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Showing posts with label History. Show all posts
Showing posts with label History. Show all posts

Monday, March 2, 2015

Military weapons exhibition by the Kuala Lumpur Museum

Recently, the Kuala Lumpur Museum organised a special weapons exhibition in one of its special halls. A special entrance fee is required to enter this special exhibition.

Before you enter there are a few things that would interest kids.....My son as a British soldier...


....and as a Viking.


The exhibition starts with weapons from the historical age, the Stone Age. There are a lot of life-size panorama in the exhibition.


Here are some examples of stone tools and weapons found in Malaysia.


Another big section was on the two World Wars.


A vintage mortar.


Some weapons used in the war as well as post-war period.


A Japanese field artillery.


Some modern weapons.


Not that new sub-machine guns.


Pistols.




Sniper rifle.


There were many more weapons, especially the edge weapons. Unfortunately, the lighting was too poor for my Apple iPhone.


Friday, October 17, 2014

Old class photos circa 1983 - 1985, St John's Institution Kuala Lumpur - Brought back excellent memories of my school days.

This was for 3C in St Johns Institution back in 1985. Me sitting on the front row, extreme right.


Class trip to Kuala Selangor.


Ananta - now a Doctor - in fact, my family GP!


Ranjit - also a Doctor - a Gynecologist.
 

Fashion in the early 1980s. My friend Mariner started the man-bag craze way back then - trend setters!


Raja Kamarul - the athletic one.


Cheong - a Doctor; Shahril - EPF boss!


Mariner and Mr Goldman, our Sejarah (History) teacher. Love to hear his stories.


We were scrawny back then.


Raja Mahani.


 Mrs Kuga Tas.



Stamp Club.



Charles Leong.


These are only some of the photos that we have to remind us of the good old days in school. The new generation can't imagine the difficulty of getting hold of a camera to take a picture back then. Everything was based on film rolls.

Looking at the photos reminded me how close we were as classmates and more importantly as friends.



Friday, November 30, 2012

A Brief History of the Steam Engine

This is taken from: www.popularmechanics.com. Please note that some of the images may not be generated by the document viewer. Please download the full PDF to get the full details.

Print - A Brief History of the Steam Engine - Popular Mechanics


Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Pictorial history of the Calculator



As a mathematician, a calculator is a Godsend. I always wondered the history behind the digital calculator. When I was in school, before the use of the calculators, I used to use the log tables. Anyway, courtesy of calculator.co.uk, below is a graphic which gives a graphical representation of the history of the calculator.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

USS Bonhomme Richard (1765)

John Paul Jones used the Bonhomme Richard to net the Continental Navy’s first sea victory against the British.

Designation: USS Bonhomme Richard (1765)
Classification Type: 42-Gunner
Ship Class: Frigate
Country of Origin: United States
Initial Year of Service: 1765
Number in Class: 1

The Duc de Duras, a 900 ton merchant ship built in France for the French East India Company in 1765, transported freight between the Orient and France. She was placed at the disposal of John Paul Jones and the Continental Navy on February 4, 1779, by King Louis XVI of France as a result of a loan to the United States. Jones was an admirer of Benjamin Franklin because of his founding father roots and also perhaps because Franklin was an envoy to France as the Commissioner to Paris. Jones renamed the Duc de Duras the “Bonhomme Richard” when, translated in English, meant “Poor Richard“ - the pen name Franklin used when he wrote his “Poor Richard’s Almanac”. Franklin used the journal to shape public will against the British crown using witty humor.

The French gave Jones the authority to use his own judgment as to where he would sail to attack British shipping. Jones now had the ship but needed officers and a crew. The ship also needed to be converted from a merchantmen to a ship of war. A few months were needed to find and secure cannon and stores so she could become a fighting frigate. By this time Jones was bestowed the title of commodore as other ships were also placed under his command. The Bonhomme Richard was not a new ship by any regard, having made many voyages in her cargo guise. As such, she had a tendency to develop leaks to the point that Captain Jones felt uneasy. With a new coat of paint and a new name she was finally ready for the sea.

Jones sailed the Bonhomme Richard out on June 19, 1779 along with his squadron of ships including the fine USS Alliance (a 36-gun frigate), the French warships Pallas (a captured British 32-gun frigate), the Vengeance (a 12-gun British brig), the cutter Le Cerf and a complement of troop ships. This voyage resulted in no contact with British shipping but in August the fleet set sail into the North Sea and captured 16 British merchantmen along with their cargos. After returning to port for repairs, Alliance and the Bonhomme Richard collided in a storm.

