автор ветки расскажет об этом...
РыбаКит написал:
#1288887
Захватите копированием, киньте в гугл переводчик, переведите на русский, потом на немецкий.
я уж лучше ПРОМТом - но в итоге получиться такая белиберда... лет десять назад уважаемый дон Нико приводил пример, как его студент перевел технический текст про принцип действия реостата, к сожалению уже за давностью не могу найти его сообщения, помню только кусок текста "...Голый проводник бегал по вагону..."
Правь, Британия, морями?
MR.GOURLEY (Sunderland) , in rising to move the following Resolution which stood in his name on the Paper:
— That a Select Committee be appointed to inquire into the designs upon which ships of war are now being built, and how far they are in harmony with the transition in Naval construction and tactics, and also the necessity for an organized system of harbour and coast defence, said, that on several occasions requests had been made for the appointment of a Committee upon the ship-building policy of the Admiralty.
Lord Brassey, when in that House, had asked first for a Royal Commission, and subsequently for a Committee. Other Members had done the same thing, but the Government of the day had always refused. Three grounds had been put forward for their refusal—in the first place, that it would be impossible to find enough Members who would be able to deal with a subject so difficult; secondly, that such a Committee would delay Admiralty work; and, in the third place, that it would remove the responsibility from the proper shoulders.
Now, he denied that the first of those objections applied at the present time, whom there was a larger number of Naval officers, Artillery officers, and Engineer officers in the House than over before; and also Members engaged in every kind of iron manufacture and shipbuilding—men who had built ironclads themselves.
As to the second objection, would such a Committee, he asked, have delayed the progress of vessels like the Inflexible, which took eight years to build, and cost some hundreds of thousands of pounds more than the estimate; the Polyphemus, which took seven years to build; or the Colossus, which all last year lay in the waters of the Silent, a monument of Admiralty folly in regard to her guns? If there were a Royal Commission or a Committee of this 590 House to inquire into the policy of the Admiralty, it would not, he was confident, delay progress with regard to those largo types of vessels or any other type; but, on the contrary, promote efficiency and progress.
In answer to the third objection, about removing responsibility from the officers connected with the Admiralty, he was bound to say that at the present moment, though there was every kind of official at the Admiralty, it was extremely difficult to fix responsibility when anything went wrong; in his opinion, all responsibility should attach to the first Lord. The objections hitherto raised by the Admiralty against his proposal, therefore, held no longer, as the First Lord of the Admiralty and the Government could easily find a sufficient number of hon. and gallant Members quite fit to deal with all the technical problems involved in designing and completing ships of war.
The report of Lord Dufferin's Committee, appointed 12 or 13 years ago, after the capsizing of the Captain, was the only detailed Report the House possessed with regard to our designs of ships, with the exception of the Memorandum issued the other day by the noble Lord the First Lord of the Admiralty (Lord George Hamilton). That Committee—which, by the way, was a Departmental Committee appointed to inquire into the line of policy pursued by the Admiralty itself—in other words, appointed by the Admiralty to sit in judgment on the Admiralty—considered that the Devastation was the strongest type of iron-clad then afloat; and is even yet—subject to slight additions to her bow armour—considered by experts to be the strongest type of iron-clad yet designed.
But the question he would now like to ask was this—how far the policy recommended by Lord Dufferin's Committee with regard to iron-clad armour had been carried out by the Admiralty? Now, it appeared from the Report of the noble Lord that in the case of the Warspite and the belted cruisers, instead of the armour being, as recommended by Lord Dufferin's Committee—and endorsed by Parliament two years age—18 inches the water, it was actually (although designed to be 18 inches above the water) found, on completion of the ships with their complement of coal on board, six inches below the water.
If there was nothing more than that against the designers of the Admiralty, he contended that he had made out a case for a Committee.
What must be the consequence if these vessels went into action? The consequence must be that they would be in a worse plight than if they had been built without armour at all. What applied to the Warspite and to the belted cruisers applied also to the Admiral class. These vessels were built on the citadel principle, a largo part of the vessel fore and aft being entirely without armour. He could not help thinking that the millions of money expended on those ships had been spent on the wrong type of vessel altogether. If he was correct in his information, Herr Krupp had already invented a gun which could throw a shell five miles, and designed for the very purpose of destroying, if possible, these unarmoured iron-dads. The shell which would be thrown from the gun carried a very heavy charge of powder, and, being fitted with a sensitive fuse, was certain to be very destructive.
