HMS Edinburgh (1882)
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Career | |
---|---|
Laid down: | March 20, 1879 |
Launched: | March 18, 1882 |
Completed: | July 8, 1887 |
Broken up: | 1910 |
Specification | |
Displacement: | 9,420 tons |
Length: | 325 ft |
Beam: | 68 ft |
Draught: | 25 ft 9 inches |
Engine: | Two-shaft Humphreys inverted direct compound
I.H.P. = 6,808 |
Speed: | 16 knots |
Complement: | 396 |
Armament: | Four 12-inch breech loaders
Five 6-inch breech loaders Twenty smaller guns Two 14-inch torpedo tubes |
Armour: | Citadel 18 inches to 14 inches
Turrets 16 inches faces, 14 inches sides and rear Conning tower 14 inches Bulkheads 16 inches to 13 inches Deck 3 inches to 2.5 inches |
HMS Edinburgh was an ironclad battleship of the Colossus class which served in the Royal Navy of the Victorian era. She was the sister ship of HMS Colossus, being started before her but being completed after.
Edinburgh was completed carrying breech loading rifles as her main artillery, and was the first British battleship to do so; the 110-pounder Armstrong guns carried in HMS Warrior were, apart from being unsatisfactory, numerically only a lesser part of the total armament. The guns were carried in two turrets positioned near the centre of the ship, and the turrets were mounted en echelon. It was expected that, by mounting the turrets in this way, at least one gun from each turret could fire fore and aft along the keel line, and all four guns could fire on broadside bearings; it was intended that every part of the horizon could be covered by at least two guns. In practice it was found that firing too close to the keel line caused unacceptable blast damage to the superstructure, and cross-deck firing similarly caused damage to the deck.
Before Edinburgh the positioning of the conning tower in British ironclads had produced a variety of solutions; the difficulty was that the two important factors involved, maximum protection and maximum visibility, were essentially mutually incompatible. In this ship the conning tower was positioned forward of the foremast for good all-round vision; the chart-house was, however, placed on its roof, and the whole area surrounded by small guns, stanchions and other obstructions to the view; the problem was not solved until the political will to build larger ships in turn allowed more space for command facilities.
[edit] Service History
Her completion was delayed due to a lengthier than expected development time for her armament. An example of the Mark II twelve-inch breech loader exploded on board HMS Collingwood while on trial, and Edinburgh had to wait, as did other ships, for the Mark IV. She was commissioned at Portsmouth in July 1887 for the Jubilee Review, and was then posted to the Mediterranean until 1894. She was then briefly guardship at Hull, and was then guardship at Queensferry until 1897, when she went into reserve. In 1908 she was converted for use as a target ship, being fitted with fully backed and supported modern armour plates; the intention was to test and measure the effect on these plates of oblique impact by armour-piercing shells filled with Lyddite, the most potent explosive of the period. As a result of these trials, which revealed major shortcomings in British high-explosive shells, the Controller, Jellicoe, ordered that the design of these shells should be improved. He was shortly thereafter appointed as Commander, Atlantic Fleet, and this instruction was not carried out. At the Battle of Jutland many British armour-piercing shells either did not pierce German armour, or did so but failed to explode, because of this failing.
[edit] References
- Oscar Parkes British Battleships ISBN 0-85052-604-3
- Conway All the World's Fighting Ships ISBN 0-85177-133-5
- D K Brown Warrior to Dreadnought ISBN 1-86176-022-1