enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Turret ship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turret_ship

    Background. HMS Prince Albert, a pioneering turret ship, built by naval engineer Cowper Phipps Coles. Before the development of large-calibre, long-range guns in the mid-19th century, the classic ship of the line design used rows of port-mounted guns on each side of the ship, often mounted in casemates. Firepower was provided by a large number ...

  3. Gun turret - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gun_turret

    A wing turret is a gun turret mounted along the side, or the wings, of a warship, off the centerline. The positioning of a wing turret limits the gun's arc of fire, so that it generally can contribute to only the broadside weight of fire on one side of the ship.

  4. Cowper Phipps Coles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cowper_Phipps_Coles

    Captain Cowper Phipps Coles, C.B., R.N. (1819 – 7 September 1870), was an English naval captain with the Royal Navy. Coles was also an inventor; in 1859, he was the first to patent a design for a revolving gun turret. Upon appealing for public support, his turrets were installed on HMS Prince Albert and HMS Royal Sovereign.

  5. Naval artillery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naval_artillery

    The idea of ship-borne artillery dates back to the classical era. [1][2] Julius Caesar indicates the use of ship-borne catapults against Britons ashore in his Commentarii de Bello Gallico. The dromons of the Byzantine Empire carried catapults and Greek fire. From the Middle Ages onwards, warships began to carry cannons of various calibres.

  6. List of monitors of the United States Navy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_monitors_of_the...

    Vietnam War "brown-water navy" monitors. The US Navy created their first Mobile Riverine Force (MRF) for the first time since the American Civil War, during the Vietnam War. World War II all steel 56-foot (17 m)-long Landing Craft Mechanized (LCM-6s) were used as the basic hull to convert into 24 Monitors from 1966-1970.

  7. Semi-submersible naval vessel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semi-submersible_naval_vessel

    The Imperial Russian Navy developed semi-submersible vessels—starting with the Keta [ru] —which were designed to be torpedo boats with low visibility for coastal protection against enemy warships. Keta was built in 1904 in St. Petersburg, powered by a 14-horsepower (10 kW) motor, displacing 8 tons, and with a length of 7 metres (23 ft).

  8. Turret deck ship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turret_deck_ship

    A turret deck ship is a type of merchant ship with an unusual hull, designed and built in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The hulls of turret deck vessels were rounded and stepped inward above their waterlines. This gave some advantages in strength and allowed them to pay lower canal tolls under tonnage measurement rules then in effect.

  9. Casemate ironclad - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casemate_ironclad

    The sloped casemate deck is clearly visible. The casemate ironclad was a type of iron or iron-armored gunboat briefly used in the American Civil War by both the Confederate States Navy and the Union Navy. Unlike a monitor-type ironclad which carried its armament encased in a separate armored gun deck/turret, it exhibited a single (often sloped ...