He thought that, in regard to the differences of opinion regarding the Devastation and the Admiral class of ships, a case had been made out for inquiry; and he did not think that any hon. Member would hold the opinion that vessels of this class could now be considered fit for ocean fighting. They must be kept within the range of their coal supply. Only fancy a squadron of these vessels having to proceed to New York; how could they reach that side of the Atlantic on an emergency, seeing that they only carry four or five days' fuel? Why, they would have to be conveyed with huge colliers or become targets for swift belted cruisers, provided with speed, coal endurance, and long-range Krupp shell guns.
Another typo of ship to which Lord Dufferin's Committee referred was the Vanguard class, which was too weak in the lower structure. The Committee recommended that the lower structure of vessels of this class should be strengthened. What happened subsequently proved the correctness of the statement of the Committee, because the Vanguard was shortly afterwards sunk. Another type of vessels regarding which Lord Dufferin's Committee made inquiry was the Inconstant class, built for the purpose of cruising. But these vessels were built for ocean cruising; yet, strange to say, without any coal endurance, and the Committee recommended that in future that type of ship should be smaller, and constructed with more power, with large heavy guns, and efficient coal endurance.
How did the Admiralty rectify the defects which were pointed out in regard to the Inconstant class? They built two ships, the Iris and the Mercury, to steam 18 knots; but what was the result when they were completed? During the progress of the Egyptian war, the Peninsular and Oriental Company's fleet beat the Iris, which was engaged as a despatch vessel, by between 12 and 21 hours, and this at a time when the Iris was conveying Lord Wolseley on an emergency for the purpose of taking the command of the Army of the Nile; the truth being that those vessels cannot steam more than 14 knots in place of 18 as originally intended.
The Board of Admiralty intended to build a number of quick vessels to steam 19 and 20 knots. Judging from past experience, he feared that when these vessels were completed they would find that the Admiralty had made mistakes with regard to these new vessels similar to those which they had made in the past in regard to other types of ships.
Seeing that the Admiralty made such grievous mistakes between the inception of their designs and the completion of them, how could they expect the House to have confidence in the present system; he had no confidence in the present system; and, therefore, he asked for the appointment of a Committee, not for the purpose of thwarting the work of the Admiralty, but for the purpose of assisting and enabling it to come to right and proper conclusions with regard to the designs which they were preparing for the defence of the Empire.
He also wished to know who was responsible for the defects which were said to exist with regard to the Agamemnon and the Ajax?
Who was responsible for the present condition of our Channel Squadron? He believed that on the last occasion on which the Channel Squadron was manœuvred at sea, it was not possible to manœuvre it at more than six miles an hour. In the face of an efficient enemy, the squadron would have but a poor chance of escaping without injury at such a miserable speed as that.
Without in any way depreciating our Navy, he believed that, owing to the numerous defects in our naval administration with respect to ships and designs, in the event of war, our chance of success would have to rest mainly, if not entirely, on the bravery, ingenuity, and pluck of our seamen. The noble Lord the First Lord of the Admiralty and his practical coadjutor (Lord Charles Beresford), believed in grouping and in organization. He maintained that if they grouped the ships of all classes and all types, and exercised them in the game of war, there would be a much better chance of discovering the defects than by sending them on such cruises as was at present the practice. The Admiralty had a splendid opportunity of doing this at the present moment. They had the Channel Squadron at Gibraltar, and the Mediterranean Squadron in the Mediterranean.
In his judgment, it would be a wise policy if the Admiralty enabled both squadrons to come together, in order to test both men and ships by exercising them in the game of war—a policy about to be illustrated by the French in a sham attack upon Gibraltar. The hon. Gentleman concluded by moving the Motion which stood in his name.
***
THE SECRETARY TO THE ADMIRALTY (Mr. FORWOOD) (Lancashire, Ormskirk) said, he thought that many of the reflections of the hon. Member for Cardiff (Sir Edward Reed) upon the mode in which the business had been done at the Admiralty were just. These reflections, he believed, arose from circumstances similar to those pointed out by the hon. Member for Sunderland (Mr. Gourley) in reference to defective designs. No one would gainsay the importance of the question raised by the hon. Member for Sunderland, nor would anyone deny the propriety of bringing before the House the system under which our ships of war were designed. He did not intend, even if he were prepared, to defend the design of each and every vessel that had been adopted by the Admiralty.
