M-class cruiser
Template:Short description Template:Use shortened footnotes
Template:Infobox ship imageTemplate:Infobox ship class overviewTemplate:Infobox ship characteristicsThe M-class cruisers were a class of light cruisers planned, but never built, by Nazi Germany's Script error: No such module "Lang". before World War II. The ships were designed for commerce raiding in the Atlantic Ocean. The design for the first four ships suffered from a number of problems, and so the fifth and sixth ships were substantially redesigned.
The name of the class is taken from the letter designating the first projected unit. As long as the ships were not named, they were referred to by letters assigned in the chronological order of their planned construction. The first planned unit would have been the thirteenth German cruiser and was therefore listed as cruiser M in the navy's documents. Had any of the ships been built, the class would have been named after the first completed unit.
Development and cancellation
In the early 1930s, Adolf Hitler began a rearmament program in Germany. He signed the Anglo-German Naval Agreement in 1935, which allowed Germany to build up its navy to 35 percent of the strength of the British Royal Navy and effectively repudiated the restrictions of the Treaty of Versailles on the German fleet. Versailles had limited the German fleet's cruiser strength to six vessels of Template:Convert displacement.Template:Sfn
The M class was intended for use as a scout for the commerce raiding squadrons envisioned under German strategic thinking at the time, which would be formalized as the Plan Z construction program.Template:Sfn The ships design process started in 1936; the ships were intended for long-range commerce raiding. They were an improvement over previous designs like the Template:Sclass and Template:Sclasses, which suffered from insufficient range to be effective commerce raiders. However, the requirements placed on the design—high maximum and cruising speeds, long range, heavy armament, and armor sufficient to withstand Template:Cvt shells, all on a displacement no more than Template:Cvt were deemed impossible by the design staff. In July 1937, the Script error: No such module "Lang". (commander in chief of the navy) requested proposals from both the naval design staff as well as private dockyards. None of the designs by the dockyards were practical, and so the official design, which only met some of the requirements, was chosen.Template:Sfn
During further development of the design, serious flaws became apparent, including the weakness of both the main battery and anti-aircraft armament, as well as the insufficiently thick armor protection. The stepped arrangement of the deck armor wasted space and was therefore impractical. The layout of the propulsion system was also problematic; both turbines were in the same engine room, and therefore each were vulnerable to disabling if the other was damaged. Their crew spaces were also insufficient for long-range cruises. As a result, the design was heavily modified for the last two ships of the class, Q and R. The initial design borrowed on contemporary British and French ships, the Template:Sclass and Template:Sclass, respectively. The distribution of the M-class ships' side armor was the most obvious influence of the Southampton-class design.Template:Sfn
The contract for M was assigned to Script error: No such module "Lang". in Kiel under the construction number 263. N followed at the Script error: No such module "Lang". in Wilhelmshaven, as number 129. O—construction number 606—was assigned to Script error: No such module "Lang". in Kiel, but on 8 August 1939, the contract was transferred to the Script error: No such module "Lang".. P was also assigned to Script error: No such module "Lang"., under number 607. Q was assigned to the Script error: No such module "Lang". in Danzig, and the contract for R was awarded to the Script error: No such module "Lang".. Only the keels for M and N were laid—in 1938—but construction was halted on 19 and 21 September 1939, respectively, after the start of World War II. Both hulls were broken up on the stocks shortly thereafter.Template:Sfn
Design
General characteristics
The first four M-class ships—M, N, O, and P—were Template:Cvt long at the waterline, and Template:Cvt long overall. They had a beam of Template:Cvt and a draft of Template:Cvt standard, Template:Cvt forward, and Template:Cvt aft. The ships had a designed displacement of Template:Cvt, and would have displaced Template:Cvt at standard load and Template:Cvt fully laden. The last two ships—Q and R—were enlarged versions: Template:Cvt long at the waterline and Template:Cvt overall. Their beams were Template:Cvt wider, at Template:Cvt. Their draft was lower at Template:Cvt. They were designed to displace Template:Cvt, and would have displaced Template:Cvt standard. Full load figures are not known.Template:Sfn
All six ships were to have steel-made, and up to 85% welded construction. The design called for fifteen watertight compartments and a double bottom for 78% of the length of the hull. The ships had a crew of 28 officers and 892 men. They were designed to carry one picket boat, a barge, a launch, and two cutters. They would have carried a pair of Arado Ar 196 seaplanes for reconnaissance, which would have been launched with a single steam catapult.Template:Sfn
All six ships were intended to use two sets of Brown, Boveri & Cie and Wagner steam turbines or Marine-type turbines built by Germaniawerft and four MAN double-acting 12-cylinder two-stroke diesel engines. Q and R however, were to be equipped with an additional four diesels, for a total of eight. The turbines were powered by four Wagner ultra-high pressure water-tube boilers, designed to put out 58 atmospheres of pressure. The propulsion system drove three screws, although four were considered for Q and R. The ships' electrical power was supplied by four generators that produced 2,400 kW at 220 volts.Template:Sfn
Armament and armor
All six ships were armed with the same set of weaponry. The primary armament consisted of eight 15 cm L/55 quick-firing guns mounted in four twin turrets, in superfiring pairs fore and aft. The guns had a total of 960 shells, for 120 rounds per gun.Template:Sfn The 15 cm twin turrets were Drh L. C/34 mounts—the same type as those fitted to the Template:Sclass- and Template:Sclasss, as well as a number of other designs.Template:Sfn The turrets allowed depression to -10 degrees and elevation to 40 degrees, which enabled a maximum range of Template:Convert. The 15 cm guns had a rate of fire of between 6 and 8 Template:Convert rounds per minute, at a muzzle velocity of 875 meters per second (2,871 ft/s). The guns used two propellant charges: a Template:Convert RPC/38 fore charge and a Template:Convert main charge in a brass cartridge.[1]
The ships carried four 8.8 cm L/76 anti-aircraft guns in two twin turrets, aft of the main superstructure. The 8.8 cm guns were supplied with 1,600 shells, for 400 rounds per gun.Template:Sfn These guns fired Template:Convert high explosive shells at a rate of fire of 15 to 20 rounds per minute and a muzzle velocity of 950 m/s (3,117 ft/s). The guns could elevate to 80 degrees, which allowed them to hit targets flying at Template:Convert.[2] The M-class ships were also equipped with eight 3.7 cm AA guns in twin mounts centered on the superstructure. They had a total of 9,600 shells. The anti-aircraft weaponry was supplemented with four 2 cm guns, each of which had 2,000 rounds. The ships were also armed with eight deck-mounted Template:Cvt torpedo tubes and approximately 60 mines.Template:Sfn
The ships were to have been protected with Krupp and Script error: No such module "Lang". ("Script error: No such module "Lang".", Hard) armor plating. The inner layer of the armor belt was 50 mm thick in critical areas amidships, and tapered down to zero protection at the stern and bow. The outer layer was 30 mm amidships; also tapering down to zero at both ends of the ships. The flat portion of the decks were 20 mm thick, with 35 mm thick sloped sides that connected to the bottom of the belt armor. The conning tower had a roof that was 50 mm thick and sides 100 mm thick. The gun turrets had the same armor protection as the preceding light cruiser Script error: No such module "WPSHIPS utilities".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".: the sides were 35 mm thick, the faces were 80 mm thick, the roofs ranged in thickness from 20–35 mm. The armor protecting the turret barbettes was 60 mm thick.Template:Sfn
Footnotes
References
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Further reading
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