Posts: 1396 Joined: November 19th, 2011, 12:49 pm
|
1933 Naval Plan
Riksepplet class
By the turn of the 19th century Erikrike’s navy was mainly formed by ten large CDSs, all of (relative) world class at their commissioning. In 1908 the last of these ships were completed, but becouse of the Dreadnought’s arrival they were made hopelessly obsolete.
By 1911 a project for a new ship had been evolved, armed with ten 240mm guns in five twin turrets, with a deplacement of 15 000 tons. This design was due to be built, but becouse of WW1 focus was shifted towards ship that could be completed faster(the armoured Cruiser design had been estimated to be completed in 1916, by which time the war was thought to have ended, for good or for worse.
In retrospect, this was somewhat regretted, as the ship would have provided the Erikrike Navy with a viable punch in most armed conflicts. During WW1 and after, several designs was made, but none truly considered and approved.
By the end of ‘20s, however, this changed. Earlier the old ships had been considered at least somewhat acceptable for use, but a series of accidents involving some of the older units showed that these were no longer fit for service. And thus, projects for a new ship was started.
It was not until 1932 that a design was finally worked out which was considered satisfactory. The design in question, project name Design H2, carried six 240mm rifles in two three-gun turrets, Eights dual purpose 105mm guns in four twin mounts, and a number of smaller AA guns, and completed with six torpeds in two tripple mounts. The armour was considered “thin but fully satisfactory for the ship’s mission”, with a 145mm armour belt, 100mm deck armour, and 250mm in turrets(main, front). Her speed of 27,4 knots was a feature that had held high importance in the designing, allowing her to truly fulfil the mantra “faster that the stronger, stronger than the faster”, in theory if not in practice.
The usuall debate about whether to build the ship was of course a fact. In the end, the navy’s supporters won, and in August 1933, building begann on the ship that would become known as Riksepplet, formally intered into the 1933 naval plan.
In December 1935 the ship was launched, and her trials begann in May 1937. During a four-hours test she managed to reach and keep the speed of 29,2 knots. At this speed she would vibrate heavily throughout the hull however, and closer examination of the engines afterwards showed that continious abuse of this ability would not be very healthy for anyone, except possibly the enemy.
She was officialy commissioned 8th September 1937. In November she started a world-around tour along with one of the armoured destroyers of the Kaperen class. Strictly talking, it wasn’t a tour around the world, only visiting harbours of the Atlantic and Mediterranean. The pair came home to Erikrike in Mars, four months later.
After this, she spent some time in dry dock, getting a thourough overlook, and recieving several minor improvements.
By the start of WW2 she was again in service, and had been instated as the flagship of the Erikrike Navy, being stationed on the Atlantic coast.
As Erikrike was never involved in the war, we will never know how the Riksepplet would have faired in actuall combat, but nonetheless, she was considered a great, if very costly, addition to the Erikrike defence forces. On at least one occassion she was sent out to mark the boundaries of her country for non-welcome ships abusing Erikrike’s good faith.
By the end of the war, however, smaller and faster units had proved their value, and the Riksepplet’s practical use was beginning to get severely questioned. By 1949, she would stop being in active service, functioning as mainly a training ship. In 1951 she got a break from the training sessions to visit the Naval Review in Portsmouth along with HErMS Gamen. After this, she was once again assigned a training ship, but left that service as well in 1959.
For five years she was mothballed, until she was decommissioned 1st August 1964, party scrapped, and converted to a pontone bridge.
Her 240mm guns were kept, and is to this day stationated in several fortifications.
Sundsborj Class
The Sundsborj class represented a breaking of pattern in the usuall Erikrike destroyer designs. Most earlier ships had carried two-three 120mm QF guns. This class mounted four DP 105mm M/32 in two twin mounts, the same used on the Riksepplet. In fact, the Sundsborj class had originally been designed to provide for a strong escort for said ship. Considering the M/32 a satisfying enough DP gun, it was applied to this design as well. To completed this armament, a twin 25mm M/34 and two single 12,7mm MGs was added, along with six torpedos in two tripple mounts. Designated speed was at 35 knots, but several units reached up to 38 knots on trials. They were trusty ships, and highly regarded by their crews as well as the Naval Command.
A class of all in all six ships, it was one of the most numerus classes completed by Erikrike. They were among the big workhorses of the ErRN during WW2, and quite tired by the end of the war. Taking turns for refits, all units were ready for service in 1951 again. By the start of the 1960s they were converted to frigates, and dropped their twin mounts in favour for more effective equipment. As the post-war destroyer squadrons were gradually completed, they would be more and more phased out, until they faced scrapping or demotion to target ships, starting 1971 and ending in 1978.
Last edited by KHT on October 12th, 2012, 9:35 pm, edited 2 times in total.
|
|