Mistakes had, no doubt, been made, and would continue to be made, in those designs; but when constructing fighting machines that had to be worked under so many and such varying conditions of service, he thought they wore yet a long way off making a perfect fighting ship. When he used the term "mistakes," he did not impute blame to anyone, or mean that the errors were errors that should have been apparent to the designers. They were not errors by the light of the information that the designers had at the time that they designed the ships. Experience and use daily developed alterations and changes in the type of vessel required. He could not do bettor than quote from the Report of the Committee of 1871—Lord Dufferin's Committee, viz.:— A perfect ship of war is a desideratum which has never yet been attained, and is now further than ever removed from our reach. Any near approach to perfection in one direction inevitably brings with it disadvantages in another.
As he understood the object of the hon. Member, it was not so much to raise questions as to the suitability of this or that vessel, but rather to consider whether the principles on which designs were prepared and adopted by the Admiralty were such as to enable the country to obtain the best form of battle ship. Naturally those who supported the formation of a Committee on Designs illustrated their arguments by reference to failures in vessels that had been constructed.
But, to his mind, the real question to be determined was, not whether certain failures had occurred under the existing system, but whether, under any other arrangement, we should obtain, on the whole, a more serviceable Navy than the one we at present possessed. He believed that the general system adopted in regard to approving and designing of vessels by the Admiralty was good if worked out on plain, proper, sensible business lines. No doubt, in theory, a "Committee on Designs" sounded most attractive; but in practice he was inclined to believe that it would be found, not only unworkable, but prejudicial.
What was required in a vessel, especially in a fighting vessel, was a homogeneous design. The scantlings, dimensions, displacement, power, armament, should all proceed upon one common basis. This uniformity could best be secured by intrusting the work to one competent and responsible designer. In no science was there greater room for differences of opinion than that of the naval architect, and two experts were but seldom found, to agree on any one point. Therefore, if a Committee of exports was called together, and that Committee was composed of men of strong minds, the probability was that each would have some special point in construction to which he attached importance; that he would force his particular hobby upon his colleagues, with the result that a patchwork ship would be designed, one that could not possibly fulfil in a satisfactory manner any one requirement.
A design prepared under such a Committee would be no one man's production. There would be no individual responsible, and if it did not succeed there would be no on to whom blame could be personally attached. In his judgment the Admiralty system of preparing and approving designs was, as he had said, if conducted on business lines, a more satisfactory form of Committee with individual responsibility than could be devised by any plan of a Committee.
No Navy in the world required such a variety of type of vessels as did England. In addition to the necessity of maintaining a powerful fighting fleet, provision had to be made for the naval police of the globe, and for a fleet to protect our extending and ever growing commerce. We required ships for deep sea service, for river service, and vessels that would keep the sea for a lengthened period without loss of speed, or the necessity of being frequently placed in dry dock. The depository of all this knowledge was the Admiralty. The information daily gained from the officers in command of our numerous stations was alone in the possession of the officials of the Admiralty. They alone were able to watch the performances of each and every type of cruiser, and by the vast experience thus gained they were in the best position to know their faults and defects, and to guard against similar errors in new vessels.
The Admiralty possessed, in addition, a full knowledge of the progress of naval construction of all other nations. This, combined with their own experience, placed the Department in a position that could not be attained by any Committee of experts composed of gentlemen not daily in touch with the naval operations. The Admiralty had a highly trained Constructive Department, presided over by a gentleman who had attained European note as a designer of war ships. It was at the earnest request of the noble Lord now at the head of the Admiralty that Mr. White was induced to leave the Elswick Works and place his services at the disposal of the Government. "When objection was raised last year to Mr. "White continuing to act as consulting engineer for a certain period to the Elswick Works he determined to cease his connection with them, and in September such connection terminated. During the period after Mr. White had left Elswick and come to the Admiralty, he believed that gentleman had never once been consulted by the Elswick firm as to work which they had had in hand; but it would not have been possible for the Admiralty to obtain his valuable services had not the First Lord allowed him to be consulting adviser to that firm for a short period.
With regard to the general question, he had already stated that in his opinion the machinery and system of the Admiralty for providing efficient war vessels was good. He had qualified that statement by the stipulation that it must be carried out in a businesslike way, and he was bound to admit that this had not always been the case in times gone by. The Construction Department had brought forward designs and vessels had been ordered without the designs being properly referred to the officers responsible for the manning, arming, and machinery of the vessels.
