As a natural (and well documented) mood swift, Im again moving away from this somewhat Arctic orientated Warsav Pact member to a more traditional Baltic orientated neutral Finland...
These things tend to come like tidewave....
I start the analogy this time with the "Republican fleet", or a fleet post 1918, since the former presents Kingdom and yadi yaa...
the timeline is typicall to my previous incarnations of this AU, except with little less into Russian influence this time...Stalin and the finnish social democrats didn't like each others that much. In this scennario, the enemy is again in the east, but the naval tradition comes...well from naval tradition itself that continues with the Kingdom way back from the "dark ages". As typical promise from me, Ill post the introduction once I manage to get the AU history part straigth... (and keep it straigth long enough to actually work with any sort of charts.)
Anyways, The content is still the same as usuall, the known and little bit invented "what if's" and never where's...strugeling again with the Destroyers. Im never going to get these final, so I wont even pretend otherways; here is just what my little fleet will look this time:
The age of "modern" destroyers begun in Finnish royal fleet around early 1900's when the German yard Grupp-Germania was awarded to assist the Finnish yards in contract of total of eigth "torbedo-cruisers", which were destroyers in their purest sense (and before the WWI, thus reclassed as such in finnish paralance)
Thougth differing with details, each of the three subclasses followed same trends in armamant, machinery and dimensions.
The concept behind them was for the Finnish navy to poses strong torbedo arm rather than compete with Swedens and Russians to build battle ships (I tell more about this coastal defence ship race with Sweden with the armoured ships) and to use the favorable geography around the Finnish coast for rabid hit-and-run attacks from the archipegalo.
Along with older torbedo boats (also to be posted later) they presented the core of the fleet, that the few armoured ships just supported, against the swedish doctrines of strong fleets build around the coastal BBs.
Small budgets and consentration once more for the armoured ships prevented the fleet aquire any turbine powered destroyers prior to the WWI, and during the war (when the Kingdom of Finland fougth against the Russians and then the Republic against White-russian forces, germans and interventionists) the fleet was not able to aquire turbines intended for fast destroyer type of vessels, as there were no shipyards or machinery plants to produce turbines.
The class served trough the war with dignity, with only minimal losess and remained as the core of the fleet way beyond their obsolence, and beeing finaly replaced with more modern desings in the 30's. A planned conversion to patrol gun-boats did not materialise, but Vinha was build as prototype for such conversion and used mainly as training ship and a gunboat then during the WWII, serving on Lake Onega (Ääninen) and Lake Ladoga (Laatokka)
Despite Finnish occasionally clashing with the British during the 1918-1919 period, the Republic soon made efforts to gain good relationship with the victorious nations of the WWI. The first naval acqustions went for Brittany for sale of two obsolete L-class destroyers. Thougth in size they were only little improvement to the old triple-expansion destroyers, they very huge leap in machinery and in weaponry, introducing twin torbedo tubes and three guns instead of two.
More important acqustion from the RN came when the government managed to buy the two sunken W-class vessels to be salvaged and commisioned to the fleet. These powerfull destroyers were strongest of their kind in the world at the time, and after rehaul and some reworkings on the bridges, they both were commisioned around the same time as the two "little brothers" of the L-class. The four destroyers formed a single flotilla all way up to the WWII, where Vakava sunk while harrasing the Soviet's Tallin evacuation by a mine or a unspecified submarine torbedo, and when Vinha sunk after multitude of air attacks in the Gulf of Viborg during the fierce battles of 1944.
Both surviors where disposed in the early 50's as completely worn out and over aged.