Jonathan_S wrote:Unfortunately while RFC has talked of them from time to time, the only frigates we have a full ship listing for are Silsia's 1868 Gryf-class (from the SITS books); but their ships are so crummy it's hard to know if it's representative. But for what it's worth it was a 53,500 ton design; which is at least 15 thousand tons heavier than a courier.
So back in, say, 1750 PD we don't know for sure the tonnage of a new frigate vs destroyer vs CL. I personally think back then that the frigate was closer to DD weight because DDs would have been smaller yet than they were in the 1820s; so in some ways a FF back then probably wasn't far off from a DD with a several fewer weapons mounts, and downsized magazines, to free up space for more fuel, food, and spares.
This is what Theemile said earlier:
Theemile wrote:The only Frigate we have hard stats on is the Silesian Gryf class. launched in 1868, it massed 53.5Ktons. The mentioned Silesian DD is the Joachim Cheslav launched in 1867 and massing 95.75 Ktons. The Gryf has 6 broadside missiles, 1 laser, 1 CM, and 2 PDs. Each hammerhead has 1 of each. The DD has an 8 missile broadside, with 1 laser, 2CM, and 3 PD, each chase has 1 of each and 2 PDs. Notably the Gryf has 1/2 the shipkiller mags of the DD, and 45% of the CMs.
So if an unarmed dispatch boat is the minimum hyper capable ship, then we take 15 thousand tons to expand the hull to carry weapons and some armor and the other necessities for long range cruising to get a frigate; we are still 40 thousand tons away from a contemporary destroyer. At least in Silesia a frigate was closer to a dispatch boat than a destroyer.
For anti-piracy duty that was generally okay, because the volume of space required swarms of these ships and the average pirate could not stand up to a well drilled frigate.