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The Axe class was a class of naval trawlers used by the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom during the Second World War. The ships were acquired by the Royal Navy during the First World War. They were originally being built for the Empire of Russia, but were acquired by the Royal Navy after the Russian Revolution took the Russians out of the war. [1]
Recreational trawlers are pleasure boats that resemble fishing trawlers. They may also be called cruising trawlers or trawler yachts. Within the category, however, are many types and styles of vessels. A fishing trawler, for example, always has a displacement hull for load-carrying capacity. Recreational trawlers, on the other hand, are as ...
Naval trawlers are vessels built along the lines of a fishing trawler but fitted out for naval purposes; they were widely used during the First and Second World Wars. Some, known in the Royal Navy as "Admiralty trawlers", were purpose-built to naval specifications; others were adapted from civilian use.
The Rio Damuji-class frigates are the largest warships in the Cuban Navy built from former Spanish-built fishing trawlers. Built between 1975 and 1979, they are variously classed as frigates, corvettes, or offshore patrol vessels. The ships' armament consists of Styx missile launchers, 25 mm guns, and the turret of a ZSU-57-2.
Cape Dory Yachts was a Massachusetts-based builder of fiberglass sailboats, powerboats, and pleasure trawlers which operated from 1963 to 1992. It also produced a small number of commercial craft. It also produced a small number of commercial craft.
Fitzroy Yachts: Ed Dubois: 2010: Aluminium sloop Ohana II: 49.70 m (163 ft) Fitzroy Yachts: Ed Dubois: 2012: Flybridge aluminium sloop Meraki: 49.70 m (163 ft) Vitters: André Hoek: 2020: Aluminium ketch Eleonora: 49.50 m (162 ft) Van der Graaf: Nathanael Greene Herreshoff: 2002: Replica of the racing gaff steel schooner Westward (1910) Invader ...
John Lewis & Sons built trawlers for other customers to the same measurements as White Pioneer. Yard number 136 was launched in December 1935 as Fort Rannoch, [8] and yard number 137 was launched in June 1936 as Mount Keen. [9] However, each had a traditional triple expansion engine, with no exhaust turbine, and without White's reduction gearing.
The Hill class of Admiralty trawlers was a small class of trawlers built for the British Royal Navy during the Second World War.. The vessels were intended for use as minesweepers and for anti-submarine warfare, and the design was based on a commercial type, the 1937 Barnett by Cook Welton and Gemmell of Beverley. [2]