The Grand Fleet  
Warship Design and Development 1906-1922
Author(s): D K Brown
Published by Pen and Sword
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781805000327
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9781805000327 Price: INR 1129.99
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The launch of HMS Dreadnought in 1906 ushered in one of the most rapid periods of warship development in history; and only ten years after this all-big-gun, turbine-powered battleship was completed, two entire fleets of Dreadnoughts would meet at Jutland and put the work of the prewar designers to the ultimate test.

The renowned warship author, D K Brown, examines the development of these vessels and looks at how wartime experience affected warship design. As well as battleships and battlecruisers, for the first time the developmental history of smaller vessels such as minesweepers, monitors and escort vessels, built in direct response to wartime needs, is described, as is that of the submarine and aircraft carrier. A detailed study is made of battle damage, including the role played by ammunition explosions in the loss of three British battlecruisers at Jutland. Also described are the postwar capital ship designs, killed off by the Washington Treaty, which are among the most fascinating might-have-beens of naval history.

A classic work again available for historians and enthusiasts, detailing the development of all those ships that enabled the Royal Navy to rule the waves supreme and defend country and empire.
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The launch of HMS Dreadnought in 1906 ushered in one of the most rapid periods of warship development in history; and only ten years after this all-big-gun, turbine-powered battleship was completed, two entire fleets of Dreadnoughts would meet at Jutland and put the work of the prewar designers to the ultimate test.

The renowned warship author, D K Brown, examines the development of these vessels and looks at how wartime experience affected warship design. As well as battleships and battlecruisers, for the first time the developmental history of smaller vessels such as minesweepers, monitors and escort vessels, built in direct response to wartime needs, is described, as is that of the submarine and aircraft carrier. A detailed study is made of battle damage, including the role played by ammunition explosions in the loss of three British battlecruisers at Jutland. Also described are the postwar capital ship designs, killed off by the Washington Treaty, which are among the most fascinating might-have-beens of naval history.

A classic work again available for historians and enthusiasts, detailing the development of all those ships that enabled the Royal Navy to rule the waves supreme and defend country and empire.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Contents
    • Foreword and Acknowledgements
    • Part I: Pre-War Developments
      • Introduction
      • One Preparations for War
      • Two Attack and Defence: Pre-War Trials
    • Part II: Pre-War Designs
      • Three Battleships
      • Four Cruisers
      • Five Destroyers and Early Naval Aviation
      • Six Submarines
    • Part III: Wartime Experience and Design
      • Seven Major Vessels
      • Eight Wartime Destroyers and Aviation Vessels
      • Nine Wartime Submarines
      • Ten Smaller Vessels and Shipbuilding
      • Eleven Action Damage and the Experience of War
      • Twelve Warship Design from the Armistice to Washington
      • Thirteen The Achievement: the Right Ships and the Right Fleet
    • Appendices
      • 1. Views on the All-Big-Gun Battleship
      • 2. Thornycroft and Yarrow ‘Specials’ of the First World War
      • 3. Riveting
      • 4. The Stability of a Flooded Ship
      • 5. Second Moment of Area and Moment of Inertia
    • Review of Principal Sources
    • Glossary and Abbreviations
    • Index
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