Earnest-class destroyer

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Class overview
NameEarnest class
Builders Laird, Son & Co., Birkenhead
OperatorsNaval Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg  Royal Navy
Built1896–98
In commission1895–1919
Completed6
Scrapped6
General characteristics
Type Torpedo boat destroyer
Displacement395 long tons (401 t)
Length213 ft (64.9 m)
Beam21.5 ft (6.6 m)
Draught9.75 ft (3.0 m)
Installed power6,300 ihp (4,698 kW)
Propulsion
Speed30 knots (56 km/h; 35 mph)
Complement63
Armament

Six Earnest-class destroyers served with the Royal Navy: Earnest, Griffon, Locust, Panther, Seal and Wolf. These ships were all built by Cammell Laird and were part of the class of 'thirty knotters'.

Concern about the higher speeds of foreign boats had prompted to Admiralty to order new destroyers capable of 30 knots (56 km/h), rather than the 27-knot (50 km/h) requirement which had been standard. The boats were not able to make this speed in bad weather, where they were usually wet and uncomfortable with cramped crew quarters, but they proved their toughness in serving through World War I, despite being twenty years old. Thanks to their watertight bulkheads, their thin plating and light structure they were able to take a great deal of damage and remain afloat, although their plates buckled easily, affecting their handling.

The ships were fitted with Normand boilers which generated around 6,300 horsepower (4,700 kW). They were armed with the standard 12-pounder gun and two torpedo tubes and carried a complement of 63 officers and ratings.

In 1913 the Ernest class, along with all other surviving "30 knotter" vessels with 4 funnels, were classified by the Admiralty as the B-class to provide some system to the naming of HM destroyers (at the same time, the 3-funnelled, "30 knotters" became the C-class and the 2-funnelled ships the D-class).

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