Beagle Class Destroyer (1909)

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Sixteen destroyers of the Beagle Class were ordered as part of the 1908-1909 Naval Programme.

They inaugurated the use of 21-in torpedoes on Royal Navy destroyers.

Armament

Guns

One 4-in QF Mark VIII gun forward Three 12-pdr 12 cwt guns, two in echelon on the beam and one aft

Torpedoes

Two single 21-in tubes on the centre line, one right aft, firing the short 18.5-foot Mark I.[1]

Control

Voice Control Equipment
Handbook of Fire Control Instruments, 1909, Plate 55.

The ships were probably completed with the Navyphone and Telaupad circuitry outlined in the Handbook of Fire Control Instruments, 1909[2] for control of gunnery, searchlights and torpedoes. It was powered by six Pattern 1453 cells.

Each gun, torpedo tube and searchlight had a set of telaupads, and there were navyphones on fore bridge (a Pattern 863) and in the aft steering position (a Pattern 2140A).

The C.O.S. on the fore bridge had two positions:

  1. Fore bridge Navyphone tied to after steering position Navyphone
  2. both Navyphones in communication with all Telaupads

Dreyer Table

These ships had no fire control tables.[3]

Fire Control Instruments

See Also

Footnotes

  1. Annual Report of the Torpedo School, 1909, p. 32.
  2. Handbook of Fire Control Instruments, 1909, p. 52, Plate 55.
  3. absent from list in Handbook of Capt. F.C. Dreyer's Fire Control Tables, p. 3.

Bibliography

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