English:
Identifier: submarinesmines00domv (find matches)
Title: Submarines, mines and torpedoes in the war
Year: 1914 (1910s)
Authors: Domville-Fife, Charles W. (Charles William), 1886-
Subjects: Submarines (Ships) Submarine warfare Submarine mines
Publisher: London : Hodder and Stoughton
Contributing Library: Robarts - University of Toronto
Digitizing Sponsor: University of Toronto
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hting value. They, however, differ 72 British Submarines slightly from each other: D.i has a submerged displacement of 595 tons;D.2 of 600 tons; and the remaining vessels of this class of 620 tons. They have an approximate length of 150 feet and a beam of 15 feet. Heavy-oil engines of 1,200 h.-p. drive them at a maximum speed of 16 knots an hour on the surface, and electric motors of 550 h.p. give them a submerged speed of just over 10 knots an hour. All these vessels have twin-screws situated below the centre line. Their cruising range on the surface is 4,000 miles, and when submerged 120 knots at 7 knots an hour. These vessels were the first to be fitted with a special and more efficient pattern of electric storage battery and a safer type of electric motor. The armament of the Ds consists of two bow and one stern tube with six 18-inch White-head torpedoes. Ds 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 are also fitted with a small quick-firing,high-angle gun for defence against air-craft. This gun is fixed on a disappearing
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Image: The British Submarine "C.34." Displacement, 320 tons; Speed, 14.9 knots; Armament, 2 bow torpedo tubes. There are 37 vessels of this class, completed between 1906-12. - Book text: i V,^ 5 British Submarines 73 mounting, enabling it to be quickly and almost automatically lowered into a water-tight cavity in the superstructure before the submarine dives below the surface.The complement of these vessels is twenty-one officers and men. E Class. (Completed 1912-14.) Es 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13,14, 15, 16, 17, 18. These fine ocean-going submarines are the latest additions to the British Flotillas.They have a submerged displacement of 800 tons, are 176 feet long and 22^ feet in beam. The heavy-oil engines of nearly 2,000 h.-p. give them a surface speed of over 16 knots, while the electric engines of 800 h.-p. drive them at a maximum speed of 10 knots an hour when submerged. Their surface cruising range is 5,000 miles at economical speed, and the submerged endurance 140 knots at 8 knots an hour.In point of armament the Es are far 74 British Submarines more powerful than their predecessors,being fitted with four tubes and carrying six of the largest and most powerful W
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