Audacious class ironclad


HMS Vanguard with the later barque rig
Class overview
Built: 1867-1870
In commission: 1870-1927
Completed: 4
Lost: 2
General characteristics
Type: Ironclad warship
Displacement: Audacious/Invincible: 6,106 tonnes
Iron Duke/Vanguard: 6,034 tons
Length: Audacious/Invincible: 280 ft (85 m)
Iron Duke/Vanguard: 341 ft 3 in (104.01 m)
Beam: 54 ft (16 m)
Draught: Audacious/Invincible: 22 ft 7 in (6.88 m)
Iron Duke/Vanguard: 23 ft 2 in (7.06 m)
Propulsion: Coal-fired reciprocating steam engines
6 boilers
2 shafts
Sail plan: Full rigged ship, later converted to barque-rig[1]
Speed: Audacious/Invincible: 13.5 knots (25.0 km/h)
Iron Duke/Vanguard: 13 knots (24 km/h)
Complement: 450
Armament:

Audacious/Invincible:
10 × 9 inch guns
4 × 64-pounder guns
Iron Duke/Vanguard:
10 × 12-ton, 9 inch (229 mm) RML guns
4 × 6 inch (152 mm) 64-pounder (29 kg) RML 'chaser' guns (two at bows and two at stern)
6 × 20-pounder (9 kg) guns

Ram
Armour: Audacious/Invincible:
8 feet (2.4 m) waterline belt 8 inches (203 mm) thick amidship reducing to 6 inches (152 mm) thick at ends of hull
Central battery protected by 6–8 inches (152 mm) armour
10 inches (254 mm) teak backing
Iron Duke/Vanguard:
Iron plating with teak backing
Belt: 6 to 8 in (152 to 203 mm)
Battery: 4 to 6 in (102 to 152 mm)
Bulkheads: 4 to 5 in (102 to 127 mm)

The Audacious class battleships were designed by Sir Edward Reed at the request of the Board of Admiralty to serve as second-class battleships on distant foreign stations.

Contents

Background and design

The principal motivation driving the Admiralty was the French policy, already well advanced, of dispatching their own small ironclads to these same distant stations. Monarch was under construction, and Captain had been authorised. Both of these were turret-armed ships, and the press agitated for a turret-mounted armament in these newly ordered ships. The Admiralty, however, decided that as there had been built a long succession of successful broadside ironclads, and no turret-armed ships had been produced other than some coast-defence ships of low displacement and limited range, it would be better to await the assessment of Monarch and Captain before departing from the broadside principle.

As the ships were intended for service in waters far distant from Britain, and given the limited efficiency of the steam engines of the period, it was necessary to equip them with a full sailing rig. Reed never wavered from his belief that in a fully rigged ship armament carried in a central broadside battery was the superior method, being unobstructed by masts and rigging. Both the designer and the Admiralty were therefore in total agreement that these ships should not be armed with turret-mounted artillery. The rig was later converted to a barque-rig, which required fewer hands to manage.[1]

The ships were designed following the lines of HMS Defence, by then more than five years old. Reed found that, on the dimensions of the older ship, the armament, armour and machinery would all be insufficient for the stated requirements, and asked for an increase in tonnage, which was granted by the Board only with reluctance.

Although four ships were required, initially only two, HMS Audacious and HMS Invincible were laid down. The Admiralty, following a commitment made to Parliament by the First Lord of the Admiralty, put the other two ships out to tender. Submissions of various designs were received: a broadside and turret ship from Mare & Company, a broadside ship from Palmers, a different broadside ship from Thames Ironworks, and turret ships from Napiers, Samudas and Lairds Co & Sons. All were determined to be in some way inadequate, and ultimately the third and fourth ships were built, with some delay, to the Admiralty design.

This class was the first homogeneous class of battleships to be launched since the Prince Consort class, and the last until the Admiral class battleships.

Ships

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Winfield, Rif; Lyon, David (2004). The Sail and Steam Navy List: All the Ships of the Royal Navy 1815–1889. Chatham Publishing. ISBN 978-1-86176-032-6. OCLC 52620555.  p250

External links