Jonathan_S wrote:Relax wrote:Purpose built hulls are the only ones which count.
Age of sale happened over several hundred years so is a bit more steady state like the Honorverse.
Age of sail:SNIPPITY SNIP
A 5th rate by the napoleonic era is a heavy frigate with 40 or 44 guns, and much more a heavy cruiser than a destroyer; with a sixth rate (a lighter frigate) being much more a light cruiser. (Frigates being pretty large rated ships with only one gun-deck)
At least if we're comparing to classic treaty-era cruisers and destroyers
And there were plenty of new build 2nd and 3rd rate ships of the line. Far more than there were 1st rates. 1st and 2nd rates were both 3 decker ships; but 1st rates being larger more expensive ships designed to carry more guns -- the prestige unit; to the far more common 2nd rate affordable 3 deckers. 3rd rates were 2-decker ships of the line and the most common type for much of the age of sail.
It was 4th rates that were rare by the time of Napoleon; being a 2-decker with no more than 60 guns -- by that time a 74 gun 3rd rate was seen as the minimum viable new-build ship of the line.
For novels, in O'Brian's Aubrey–Maturin series Aubrey starts out in Master and Commander in the 14-gun sloop-of-war Sophie, then in book 2 he has the sloop Polychrest, before temporarily getting a rated ship (HMS Lively, a 38-gun 6th rate), and then the third book sees him get permanent command of HMS Surprise, another 6th rate.
There were plenty of real warships that were unrated. They generally preyed on each other, or were the most distant scouts of the fleet, preyed on unescorted enemy shipping, or performed anti-piracy (and later anti-slavery) patrols. So in many ways workhorses of the fleet. But unrated ships did tend to get named for their sailing rig - so sloops, brigs, etc. might be of roughly the same size and number of guns and just differ in masts and sails.
Thanks for the suggestions. Ah, more reading material