Soldati Class Destroyer (1906): Difference between revisions

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|Stricken 1 Jun, 1928
|Stricken 1 Jun, 1928
|- align=left
|- align=left
| {{IT-Garabaldino}}
| {{IT-Garibaldino}}
|[[Giovanni Ansaldo & Company]], Genoa
|[[Giovanni Ansaldo & Company]], Genoa
|Nov, 1911
|Nov, 1911
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{ship
{ship
name=Garabaldino
name=Garibaldino
laid=23 10 5{{FraccaroliWW1|pp. 66-7}}
laid=23 10 5{{FraccaroliWW1|pp. 66-7}}
comp=1 6 10{{FraccaroliWW1|pp. 66-7}}
comp=1 6 10{{FraccaroliWW1|pp. 66-7}}

Latest revision as of 23:50, 13 May 2020

Italy built eleven "Soldati" class destroyers in three groups, completing them as the Great War approached.

Design & Construction

The six units of the Artigliere group were all coal burners. The Alpino group of four ships followed, using oil burners. The last unit, Ascaro, ordered by China around 1910 and acquired in 1912, boasted an oil-burning boiler forward and two coal-burners aft.

Machinery

Armament

Guns

Torpedoes

See Also

Footnotes

Bibliography


Soldati Class Destroyer
Artigliere Group
  Artigliere Bersagliere Corazziere  
  Garibaldino Granatiere Lanciere  
Alpino Group
  Alpino Carabiniere Fuciliere Pontiere  
Chinese Order
  Ascaro  
<– Nembo Class Destroyers (IT) Indomito Class –>