Difference between revisions of "Sixth Destroyer Flotilla (Royal Navy)"
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The backbone, however, was comprised of [[River Class Destroyer (1903)|''River'']] and [[Tribal Class Destroyer (1907)|''Tribal'' class destroyers]], whose ten 18-in Mark VII test-fired torpedoes were 70% likely to be dangerous to the enemy.<ref>''Annual Report of the Torpedo School, 1916'', p. 87.</ref> | The backbone, however, was comprised of [[River Class Destroyer (1903)|''River'']] and [[Tribal Class Destroyer (1907)|''Tribal'' class destroyers]], whose ten 18-in Mark VII test-fired torpedoes were 70% likely to be dangerous to the enemy.<ref>''Annual Report of the Torpedo School, 1916'', p. 87.</ref> | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Before the War== | ||
+ | In July 1914, twelve "River" class destroyers joined a like number of 30 knotters at Dover to comprise the flotilla. | ||
+ | <ref>Marh, Edgar J. ''British Destroyers'', p. 94.</ref> | ||
==Outbreak of War, August, 1914== | ==Outbreak of War, August, 1914== |
Revision as of 15:13, 23 January 2012
The Sixth Destroyer Flotilla was a formation of destroyers of the Royal Navy. The flotilla changed composition often as ships were damaged, retired or transferred. For tactical reasons the flotilla was divided into two half flotillas.
In 1916, it was comprised of a mish-mash of types. Assorted old torpedo boats ran 17 18-in cold torpedoes that year that were 94% likely to endanger the enemy, while some P-boats' six 14-in runnings that year resulted in shots that were 83% likely to be dangerous to the enemy.
The backbone, however, was comprised of River and Tribal class destroyers, whose ten 18-in Mark VII test-fired torpedoes were 70% likely to be dangerous to the enemy.[1]
Contents
Before the War
In July 1914, twelve "River" class destroyers joined a like number of 30 knotters at Dover to comprise the flotilla. [2]
Outbreak of War, August, 1914
Battle of Jutland, June 1916
After Jutland, 1916
Footnotes
Bibliography
- Dittmar, F.J.; Colledge, J.J. (1972). British Warships 1914–1919. London: Ian Allan.