Dilandu wrote:doug941 wrote:
The point is you have to beach or drydock every so often to clean the hull. Imagine what several hundred square feet of seaweed, barnacles etc will do to your speed. Without said cleaning, an enemy ship that you normally would run down will instead sail away into the sunset. And if a marine worm eats your hull, your vessel is out of business when it maybe the only one able to respond to the enemy.
Please. It's a cheap, wartime-build gunboats and sloops. They are build for short service.
Copper cladding stops this buildup, antifouling paint would be another option (but copper cladding lasts longer).
As for comparable hull designs, have a look on the web for "marine nationale .djvu". The hull detail drawings for most of the French navy's ships built from from 1870 to 1970 were uploaded a few years ago (mostly living on Russian servers)(including submarines and aircraft carriers). Earlier drawings for ships built in Brest and Toulon, including about half the US Navy circa 1838 are also available (I have copies but they are big files (46Mb for the Toulon pdf - too big for most peoples email & 2.6Gb in total found so far (average file size per ship is ~10Mb))).