- Forward class cruiser
The "Forward" class was a two ship class of
scout cruiser serving with theRoyal Navy inWorld War I , and consisting of the ships HMS "Forward" and HMS "Foresight".Design
They were one of four pairs of scouts ordered to a general specification with the exact design left up to the individual builders. The ships were built by
Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Company ,Govan at a cost of £289,000 each. The class was originally designated as "Nore" but this was changed before their construction. Their main disadvantage in action proved to be a lack of range and endurance, having been designed at a time when destroyer operations were planned to take place relatively close to home bases, rather than on long patrols on the open sea. Fairfield's original design was criticised by theAdmiralty for lacking structural strength and being unrealistic regarding coal consumption. A complete redesign was undertaken but in practise the problem of their lack of range was never satisfactorily addressed. Not long after completion the two additional12 pounder gun s were added and the3 pounder gun s were replaced with six 6 pounders. In 1911-12 they were reamed with nine convert|4|in|mm|sing=on guns.They were protected with a convert|2|in|mm|sing=on armour belt, with one inch plating on the decks, in an effort to reduce their weight and increase their speed. The convert|365|ft|m|sing=on long ships displaced 2850 tons and produced convert|15000|hp which gave them a best speed of convert|25|kn|km/h. Despite this, they were slower then the new destroyers they were planned to lead and increasingly were relegated to other roles. Both ships survived the
First World War , but were scrapped shortly after its end.hips
*HMS "Forward" - launched on
27 August 1904 and sold for scrap on27 July 1921 .
*HMS "Foresight" - launched on8 October 1904 and sold for scrap on3 March 1920 .References
*Colledge
*Jane's Fighting Ships of World War One (1919), Jane's Publishing Company
* [http://www.worldwar1.co.uk/light-cruiser/hms-Forward.html Forward class in World War I]
* [http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/weapons_forward_class_cruisers.html History of the Forward class]
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