V and W-class destroyer - définition. Qu'est-ce que V and W-class destroyer
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Qu'est-ce (qui) est V and W-class destroyer - définition


V and W-class destroyer         
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  • 6}} (Admiralty V class), showing the typical inter-war layout of a V and W-class destroyer. She is wearing the 1939-pattern funnel bands of the 16th Destroyer Flotilla based at [[Portsmouth]]; one red over one white.
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  • HMS ''Wolverine'']] (Admiralty Modified W class) as modified into a "short range escort". She retains both boiler rooms and funnels, but has "Y" gun replaced by depth charges, the after torpedo tubes replaced by a 12 pdr anti-aircraft gun, centimetric Radar Type 271 has been added on the bridge and (not visible) "A" gun has been replaced by a hedgehog weapon.
  • HMS ''Velox'' in 1944 after conversion to a long range escort (LRE).
1917 CLASS OF BRITISH DESTROYERS
V & W class destroyer; Admiralty Modified W class; Admiralty Modified W; HMS Zealous (1919); Admiralty V class leader; "V/W" class destroyer; V and W class destroyer
The V and W class was an amalgam of six similar classes of destroyer built for the Royal Navy under the 9th, 10th, 13th and 14th of fourteen War Emergency Programmes during the First World War and generally treated as one class. For their time they were among the most powerful and advanced ships of their type in the world, and set the trend for future British designs.
W and Z-class destroyer         
1943 CLASS OF BRITISH DESTROYERS
W class destroyer (1943); Z class destroyer; W and Z class destroyer; Z-class destroyer; Z Class destroyer; W- and Z-class destroyer
The W and Z class was a class of sixteen destroyers of the Royal Navy launched in 1943–1944. They were constructed as two flotillas, with names beginning with "W-" and "Z-", respectively, although, like the preceding , two of the flotilla leaders were named after historical naval figures (as had been Royal Navy practice during the inter-war years).
U and V-class destroyer         
1943 CLASS OF BRITISH DESTROYERS
V class destroyer (1942); U class destroyer; U and V class destroyer; U-class destroyer
The U and V class was a class of sixteen destroyers of the Royal Navy launched in 1942–1943. They were constructed in two flotillas, each with names beginning with "U-" or "V-" (although there was a return to the pre-war practice of naming the designated flotilla leader after a famous naval figure from history to honour the lost ships Grenville and Hardy).