HMS York |
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Class overview | |
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Operators: | Royal Navy |
Preceded by: | County class |
Succeeded by: | Leander class |
Planned: | 7 |
Completed: | 2 |
Cancelled: | 5 |
Lost: | 2 |
General characteristics York, as per Lenton[1] | |
Type: | York heavy cruiser |
Displacement: | 8,250 tons standard / 10,350 tons full load |
Length: | 540 ft (164.6 m) p/p 575 ft (175.25 m) o/a |
Beam: | 57 ft (17.58 m) |
Draught: | 17 ft (6.17 m) |
Propulsion: | Eight Admiralty 3-drum water-tube boilers Parsons geared steam turbines 80,000 shp (59,700 kW) on four shafts |
Speed: | 32.25 kt (30.25 knots full load) |
Range: | 1,900 tons oil fuel; 10,000 nmi (20,000 km) at 14 knots (26 km/h) |
Complement: | 623 |
Armament: |
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Armour: |
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Aircraft carried: | One x Fairey Seafox |
Aviation facilities: | rotating catapult |
General characteristics (Exeter, as per Lenton[1]) | |
Displacement: | 8,390 tons standard / 10,410 tons full load |
Beam: | 58 ft (17.67 m) |
Complement: | 630 |
Armour: | as Exeter, except;
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Aircraft carried: | Two x Fairey Seafox, later Supermarine Walrus |
Aviation facilities: | Two fixed catapults |
Notes: | Other characteristics as per York |
The York class was the second and final class of 8-inch (203 mm)–gunned heavy cruisers built for the Royal Navy under the terms of the 1922 Washington Naval Treaty. They were essentially a reduced version of the preceding County class, scaled down to enable more cruisers to be built from the limited defence budgets of the late 1920s.
It was initially planned to build seven ships of this class, though in the end only two were constructed—HMS York, started in 1927, and HMS Exeter, started in 1928. Exeter differed in appearance from York because of late changes in her design. The remaining ships were delayed due to budget cuts, and then following the London Naval Treaty of 1930 the Royal Navy decided its cruiser needs were best met by building a greater number of yet smaller cruisers with 6–in guns.[2]
Both ships served in World War II. Most famously, Exeter took part in the Battle of the River Plate against the German raider Graf Spee, and was badly damaged, though later repaired. Ultimately, both ships were lost in action.
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The Royal Navy had a need for smaller cruisers than the County class, the largest design possible under the Washington limits, in order that more could be built under the strict defence economies of 1920s Britain. From 1925 the Royal Navy planned a "Class B" cruiser (as against the 10,000-ton cruisers of Class A, such as the Counties.) [3]
The new design was to have a displacement of 8,500 tons, as opposed to the 10,000 tons of the County class. This weight saving was mainly to be accomplished by reducing the armament to six 8-in guns (as opposed to the 8 guns on the County class), and also by using a new Mark II mounting for the guns. Otherwise the new ships were to share all the main features of the preceding class.[4]
The economies in size allowed for a 50-foot (15 m) reduction in length and 9 feet (3 m) in beam over the Countys. Their engines were identical - four boilers in two boiler rooms providing steam for four Parsons geared turbines, generating 80,000 shaft horsepower. The design speed was 32.5 knots (60.2 km/h), one knot faster than the County class.[5]
Armoured protection included a 3-inch-thick (76 mm), 8-foot-deep (2 m) main belt and an armoured lower deck joining at its top edge. Over the magazine spaces, the belt thickened to 4in, and the armour extended above the belt, with a 2.5-in magazine crown The turrets had 2in armour to the face and crown, 1.5in on sides and rear, and the barbettes on which the turrets sat had 1in armour. The transmitting station was also covered by 1in armour.[6] To shorten the belt length, the amidship magazine found on the Countys was removed (reduced armament required less magazine space anyway). This armour scheme was generally equivalent to that of the County class, though thicker over the machinery spaces.
The six 8 inch Mark VIII guns were mounted in three turrets. York used the Mark II mounting, which was intended to be 20 tons lighter than the Mark I mounting used on the earlier County class ships; however, in fact it turned out to be heavier.[7] The Mark II mounting was capable of firing at up to 80 degrees elevation for anti-aircraft barrage fire. However, this feature, which was also shared with the Mark I mounting, turned out to produce more mechanical headaches than were justified by its very marginal military utility.[8] Exeter used a modified Mark II* mounting, limited to 50 degrees elevation.[9]
The secondary armament consisted of four 4in QF Mark V guns and two 2pdr guns. Two triple 21-in torpedo tubes were carried. This was similar to the County class, with the exception that the Yorks carried two fewer torpedo tubes, because of the narrower beam.
As a result of the magazine changes, and to keep the funnels distant from the bridge, only two funnels were required; the forward boiler room uptakes trunked up into a large fore-funnel. This was raked in York to clear the flue gasses from the bridge, but was straight in Exeter owing to an altered bridge design and more extensive trunking. To maintain homogeneity of appearance, York stepped raked masts and Exeter vertical ones. York had a tall "platform" style bridge as seen in the Countys, which was somewhat distant from 'B' turret. This was because it had been intended to fit a catapult and floatplane to the roof of the turret, which needed clearance distance and required a tall bridge to provide forward view. The roof of the turret, however, was not sufficiently strong to carry this catapult and it was never fitted. Exeter was ordered two years later and the bridge was redesigned in light of this, being lower, further forward and fully enclosed, as later seen in the Leander and Arethusa classes.
York eventually received a rotating catapult amidships behind the funnels, and Exeter had a fixed pair in the same location, firing forwards and angled out from the centreline. A crane for recovery was located to starboard and one aircraft could be carried, initially a Fairey Seafox and later, in Exeter, a Supermarine Walrus.
The Yorks saved 1,750 tons in net weight, but the reductions in cost of £250,000 and manpower of 50 was something of an uneconomical saving.
Name | Pennant | Builder | Laid down | Launched | Completed | Fate |
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York | 90 | Palmers Shipbuilding & Iron Company, Jarrow | 16 May 1927 | 17 Feb 1928 | 6 June 1930 | Rammed and crippled by two Italian explosive motor boats at Suda Bay 26 March 1941, beached in Suda Bay. Further damaged by German air raid, 18 May 1941. Abandoned, 22 May 1941. Salvaged and scrapped Feb 1952. |
Exeter | 68 | HM Dockyard, Devonport | 1 August 1928 | 13 July 1929 | 31 July 1931 | Sunk by gunfire from Japanese cruisers Haguro and Nachi in Second Battle of the Java Sea 1 March 1942. |
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