The Chief Constructor had stated on his designs his views on these matters, and had estimated the displacement of his vessel for a certain weight of armament and engines, and an estimated complement of crew. These conditions had not always been examined by the officers best acquainted with these details. Proposals had thus been accepted without being properly examined. Subsequently, from time to time after the vessel's construction had commenced, serious alterations had been made in these important details, adding largely to the weight to be carried by the vessel beyond her original design. Vessels had also been kept an undue length of time under construction, and, as improvements developed in naval appliances, alterations and additions had been made to such ships incompatible with the ideas of those who designed them.
In illustration of this absence of procedure on business lines, to which the mistakes were almost entirely duo, he might cite one or two examples from vessels included in the Estimates now before the House. The Mersey, for instance, was designed and partly constructed to be a flush-decked ship to carry 14 6-inch guns, four on her spar deck, and 10 on her between-docks. When, however, the vessel was completely framed, a change of idea had come over the Admiralty, and they had altered her from a flush-deck ship to a vessel with a poop and forecastle, and a deep open waist, Her armament was altered by placing one heavy 8-inch gun on board in lieu of two of the 6-inch guns. Her sea-going trim was quite altered, and the increased cost for completing this vessel had been £50,000.
It had not infrequently happened that the Admiralty had allowed a ship to be commenced before they had finally determined the armament. The Benbow was an example of this. Her designer had proposed that she should carry two 63-ton guns in each of two barbettes; the Admiralty, instead of determining whether this armament was proper or not, contracted for the vessel at separate prices for the hull and barbettes, so that if they changed their mind as to the armament, they could more readily arrange with the builders the cost of such change; but the most important factor in the whole matter was overlooked—namely, that the lines of the hull were drawn to carry at a given displacement, and the question whether the vessel could carry at that displacement depended largely upon the weight of the armament to be put on board. What was the result? After the work on the ship had gone on for some time, there was no 63-ton gun ready, but there was a 110-ton gun completed which the Admiralty thought might be very well suited for the Benbow. Consequently, instead of the two barbettes being armed each with two 63-ton guns, it was determined to place 110-ton guns in each of the barbettes, rendering necessary serious alterations in the size of the barbettes. They also increased her armament by four 6-inch guns and 12 six-pounders; so that by the time the Admiralty had made up their mind as to the armament of this vessel, she was called upon to carry something like 500 tons of extra dead weight, or equal to one foot extra displacement beyond that at which she was originally designed to float.
In a similar way, 250 tons had been added to the weight of the belted cruisers now building beyond their designed capacity. Allusion had been made to the ridiculously small coal rapacity of the Impérieuse and the Warspite; but since these ships were designed, 430 tons of extra armament, machinery, and other things had been added to the weight after the lines of the hull had been determined upon.
He gave these facts in order to bear out his contention that whatever fault there might be in connection with the designs of ships under construction, the blame did not lie with the system under which ships were designed, but was clue to a want of business aptitude in giving effect to that system. When every effort was made to minimize weights in the ship, and the designer worked to the nearest ton, the importance of what he had stated would be realized. These matters had engaged the attention of the present Board of Admiralty from the day they came into Office, as the Report laid before the House by the First Lord would show. The policy laid down by his noble Friend at the head of the Admiralty and his Board, was to require that before a vessel was commenced there should be obtained in writing from the Director of Naval Ordnance and Engineer-in-Chief their opinion on the armament and machinery proposed. Then, after the design had been considered by the Controller, and before going to the Board collectively, a paper should be sent to members individually, so as to give them an opportunity of criticising and considering the design before the order was given for the vessel. As the Board included a number of most distinguished and experienced naval officers, he was satisfied that those designs would be closely and sharply criticized from the Naval point of view, as they ought to be; and the faults and defects which he had endeavoured to point out would be remedied by those gentlemen in the course of the careful examination they would give to the designs. Once passed by the Board, the order was most precise that no alteration or addition was to be allowed. When thus approved in every detail the designer could prepare the lines of the vessel, knowing exactly what she had to carry in weight, and what duties she was expected to perform.
It would also be the policy of the Board not to be tempted to make alterations in vessels when once their construction was commenced, but to push on the work to completion, adhering to the original design. Such a policy would, he was satisfied, obviate the recurrence of many of the costly mistakes of the past, to which allusion had been made, and would be the best means of attaining the end which the hon. Member for Sunderland (Mr. Gourley) had so much at heart, and with whoso object the Board of Admiralty fully sympathized.
