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  2. Motor gunboat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motor_gunboat

    MGB 314, a Fairmile C motor gun boat, during World War II. The motor gunboat (MGB) was a small, high-speed British military vessel of the Second World War, which was armed with a mix of guns, in contrast to the physically similar motor torpedo boat (MTB), whose main offensive weapon were torpedoes.

  3. Fairmile C motor gun boat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairmile_C_motor_gun_boat

    The Fairmile C motor gun boat was a type of motor gunboat designed by Norman Hart of Fairmile Marine for the Royal Navy.An intermediate design, twenty-four boats were ordered on 27 August 1940 from Fairmile Marine in kit form and were assembled at multiple boatbuilders' yards and completed in 1941; they were initially rated as Motor Launches (ML), but received the designation Motor Gun Boats ...

  4. HM Motor Gun Boat 501 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HM_Motor_Gun_Boat_501

    HM Motor Gun Boat 501 was a motor gunboat operated by Royal Navy Coastal Forces during the Second World War.The design, prepared by Bill Holt of the DNC's Boat Section, was unusual for a British light coastal forces' boat at the time in that it was of composite construction, whereas most MTBs and Motor Launches were entirely wooden-hulled.

  5. Fairmile D motor torpedo boat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairmile_D_motor_torpedo_boat

    Armament for gunboat configuration as fitted to MGB 658 by the end of the war. Specifications from Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1922–1946 . and Motor Gunboat 658 The Fairmile D motor torpedo boat was a type of British motor torpedo boat (MTB) and motor gunboat (MGB), [ 1 ] conceived by entrepreneur Noel Macklin of Fairmile Marine ...

  6. British Power Boat Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Power_Boat_Company

    MGB 75, a British Power Boat Company motor gun boat at HMS Beehive, Felixstowe. During World War II the British Power Boat Company built large numbers of motor torpedo boats, high-speed motor launches, and motor gun boats (previously known as Motor Anti-Submarine Boats [3]), being credited with saving the lives of over 13,000 service personnel.

  7. Coastal Forces of the Royal Navy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coastal_Forces_of_the...

    After World War II, the Royal Navy re-designated all its motor torpedo boats (MTBs) and motor gun boats (MGBs) as "fast patrol boats." The Brave -class fast patrol boats were the last craft to be built for the Coastal Forces, and the Coastal Forces were disbanded as a separate unit and their last base, ( HMS Hornet ), decommissioned in 1956.

  8. Steam gun boat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam_Gun_Boat

    The steam gun boats were conceived to answer the seeming need for a craft which was large enough to put to sea in rough weather and which could operate both as a "super-gunboat" and a torpedo carrier, combining the functions of the motor gunboat (MGB) and motor torpedo boat (MTB) in the same fashion as did the German E-boats.

  9. Gay-class patrol boat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gay-class_patrol_boat

    During the Second World War the Royal Navy also sailed HMS Gay Viking and HMS Gay Corsair, a pair of motor gun boats. These were superficially similar to the later Gay -class, although their primary armament was a mixture of QF 6-pounder Hotchkiss , Oerlikon 20 mm cannon , and depth charges.