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  2. HMS Amazon (D39) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Amazon_(D39)

    HMS Amazon was a prototype design of destroyer ordered for the Royal Navy in 1924. She was designed and built by Thornycroft in response to an Admiralty request for a new design of destroyer incorporating the lessons and technological advances of the First World War. Their great rivals Yarrow produced a similar, competitive design — that of ...

  3. Fire room - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_room

    The fire room of the battleship USS Massachusetts. On a ship, the fire room, or FR or boiler room or stokehold, referred to the space, or spaces, of a vessel where water was brought to a boil. The steam was then transmitted to a separate engine room, often (but not always) located immediately aft, where it was utilized to power the vessel.

  4. Soviet destroyer Statny (1939) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_destroyer_Statny_(1939)

    The bow section and the forward boiler room flooded almost instantly, and as crewmen evacuated the forward engine room and second boiler room they failed to close the hatches, allowing the flooding to continue into those compartments. After a failed attempt to reverse, the destroyer grounded at a depth of 7–8 meters (23–26 ft).

  5. J-, K- and N-class destroyer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J-,_K-_and_N-class_destroyer

    The design was intended as a smaller follow-on from the preceding Tribal class. In a departure from all previous Royal Navy destroyers, the design used a two boiler room layout. This reduced hull length and allowed for a single funnel, both reducing the profile and increasing the arcs of fire of the light anti-aircraft (AA) weapons. It also ...

  6. USS Barton (DD-599) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Barton_(DD-599)

    However, before she could get underway two 'Long Lance' torpedoes fired by the Amatsukaze slammed into the midsection of Barton; one in her boiler room and one in her engine room. The massive explosions broke the Barton in two, and both sections sank only minutes after the first torpedo struck, carrying with her 164 men: 13 officers and 151 of ...

  7. V and W-class destroyer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V_and_W-class_destroyer

    In these two ships, the position of the boiler rooms was reversed, with the two-boiler room forward and the single unit aft. As a result, the funnel arrangements were transposed, with the thick funnel forwards and the narrow funnel aft. In common with other Thornycroft designs, they had characteristic broad, flat-sided funnels.

  8. E and F-class destroyer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E_and_F-class_destroyer

    The lengthened design resulted in a three boiler room layout to enhance water-tight integrity. The leaders were not fitted for minesweeping or minelaying. [10] They displaced 1,475–1,495 long tons (1,499–1,519 t) at standard load and 2,010–2,050 long tons (2,040–2,080 t) at deep load.

  9. HMS Havock (H43) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Havock_(H43)

    Her boiler room was flooded after an attack by Italian aircraft after this battle and she was repaired at Suez from 29 July to 15 September. Havock and her sister Hasty surprised the Italian submarine Berillo on the surface on 2 October off the coast of Egypt and forced her to scuttle herself. [11] The destroyers rescued 47 survivors between ...