The hon. Member for Cardiff (Sir Edward Reed) would be fully aware of the attempt made in 1871 to obtain the opinion of a Committee of Inquiry on the designs of vessels then being constructed. He would remember the variety of opinions expressed by Members of that Committee, and the difficulty of forming any reliable conclusion from their Report as to the best form of vessel to be built In looking through the evidence given before that inquiry he was much struck by one answer given by the hon. Member for Cardiff, who, on being pressed to express an opinion favourable to the introduction of compound engines into the Navy, said— My feeling is that I prefer to get actual experience rather than evidence—which, even when given from the best authorities, is not always to be trusted—before I would tamper with vessels of that kind. Now, if a Committee were formed, it would have to deal with evidence. For his own part, he preferred the common-sense process recommended by the hon. Member for Cardiff—to be guided by actual experience rather than by evidence. Another point he should notice was that there had been more Committees upon these matters than the hon. Member for Sunderland was aware of.
There was a Committee in 1865, the outcome of which was the construction of the Captain. In 1869 another Committee sat, and the Devastation and the Thunderer were produced; there was a third in 1871, after the Captain was lost; and he thought that, broadly stated, the result of these various Committees was that there were about as many opinions as there were Members on the Committee. It was true the Motion did not suggest the appointment of a permanent Committee on Designs, but was limited to an inquiry into the designs adopted within recent years. Such a proposal would have even a more prejudicial effect on the Service than the appointment of a permanent Committee. The inquiry would occupy months; it would distract the attention of officers; rival schools of ship-building would be heard before the Committee, each with its own theory. If upon so contentious and thorny a subject the Committee should by chance come to a unanimous conclusion, the effect might be to cramp the inventive and suggestive faculties of our naval officers, and to stereotype in our Navy some one system or type of ship. Men in official positions were not over partial to accept responsibility, and he thought the temptation would be great to the designers to shelter their future work behind the recommendations of such a Committee.
The result would be that for some time there would be a stereotyped typo of vessel, and the country would not keep up with that ever-growing progress which so marked the construction of our vessels in the last few years.
It must not, however, before one moment supposed that the present Board of Admiralty considered themselves or their advisers to be infallible, or that they lived in regions above and beyond the reach of outside advice. They were always pleased to receive suggestions, and in the event of difficulty or doubt there would be no hesitation in seeking the counsel of those from the outside who might be qualified to give a reliable opinion. For the reasons, however, that he had endeavoured to lay before the House, the Government could not accept the Motion of the hon. Member—a Motion which, if carried, would make it compulsory upon the Board to appoint a Committee. They hoped by using the machinery they at present possessed, and giving effect to the existing system on business lines, to arrive at the result the hon. Member desired—namely, to provide from time to time the most efficient ships of war that could be produced.
The hon. Member for Cardiff had made allusion to his visit to Devonport the other day. What the hon. Member said he saw there was the outcome of the want of business aptitude in the past. The Admiralty at the time were in a great hurry to get the vessels referred to constructed, and he believed the Admiralty had not made up their minds as to the host form of the vessels when they ordered them. At the present time, however, the Admiralty had made up their minds, and they knew what they wanted in respect of the vessels they ordered from truck to keel, and he believed that was the only way to avoid the mistakes which had occurred in the past. There was no doubt that much of the trouble that had arisen in ships now under consideration, had arisen from the overpace at which the work was pushed on.
A very large number of ships were put in hand at once, and he was afraid that that care and attention were not given to them which would have been given if the demand had not been so great and oppressive. He was afraid public opinion was somewhat to blame for that state of things. There had been some sweeping remarks by the hon. Member for Cardiff as regarded certain ships which he had named, and, although he had pointed out the differences between their designs and what they would be when they were completed; still he did not wish the House for one moment to suppose that those vessels would be anything but first-class men of war. They might have been better, but there was no hesitation on the part of naval officers of the Board in saying that they would prove good and efficient fighting ships; and if ever the time unfortunately came for their going into action they would be found as good and efficient fighting ships as a British seaman could desire.
QF написал:
#1288878
С первого представления этих кораблей в парламенте и вплоть до печальной развязки, они характеризовались крейсерами всеми, за исключением Шоу. И даже он, будучи одёрнут, вынужден был начать использовать общие определения.
