Pensacola-class
Northampton-class
Building ordered on 18 December 1925, building awarded on 19 April 1927, supplementary contract signed on 13 June 1927, laid down by Puget Sound Naval Yard, Bremerton, Washington, USA on 4 July 1928, launched by Miss Jane B. Kennedy on 1 September 1930, commissioned on 15 January 1931, reclassified from CL-28 into CA-28 on 1 July 1931, decommissioned on 17 June 1946, stricken on 1 March 1959 and sold to the Marlene Blouse Corporation, New York, USA be broken up on 14 September 1959.
With a displacement of 9.200 (standard) tons and as dimensions 173 (between perpendiculars)-182,96 (over all) x 20,14 x 4,98 metres or 569-600.3 x 66.1 x 16.4 feet. The machinery consisted of 4-shaft Parsons turbines and 8 White-Forster boilers supplying via 4 screws 107.000 hp allowing a speed of 32,7 knots. Range with a speed of 15 knots and fuel oil bunker capacity of 1.400 tons was 10.000 nautical miles. Four boiler rooms. Heating surface 95.040 square feet. Weight machinery 2.161 tons. 4 Turbo generator sets each of 250kW 120-120Volt and made by General Electric Company. The crew numbered 691 men (included 90 officers). The armour consisted of a 2,5cm/1”- 9,5/3.75” thick belt and with the barbettes, gun houses and conning tower protected by respectively 3,8cm/1.5”, 1,9cm/0.75”-6,4cm/2.5” and 3,2cm/1.25”.
The armament consisted of 3x3-20,3cm/8” /55 cal guns, 4-12,7cm/5” /25 cal anti aircraft guns, 2-4,7cm/1.9”/3pd saluting guns, 6-53,3cm/21” torpedo tubes and since 1932 4 planes for which amidships 2 catapults were available. The armament in 1941 consisted of 3x3-20,3cm/8” /55 cal guns, 8-12,7cm/5” /25 cal anti aircraft guns, 7 x quad 4cm/1.6” Bofors guns, 28-2cm/0.79 Oerlikon guns, 2-4,7cm/1.9”/3pd saluting guns, 6-53,3cm/21” torpedo tubes.