Greyhound-class destroyer
| _underway_at_Portland.jpg) Greyhound underway at Portland in 1906 | |
| Class overview | |
|---|---|
| Name: | Greyhound | 
| Builders: | Hawthorn Leslie, Hebburn | 
| Operators: |  Royal Navy | 
| Preceded by: | Mermaid class | 
| Built: | 1899–1902 | 
| In commission: | 1902–1920 | 
| Completed: | 3 | 
| Scrapped: | 3 | 
| General characteristics | |
| Type: | Destroyer | 
| Displacement: | 
 | 
| Length: | 214 ft 6 in (65.38 m) overall | 
| Beam: | 21 ft 1 in (6.43 m) | 
| Draught: | 13 ft (4.0 m) | 
| Installed power: | 6,100 shp (4,549 kW) | 
| Propulsion: | 
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| Speed: | 30 knots (56 km/h; 35 mph) | 
| Complement: | 62 | 
| Armament: | 
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Three Greyhound-class destroyers served with the Royal Navy during the First World War.[1] Built in 1899–1902, Greyhound, Racehorse and Roebuck were three-funnelled turtle-backed destroyers, with the usual Hawthorn funnel tops, built by R. & W. Hawthorn, Leslie & Company at their Hebburn-on-Tyne shipyard.
They were virtually identical to the Mermaid-class destroyer built a couple of years earlier by the same company, except that they used a different type of water-tube boiler; Yarrow rather than Thornycroft.[2] These four boilers produced 6,100 hp to given them the required thirty knots and they were armed with the standard 12-pounder guns and two torpedo tubes. They carried a complement of 63 officers and men. In 1913 the three - like all other surviving three-funnelled destroyers of the "30-knotter" group - were re-classed as C-class destroyers.
References
- ↑ "Greyhound Class Destroyer". battleships-cruisers.co.uk. Retrieved 12 July 2010.
- ↑ Lyon, The First Destroyers, p. 94
- Lyon, David (2001) [1996]. The First Destroyers. Shipshape monographs. London: Caxton Editions. ISBN 1-84067-364-8.
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