Translate

Thursday 11 February 2016

British shipyard Vickers designed battleship for the Royal Netherlands Navy in 1912-1914


In the first part of the 20th Century was the Netherlands Royal Navy interested in obtaining (nine) dreadnoughts mainly for the defence of the Dutch East Indies. While Dutch shipyards were not able at that moment to build such warships were tenders asked from foreign shipyards. Namely the German shipyards Friedrich Krupp Germaniawerft at Kiel, Blohm&Voss at Hamburg, Vulcan Werke at Stettin, Schichau at Danzig, A.G. Weser, at Bremen, the British shipyards of Sir W.G. Armstrong, Elswick, Vickers at London, Beardmore at Glasgow and the Conventry Syndicate/Fairfield Shipbuilding&Co. at London and the Italian shipyards of Stabilimento Technico at Triest and Ansaldo at Sestri Ponente.

The armament was to consist of :
4x2-35.6cm/14” /45 breech loading guns in barbettes placed on the centre line, 4 guns were to fire straight ahead, 4 right astern and 8 on each broadside over the greatest possible sector on each side and for each gun 100 rounds;
16-15cm/6” quick firing /50 in casemates with 250 round for each gun. At least 4 guns were to fire straight ahead and 4 right astern and also a few degrees over the other side of the centre line and
12-7,5cm/3” quick firing guns without gun shields to be used as anti-balloon artillery as far as they were not mounted between decks, for each gun 300 pounds.
4-21” broadside submerged torpedo tubes. The 2 foremost torpedo tubes were to fire 10-15 degrees before the beam, the 2 backward torpedo tubes 10-15 degrees abaft the beam and for each gun 3 torpedoes.

While the Royal Netherlands Navy since decades for the main armament her ships fitted out with Krupp guns which performed always well and was trusted by the Dutch naval personnel was a strong preference for Krupp guns on the battleships to be built.

Main armour belt at least 25cm thick, sloping to the fore and aft ends with the lower limit no rising out of the water with the ship trimmed to trial displacement heeled over an angle of minimum 7 degrees. The 6” gun casemates were to protected by 18cm thick armour, the barbettes and conning tower by at least 30cm thick armour. Further more armoured decks and bulkheads and the lower parts of the funnel protected. The armour was to made of Krupp cemented steel. Longitudinal nickel steel made bulkheads, torpedo nets and booms were to be used as anti torpedo protection.

Accommodation required for 35 officers, 15 engineers, 19 warrant officers, 36 petty officers and around 800 sailors.

As the battleship was to serve in the tropics [the Dutch East Indies] were good cooling devices for the ammunitions a necessity. There were two separate similar refrigerating plants acquired, each able to cool all ammunition magazines at the same time to a maximum allowed temperature of 28 degrees.

Vickers came with a design of 28.483 tons/28.033 long tons, an armour belt amidships with a thickness of 25cm. To obtain a horsepower of 34.000 ship were oil-fired 15 boilers needed to obtain the speed of 22 knots. Displacement 28.483 tons/28.033 long tons: hull 8.672 tons/8.535 long tons, armour 8.960 tons/8.820 long tons, engines 2.445 tons/2.460 long tons, armament 3.470 tons/3.415 long tons, fuel 2.999 tons/2.952 long tons, equipment 1.651 tons/1.625 long tons and margin 281 tons/280 long tons.

Sources
Archive Kon. Mij. De Schelde 1875-1970 (Municipality Archive Vlissingen, Netherlands) inventory number 214.1818.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dutch_1913_battleship_proposal