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HMS Sultan (1870) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

HMS Sultan (1870)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Career RN Ensign
Builder: Chatham Dockyard
Laid down : February 29, 1868
Launched: May 31, 1870
Completed: October 10, 1871
Broken up: 1946
Specification
Displacement: 9,290 tons
Length: 325 ft
Beam: 59 ft
Draught: 25 ft 6 inches light, 28 ft (9 m) deep load
Engine: One-shaft Penn trunk, I.H.P.= 7,720
Speed under power: 14.13 knots
Rig: Ship-rigged, sail area 49,400 sq ft (4,590 m²)
Best speed under sail: 6 knots (11 km/h)
Complement: 633
Armament: Eight 10-inch muzzle-loading rifles

Four 9-inch muzzle-loading rifles

Seven 20-pounder breech loading rifles

Armour: Belt 9 inches, tapering to 6 inches

Main deck battery 9 inches

Upper deck battery 8 inches

Bulkheads 6 inches to 4.5 inches

HMS Sultan was a broadside ironclad of the Royal Navy of the Victorian era, who carried her main armament in a central box battery. She was named for Sultan Abdülâziz of the Ottoman Empire, who was visiting England when she was laid down.

With the exception of some small warships designed only for harbour defence, every ironclad warship so far completed, starting from HMS Warrior, had mounted their main armament in broadside batteries. Although the turret-armed ships HMS Monarch and HMS Captain were building, it was decided by the Board of Admiralty that, pending results from these two experimental ships, Sultan would carry her artillery in a centrally-placed box battery.

The design of the ship was closely based on the design of HMS Hercules. Unlike the battery of the earlier ship, that of Sultan was on two levels; the main deck guns provided broadside fire, with limited ahead fire from the foremost gun, while the upper deck guns provided additional broadside fire and also could fire astern, by traversing the after gun on a turntable.

The hull had one of the roundest amidships cross-section ever adopted at the time of her launch, and this and the low metacentric height of only three feet made her a very steady gun platform. It was soon found, however, that she lacked adequate stability - in Naval parlance she was "tender" - and some six hundred tons of extra ballast had to be inserted into her double bottom.

[edit] Service history

She was commissioned at Chatham for the Channel Fleet, in which she served until 1876. She was refitted, being reduced to barque rig, and posted to the Mediterranean under the command of His Royal Highness the Duke of Edinburgh. She was with Admiral Hornby at the Dardanelles in 1878. She was then again refitted, and reduced to reserve until 1882, when she returned to the Mediterranean. At the bombardment of Alexandria she sustained casualties of two killed and eight wounded from a single hit on the battery. She was with the Particular Service Squadron during the Russian war scare of June to August, 1885, and was retained in the Mediterranean thereafter. On March 6, 1889 she grounded on an uncharted rock in the Comino Channel between Malta and Gozo, ripping her bottom open. She slowly flooded and, in a gale on March 14, 1889 she slipped off the rock and sank. She was raised in August by the Italian firm of Baghino & Co for a fee of £50,000. After temporary repairs she was brought home to Portsmouth, undergoing modernisation and repair until 1896. She served in the reserve until 1906, when she was partially dismantled and became an artificers' training ship under the name of Fisgard IV; in 1931 she was further converted into a mechanical repair ship, regaining her original name of Sultan. During World War II she was a depot ship for minesweepers at Portsmouth, and was sold in 1947

[edit] References


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