The squadron sailed again on the 23rd. While they were near the entrance to Dingle Bay, a lookout sighted the vessel Fortune. Jones approached and the Bristol-bound brig lowered its flag as it was clearly out-gunned. Two armed boats were lowered from Jones' flagship and took the Fortune as a prize. Jones placed a small crew on board and sent the Fortune back to France. Also that day, the Alliance's commanding officer, Captain Pierre Landais, a former officer in the French Navy who went to America and received a captain's commission in the Continental Navy, was given the Alliance due to his sea experience. Landais was not content to serve under Jones and whenever possible was quite to derail his commands.

The squadron now found itself close to the Irish coast with the wind calming down. Jones was concerned if his ships pursued vessels into the shoals they might be stalled and result in capture. Jones ordered Landais to not follow a particular vessel towards shore. To that, Landais boarded the Bonhomme Richard and told Jones face-to-face that he would no longer obey Jones' orders. This became the first American Munity at sea.

Problems continued for Jones and his squadron for, that evening, when Bonhomme Richard had drifted dangerously close to the shoals, Jones ordered his barge lowered so it could tow the frigate into deeper water away from Ireland. The coxswain and the boat's Irish oarsmen were delighted to return home and decided to cut the lines and row their vessels towards shore. The Le Cerf became separated from the squadron while looking for the boats and had no choice but to return to home port. Pallas, the French frigate, broke her tiller and dropped out of sight. Landais took Alliance off on his own without permission, leaving the Vengeance and the Bonhomme Richard to sail alone.

The two ships continued in a generally northerly direction west of the outer Hebrides and then headed for Cape Wrath towards Scotland. On August 30th, Jones sighted three ships and quickly gave chase. He overtook the brig Union and persuaded her to surrender. Alliance netted with a prize named Betsy and Landais again touted Jones' authority. Within a few days Pallas rejoined the squadron and, on the next day, Vengeance captured an Irish brigantine on its way to England. The squadron passed the Shetlands then turned south to begin the last leg of its cruise around the British Isles. The defiant Alliance took two more small ships and Landais again left the squadron unknown to Jones. Jones next wanted to attack Newcastle, England, to interrupt England's coal supply however this task eventually proved impossible. Instead, the Bonhomme Richard drove a ship ashore south of Yorkshire and took a British brigantine sailing from Rotterdam to Britain.

On September 23, 1779, the small fleet sighted the British Baltic Fleet of 41 vessels under the protection of a 44-gun frigate, the HMS Serapis, and the Sloop of War Countess of Scarborough, a 22-gun ship-of-the-line. At around 6:00 PM, the Bonhomme Richard engaged the Serapis and the Pallas attacked the Countess of Scarborough in what became the Battle of Flamborough Head. The USS Alliance did not engage the British but fired on the Bonhomme Richard instead. This action resulted in a court martial for Landias upon his return to France. Bonhomme Richard rounded Serapis' port quarter and fired but two of its cannon exploded below deck killing many of the gun crew. In Jones' favor, Midshipman Fanning and his men succeeded in eliminating the British sharpshooters from the top sail of the Bonhomme Richard.

Four hours of intense fighting left the Bonhomme Richard battered and Captain Pearson of the Serapis saw the enemy ship badly listing from shot and shell. Pearson suggested surrender to Jones with Jones returning to the British captain saying "I have not yet begun to fight." Jones maneuvered his ship close to the Serapis and rammed her. The ensuing, carnage on both sides was horrifying and all this occurring while the American ship was sinking.

The two vessels became locked together via grappling hooks for another two hours. Jones utilized his British prisoners to work the pumps to keep his ship afloat. His actions wore the enemy down to the point of collapse and with the Serapis on fire, the British finally surrendered to Jones by striking their colors. Jones' crew put out the fire and took stock of the Richard. He decided to transfer his crew to the British ship while the Bonhomme Richard was allowed to sink, this occurring on September 25, 1779 despite valiant attempts to save the gallant ship. Jones sailed the Serapis to port in the United Provinces in Holland. The Continental Navy had its first victory over a British ship and this occurring in Britain’s home waters of all places. This battle catapulted Jones into hero status and he was heralded as “The Father of the American Navy”. His battle cry of “not begun to fight” would go down in American naval history and quotation lore.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

USS Constitution

The historic USS Constitution is the oldest commissioned floating vessel anywhere in the world, relegated to ceremonial roles as needed.

