Italian corvette Flavio Gioia

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NameFlavio Gioia
OperatorsRegia Marina (Royal Navy)
SucceededbyAmerigo Vespucci
Flavio Gioia, date unknown
Class overview
NameFlavio Gioia
OperatorsRegia Marina (Royal Navy)
Preceded byCristoforo Colombo
Succeeded byAmerigo Vespucci
Completed1
History
BuilderRegio Cantiere di Castellammare di Stabia
Laid down26 June 1879
Launched12 June 1881
Completed26 January 1883
FateDiscarded, 10 September 1920
General characteristics
TypeScrew corvette
Displacement2,493 long tons (2,533 t)
Length78 m (255 ft 11 in) pp
Beam12.78 m (41 ft 11 in)
Draft5.19 m (17 ft)
Installed power
Propulsion
Speed14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph)
Complement268
Armament
  • 8 × 149 mm (5.9 in) guns
  • 3 × 75 mm (3 in) guns

Flavio Gioia was a screw corvette of the Italian Regia Marina (Royal Navy) built in the late 1870s and early 1880s.

Characteristics

The design for Flavio Gioia was prepared by the naval engineer Carlo Vigna; the ship was the first steel-hulled cruising vessel of the Italian Regia Marina (Royal Navy).[1] The Italian navy still largely relied on a fleet of old wooden-hulled cruising ships built in the 1850s and 1860s, but by the 1870s, the world's navies had begun to move to steel construction. The Italians responded with Flavio Gioia and the similar Amerigo Vespucci as part of a modest program to modernize its cruising fleet.[2] The two vessels were similar enough that some sources consider them to have been the same class,[3][4] though others consider them to be distinct designs.[1]

The ship was 78 meters (255 ft 11 in) long between perpendiculars, and she had a beam of 12.78 m (41 ft 11 in) and an average draft of 5.19 m (17 ft). She displaced 2,493 long tons (2,533 t). The ship had a traditional clipper bow and an overhanging stern. Her superstructure was minimal, consisting primarily of a small conning tower placed amidships. She had a crew of 268.[1]

Her propulsion system consisted of a single horizontal, 3-cylinder compound steam engine that drove a single screw propeller. Steam was supplied by eight coal-fired fire-tube boilers that vented into a single funnel located amidships. Flavio Gioia could steam at a top speed of 14 knots (26 km/h; 16 mph) from 4,156 indicated horsepower (3,099 kW). The ship had a capacity to store 500 long tons (510 t) of coal for the boilers. To supplement the steam engines, she was fitted with a three-masted barque rig.[1][3]

The main battery for Flavio Gioia consisted of eight 149-millimeter (5.9 in) 40-caliber breech-loading guns, four guns per broadside. For close-range defense against torpedo boats, she carried a secondary battery of three 75 mm (3 in) guns. In 1892, she was rearmed with four 120 mm (4.7 in) 40 cal. guns and two 356 mm (14 in) torpedo tubes. The ship was protected by a curved armor deck that was 38 mm (1.5 in) thick, with a layer of extensively subdivided series of watertight compartments below, which was intended to control flooding in the event of damage below the waterline.[1][3]

Service history

Notes

References

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