Neha Patil (Editor)

Ant class gunboat

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Name
  
Ant class

Preceded by
  
HMS Plucky

Subclasses
  
Gadfly class

Operators
  
Royal Navy

Succeeded by
  
Medina class

Ant-class gunboat

Builders
  
Portsmouth Dockyard Robert Napier & Sons Chatham Dockyard Charles Mitchell & Co J & G Rennie, Greenwich Campbell Johnston, North Woolwich Laird Brothers, Birkenhead Pembroke Dockyard

The Ant-class gunboat was a class of twenty-four Royal Navy flat-iron gunboats mounting a single 10-inch gun, built between 1870 and 1880. They carried no masts or sails, being among the first Royal Navy vessels not to do so. The last four vessels were ordered separately and are sometimes known as the Gadfly class, although they were essentially identical. Members of the class lingered on as steam lighters, dredgers, boom defence vessels and base ships, lasting in some cases into the 1950s.

Design

The flat-iron gunboats were designed for coastal defence and bombardment, and were constructed from iron. They were not rigged, and the single 10-inch (18 ton) muzzle-loading rifle was fitted forward on a hydraulic mount that allowed it to be lowered for a sea passage to improve the vessel's seaworthiness, and raised for action. Power was provided by a pair of two-cylinder horizontal single-expansion steam engines driving twin screws. Together they developed 260 indicated horsepower (190 kW), giving a top speed of about 8.5 knots (15.7 km/h).

References

Ant-class gunboat Wikipedia


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