Designation: USS Constitution
Classification Type: Heavy Frigate
Ship Class: IX-21 class

Country of Origin: United States
Initial Year of Service: 1797
Number in Class: 6

The USS Constitution was a product of changing times in America's policy. Fresh off of their independence war decades earlier, the US Navy found itself with nary a capable vessel of defending her merchant force and her interests from French aggression and pirate attacks. The resulting design initially encompassed some six ships of great gun strength but this was eventually curtailed to the USS United States, USS Constellation and the USS Constitution.

At her core, the USS Constitution was a traditional-looking three-masted great ship of oak wood hull construction and protected by copper sheathing throughout. She carried 32 x 24-pdr (pounder) long guns - supplemented by 20 x 32-pdr carronades and 2 x 24-pdr bow chasers making her a 44-gun heavy frigate. The crew complement was 450 personnel though today the vessel is supported by only 55 personnel in a primarily ceremonial role. She was partially launched on the 20th of September in 1797 where her weight prevented the official launching from completing. As a result, the reworked Constitution was once again ceremoniously launched on October 21st, 1797 in Boston Harbor.

The following year, the USS Constitution was actively patrolling the waters off of the southeast portion of the United States. During this time - the time of the Quasi-War with France, a conflict never formally declared and surprisingly fought entirely at sea - she saw action in support of marine units and was deserving of distinction in the conflict. By 1803, the vessel was serving in the Mediterranean Sea and fought along the North African coast to combat African nations seeking a sort of tax for American use of local Mediterranean trade ways. As the troubles in the Mediterranean subsided, a brewing conflict with the British was underway. The USS Constitution faced off with the HMS Guerriere in 1812 to which the Constitution earned her "Old Ironsides" nickname when British cannon rounds seemingly bounced off the American vessel's hull. After several more years of storied engagements and more years undergoing repairs for damaged received in those engagements, the Constitution was placed through major reconstruction which was completed by 1835 at the request of the United States Congress.

The Constitution was back in action in the American Civil War though she was not used in anger and merely moved to a safe location so as to protect her from Southern assault. The ironclad "New Ironsides" instead fought on in her name. With the close of the war and the arrivial of steam-powered vessels, wind-powered ships like the USS Constitution were less and less in need and would spend her days as a training ship for the Naval Academy at Annapolis. Following a world tour, the ship would be in dock once more for refitting and repair. She would later take part in her 200th celebration on July 21, 1997. The voyage of the Constitution would eventually find her in a home in Charleston Navy Yard.

Though a "show boat" in many regards, the USS Constitution is actually crewed by active sailors and commanders where it is regarded as an honor to serve on and underneath her decks for any chosen man. The vessel was first ordered in 1794, laid down that same year and launched in 1797. Acting US President George Washington is credited with naming the vessel after the United States Constitution. The Constitution completed a round-the-world voyage in March of 1844, taking some 30 months to accomplish the feat. In a bit of interesting trivia, she remains the only known vessel afloat to have sunk an enemy ship with true cannon fire.


Specifications for the USS Constitution
Dimensions:
Length: 204ft (62.18m)
Beam: 44ft (13.41m)
Draught: 0ft (0.00m)

Performance:
Surface Speed: 13kts (15mph)
Range: Essentially Unlimited

Structure:
Complement: 450
Suface Displacement: 2,200tons
Power:
Engine(s): 3 x masted sails
Armament Suite:
32 x 24-pounder long guns
20 x 32-pounder carronades
2 x 24-pounder bow chasers

Friday, October 16, 2009

HMS Victory (1765)

The HMS Victory began her service in 1765 and continues as the oldest commissioned warship in the world today, this as a museum.

Designation: HMS Victory (1765)
Classification Type: 100-gun First Ship of the Line
Ship Class: HMS Victory
Country of Origin: United Kingdom
Initial Year of Service: 1765
Number in Class: 1


As fate would have it in 1758, the same year of Lord Nelson's birth the Board of Admiralty ordered twelve new ships of the line, among them a 'first-rate' ship with 100 guns, to be named Victory. HMS Victory is a first-rate warship with four masts built to be a floating gun platform with 100 cannon of different calibers arranged on three decks. She took seven years to build at a cost is today’s money of 50 million English pounds, designed by Thomas Slade of the Royal Navy and laid down in Chatham Dockyard, England. Sir John Lindsay, Victory's first Captain, took command In March 1778. On May 8, 1778, she set sail for sea duty for the first time exactly 13 years and a day, 4,746 days from the time of her launching. Her active service life began on Friday June 13 when she sailed from Spithead as the Flagship of the Channel Fleet and first cleared her decks for action on the July 23, 1778.

