This is based on an actual Elswick design (the parameters that is) that the VCN asked for in 1888 but was cancelled for a couple of reasons but I run an AU so I can stretch that outcome a bit.
HMVS Hotham was the final part of the 1880's expansion plan, ordered in 1888, she was launched in early 1890 where she was fitted out and prepared for the 13,400nm voyage to the Colony. Departing Newcastle, she called in at Portsmouth, Gibraltar, Malta, Alexandria, Aden, Bombay, Singapore, Fremantle (and an unplanned visit to Adelaide), the out bound voyage took 117 days and went without fault bar damage sustained to the sponsoons and fittings in rough weather off the SA coast. Hotham arrived to fanfare in March 1890, where she was feted as the fastest cruiser gun-boat in the fleet, capable of 16 knots on normal load and 17.25 on light load. Hotham would go on to a fairly boring first ] decades of service, variously being in active service and reserve until 1900 when she was tasked to help escort Colonial Troops to the Boxer Rebellion. There she served mainly as a guard ship, also lending her two rotary guns to shore parties. In 1911 when decisions about the future of the fleet were being made, pressed with the strong possibility that HMVS Victoria (III) would be taken overseas in a conflict, Hotham was old enough to escape such notice and she was rebuilt mainly to the same degree as she was originally but with built up superstructure to endure the blistering summers and winter storms. At the Outbreak of war, Hotham was stationed off WA and NT operating as a patrol and survey vessel. In 1918 she returned to Victoria for the final time, going into reserve before the war was concluded. Having sailed some 88,000nm during a 30 year career, she spent two years in reserve, sitting idly off Altona as post war cuts whittled her down to just a caretaker. With further cuts looming, Hotham was sold for a paltry 320 pounds to a scrapyard who cut her down almost to the waterline and she was used for target practice for three exercises off the South Channel Fort before being sunk in Half Moon Bay as a breakwater in October 1923. Her name was temporarily used for a stone frigate from 1937-1941, before another ship was commissioned of the same name
Length: 195ft
Beam: 33ft
Draught: 11ft 2in
Displacement: 1040t
Speed: 16 knots, 9knots cruising
Machinery: Two Triple Expansion Reciprocating Steam Engines, 1300hp each, delivering 2600hp, four boilers
Armament: 3 x 6 inch gun (one twin forward, 1 single aft),
4 x 40(4.7") pounders,
8 x 3 pounders,
2 gatling guns,
1x fixed Torpedo tube (bow)
Range: 2450nm @ 9knts
Complement: 8 Officers, 63 Enlisted
Armour: .75-1.5" Protected Deck over machinery and magazine spaces (65% of length)
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Work list(Current)
Miscellaneous|
Victorian Colonial Navy|
Murray Riverboats|
Colony of Victoria AU|
Project Sail-fixing SB's sail shortage
How to mentally pronounce my usernameRow-(as in a boat)Don-(as in the short form of Donald)Dough-(bread)
"Loitering on the High Seas" (Named after the good ship Rodondo)
There's no such thing as "
nothing left to draw" If you can down 10 pints and draw, you're doing alright by my standards