HNoMS Rap (1873)

For other ships of the same name, see HNoMS Rapp.
Plan of KNM Rap
History
Name: KNM Rap
Ordered: 1873
Builder: John I. Thornycroft & Company
Laid down: 1873
Launched: 1873
Commissioned: 1873
Struck: 1920
Fate: Preserved at the Royal Norwegian Navy Museum
General characteristics
Type: Torpedo boat
Displacement: 7 long tons (7 t)
Length: 18.2 m (59 ft 9 in)
Beam: 2.4 m (7 ft 10 in)
Propulsion: Compound steam engine, 100 hp (75 kW)
Speed: 14.5 knots (16.7 mph; 26.9 km/h)
Complement: 7
Armament: Designed for a spar torpedo, later two 'frames' for Whitehead torpedoes

The Norwegian warship HNoMS Rap was a torpedo boat built in 1873. She was one of the first torpedo boats to carry the self-propelled Whitehead torpedo after being converted to use them in 1879, the same year the Royal Navy's HMS Lightning entered service. The name Rap (Rapp in the modern spelling) translates as "quick" - a fitting name for a fast attack boat.

The Rap was ordered from Thornycroft shipbuilding company, England, in either 1872 or 1873, and was built at Thornycroft's shipyard at Church Wharf in Chiswick on the River Thames. Managing a speed of 14.5 knots (27 km/h), she was one of the fastest boats afloat when completed. The Norwegians initially planned to arm her with a spar torpedo, but this may never have been fitted. Rap was briefly used for experiments with a towed torpedo before finally being outfitted with launch racks for the new self-propelled Whitehead torpedoes in 1879. Her initial commanding officer was First Lieutenant Koren, who also designed the torpedo racks.

Although Rap had been built several years earlier, the first true torpedo boat built to carry self-propelled torpedoes was the British HMS Lightning, and she was in fact fitted with such torpedoes before Rap. The first warship of any kind to carry self-propelled torpedoes was the HMS Vesuvius of 1873.

With a displacement of less than ten tons, Rap was very limited in terms of endurance and seaworthiness. Over the next three decades Rap would be followed by many other Norwegian torpedo boats of ever-increasing size and complexity. She was finally stricken from the fleet in 1920, long after she had become obsolete.

Today, the Rap is exhibited at the Naval Museum in Horten, Norway.

Rap was also the name given to a class of six MTBs built for the Royal Norwegian Navy in the 1950s.



Royal Norwegian Navy patrol boat classes
 
HNoMS Rap 1873–1920
Rapp 1952–?
Tjeld 1959–1992
Storm 1965–2000
Snøgg 1970–1994
Hauk 1979–2009
Skjold 1999–Present
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