Вы наверное не очень внимательно читаете. Вы тут ссылались на Фридмана, тогда почитайте, что он написал
As of June 1884 the proposed 1885-86 program included a follow-on New Mersey. Rendel wanted a total of four ships (with two in 1885-86), but in the wake of the ‘truth about the navy’ scare that fall the Gladstone Administration was compelled to accept the large supplemental Northbrook Program. The shape of the program was probably influenced by Captain Hall’s 1884 report on British naval weaknesses, in which second-class armourclads were a particular problem.16 Although the new ships were really cruisers with some thick waterline armour, they qualified as ironclads. The first five were ordered under the supplementary Northbrook Program of the 1884-85 fiscal year (actually in 1885), the last two being the 1885-86 ships. They formed the Orlando class.
По состоянию на июнь 1884 года предлагаемая программа 1885-86 включала в себя последующий Новый «Мерсей». Рендел хотел в общей сложности четыре корабля (по два в 1885-1886 годах), но после серии статей «Какова правды о флоте», Администрация Гладстона была вынуждена принять большую дополнительную программу Ноотбрука. На состав программы, вероятно, повлиял доклад капитана Холла 1884 года О слабостях британского военно-морского флота, в котором особенной проблемой были броненосцы второго класса. Несмотря на то, что новые корабли были на самом деле крейсерами с толстой броней по ватерлинии, они квалифицировались как броненосцы. Первые пять были заказаны в рамках дополнительной программы Нортбрука 1884-1885 финансового года (фактически в 1885 году), последние два кораблями были 1885-86. Они образовали тип «Орландо».
«Орландо».
The Elswick armament was not dead. Rendel revived his argument for heavy guns. This ship would have 9.2in guns at the ends (and twelve 6in on her broadside) and much thicker deck armour (2in flat as before, but 6in slopes). She had to be larger, 350ft rather than 300ft long, displacing 4150 tons.
Идеи Элсвика о вооружение не умерли. Рендел возродил свои аргументы в пользу тяжелых орудий. У этого корабля было бы 9.2 пушки в оконечностях (и двенадцать 6-дюймовок по бортам) и гораздо более толстая палубная броня (вместо прежних 2 дюймов 6 дюймов). Она должна была быть больше, 350 футов, а не 300 футов длиной. Водоизмещение 4150 тонн.
А ведь это уже был сильно переработанный относительно первоначального проект с сильно усиленным вооружением и бронированием.
Отредактированно Алекс (20.06.2018 02:24:45)
Алекс написал:
#1288915
Вы наверное не очень внимательно читаете.
Тогда вам не составит труда показать в приведённых цитатах кто и когда, помимо Шоу, отнёс "Орландо" не в крейсеры, а в линкоры.
Алекс написал:
#1288915
Although the new ships were really cruisers with some thick waterline armour
Да, именно так их и классифицировали современники. Belted cruiser. Соответствующие заключения современников приведены.
Алекс написал:
#1288915
they qualified as ironclads
Одним, вполне конкретным, человеком.
Алекс написал:
#1288915
displacing 4150 tons.
"Орландам" было малость далеко и до 8300 тонн тоже.
Алекс написал:
#1288915
А ведь это уже был сильно переработанный относительно первоначального проект с сильно усиленным вооружением и бронированием.
Вы заявили:
Алекс написал:
#1288813
А к лету 1885 г., когда "Орландо" выпрс в водоизмещении почти в 2 раза
Летом 1885 года Орландо не был в 8300 тонн. Также вы не смогли привести его 2500 тонного прототипа.
Вывод - вы путаете.
QF написал:
#1288916
Летом 1885 года Орландо не был в 8300 тонн. Также вы не смогли привести его 2500 тонного прототипа.
Я же вам уже написал, что Вы читаете крайне невнимательно, иногда складывается впечатление, что Вы вообще читаете только себя.
Алекс написал:
#1288747
Первый проект при водоизмещении в пределах "Мерсея" - бронепалубный крейсер с 2" палубой и 8 подводными ТА, с артиллерией существовало несколько вариантов в различной конфигурации 6" или 9,2" и 6", запасом угля в 900 т и скоростью не менее 16 уз..
QF написал:
#1288911
У этого есть хорошая сторона - мы ведь могли обсуждать китайский флот.
не, не - китайцев есть кому обсуждать, все равно кончится РЯВ)