Note: These vessels are my idea, but I cannot thank the other guys enough (Gunship, C. Hoefer, and Psilander) for making the baseline for my vessel.
-History: The Carolinian Navy after 1865 included just 1 ironclad. The Victory was, by this time, hopelessly outclassed by other nations ships and really was only good as a coast defense ship. She suffered from endless engine problems, leakages, and structural deficiencies. She sprung a leak while leaving Charleston Harbor in 1866, which doused one of her boiler fires and caused her to stop completely. Her engines constantly overheated despite the fitting of better ventilators. In short, she was at best a third-rate vessel was compared to the rest of the world's vessels. Luckily for the Carolinas, Great Britain was in a good position to build ships for other nations, and the Carolinian Government had received large amounts of war reparation money from the Union. So, a Carolinian design board was sent to work with the British designers to create a class of two very powerful ironclad frigates. Their design was interesting. They were named the Terror and the Defender, and were based on a mix of the French Gloire and the Dutch monitors of the Buffel-Class. But, interestingly enough, she carried not only 4 9-inch guns in 2 dual turrets (which used steam-powered rotation gear and ammunition hoists, very advanced features at the time) but she also carried a 12-gun battery of heavy 12-inch guns in broadside. This required an enormous amount of hull and deck strength, and she therefore utilized a hull not only plated in iron, but used steel beams as replacements for support timbers. Steel was a very innovative material at the time, and had not been used very much in ship construction. The turret-mounted guns fired projectiles that weighed up to 250 pounds at a muzzle velocity of up to 1,420 feet per second. They were muzzle-loading rifles. Meanwhile, the battery deck utilized the 12-inch 25-Ton gun of the 1864 Model. One of the most powerful naval ordnance pieces in the world, it fired a shell that weighed up to 600 pounds at 1,300 feet per second. 12 Nordenfelt 6-barreled 25-mm repeating guns were added for close combat actions, and she was armed with a powerful bow ram. 12 Oval-Shaped Coal-Fired boilers powered 2 Penn and Co. Direct-Acting Trunk-Type Engines that propelled her at a maximum speed of 15 knots. A maximum of 6-inches protected the ship along it's waterline belt, while 8-inches protected the battery. 10-inches of armor were applied to the turrets, all made of wrought-iron. The machinery spaces were almost entirely located below the waterline, therefore requiring little protection. They were laid down in 1869, and completed in 1870. Arriving in Wilmington for fitting-out, they were commissioned in 1871 after their trans-Atlantic journey. Terror was commissioned as flagship of the North Carolina group, while Defender was based at Charleston. They served as the most powerful vessels on the East Coast of North America, but they were not without their issues. The HMS Captain disaster did not, for some odd reason, impact the design phase greatly. There were considerable issues with stability, especially when the turrets where trained to the same side. The battery guns also caused some problems. These experiences led the Carolinian naval planners to determine that masts with sails had no place on an ironclad. From then on all Carolinian ironclads utilized the rather futuristic-looking (for the time) military pole-type masts with signaling arms. Refitted in 1889, the two vessels received 8-inch RBL guns and new pillbox-type turrets. The broadside guns were replaced by 6-inch RBL QF guns, which caused the need to equip radically new ammunition-handling gear. 8 circular high-pressure boilers were installed and equipped with Thornycroft oil-sprayers. In this form, the Terror and Defender were classified as armored cruisers, but were finally disarmed in 1894 and Defender was sold to the breakers, while Terror served as a floating depot until 1919, when it was restored and became a museum ironclad at Southport in 1925.
Specifications 1871:
-Type: Ironclad turret-broadside frigate
-Length: 245 Feet
-Beam: 25 Feet
-Draft: 13 feet
-Speed: 15 knots under combined sail and steam
-Machinery: 12 Oval-shaped coal-fired boilers. 2 Direct-acting Trunk-type engines
-Armament: 4 9-inch RML Guns, 12 12-inch RML Guns, 12 6-barreled 25mm Nordenfelt guns, 4 Hotchkiss revolving guns (37mm)
-Armour: 6-inch belt, 8-inch over battery, 10-inch turrets. All wrought-iron.
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Specifications 1889:
Type: Ironclad armored cruiser
-Length: 245 Feet
-Beam: 25 Feet
-Draft: 14 feet
-Speed: 18 knots on steam
-Machinery: 8 Circular high-pressure coal/oil boilers, 2 compound-type engines
-Armament: 4 x 8-inch RBL Guns, 12 x 6-inch RBL QF Guns, 12 x 3-pounder guns, 6 x 1-pounder guns, 4 x 7.92mm machine-guns, 6 x 37-mm Hotchkiss revolving guns, 4 x 14-inch torpedo drop-collars.
-Armour: 5-inch belt (Harvey steel) 6-inch over battery (Harvey Steel, Creusot Steel mix) 8-inch turrets (Harvey steel)