A story in itself is the construction of the Victory. The 18th century shipwrights had only simple gear and tools and the difficulty of moving enormous timbers from where they were felled to the dockyard in Chatham. This extensive skilled workforce of about 250 men were required to accomplish the work. The shipwrights needed a hundred acres of oak forest, about 6,000 selected mature oak trees found in the weald forest of Kent and Sussex in England. The balance of the timber needed was fir, elm, and pine and was cut and stored knowing the wood required seasoning or drying for many years.

First the keel on July 23, 1759 then the frame was constructed; shipwrights would normally cover the ship in canvas for several months for more seasoning of the wood. Luck would have it for Victory that the Seven Years' War ended so her construction was stalled. Peace meant that she was not needed so her frame remained covered for three years, this increased seasoning turned out to increase her strength and sturdiness. Certain sections of a ship framework had to be made from a single piece of oak, so mature oak trees of great size were sought after. The largest oak trees required were for the 30 feet high 'stern post' which took some of the greatest stresses placed on the ship. Other valued oak trees had “Y “shaped curved branches which enabled the knees and clamps to be made from one piece for increased strength. Perhaps the most difficult of the trees to locate were the timbers used for the wing transom needing a very wide forked mature oak tree. Light supple wood like fir and spruce was required for the decks, masts & yard arms. Seven mature elm trunks were used for the keel.

The Victory having 3 masts and a bow sprit is called a rigged ship vessel. Each of the masts supports yards horizontal spars were named after their respective masts. The lower yard, topsail yard and the topgallant yards were made from either fir or pine because of its light weight and being flexible. The masts required so much bulk it took 7 trees to make each one, each tree were combined and built-in as one with iron hoops and joined tightly with hundreds of yards of ropes. The masts used 27 miles of rigging and carried four acres of canvas for the sails. Two tons of iron and copper nails are needed for the deck. Iron bolts were passed through the timbers and joints with the ends clenched with washers holding the ship together. A ship the size of Victory required more than 26 miles (42 km) of flax and hemp rope with the largest rope for the anchors being 19 inches (47 cm) in circumference. As an historical note typically, hemp contains below 0.3% THC, while cannabis grown for marijuana can contain anywhere from 6 or 7 % to 20% or even more. The smoking lamp was not lit on board Victory.

Close to 4 acres of sails were needed comprising of 37 sails with a total sail area of 6,500 square yards (5, 428 square meters). Dundee weavers who manufactured the bolts of cloth for the Navy during this period and would have spent around 1,200 hours just to stitch the top sail together. Spare sails were needed so an additional 23 sails were carried on board. When in full sail HMS Victory carried thirty seven different sails. These canvas sails were mostly hung from horizontal yard arms mounted on her four masts, the bowsprit, the foremast, the mainmast and the mizenmast. Just the right combination of sail had to be rigged, to little sail and the ship did not move fast enough through the water. Too much sail in a strong wind and the mast might snap. At times little sail was necessary for leaving or entering ports. To trim or adjust a sail the crew had to climb the rope ladders to their assigned “yard” the horizontal bar that supported the sail. The orders were to “Make Sail” or unfurl the area of sail to catch more wind, or “Trim Sail” to reduce or furl the sail area by rolling up and tying down the sail. The crew of Victory was expected to hear the order, climb the rope rigging ladders to their assigned station and have full sail in six minutes. 120 plus men were needed to accomplish this task and it was not uncommon for inexperienced sailors to fall to their death from wet ropes and gusts of wind. HMS Victory's design allowed speeds up to 8 knots or 10 mph, and being a First Rate ship being maneuverable required her for active service between 1778 and 1805 and became one of the most sought after ships in the Navy.

The Victory carried 7 anchors of various sizes; the two main anchors were used for holding the ship in deep water. The larger and heaviest of the two weighing 4 tons was always rigged on the starboard or right hand side of the ship due to prevailing winds found in the northern hemisphere. It was the heaviest work on board to raise the anchor, and at the center of the ship were two capstans connected together vertically. All hands helped in this being the most difficult job on board for sailors and marines alike. The capstan was a big wench with 12 heavy wood bars made long enough for six men to stand side by side and walk around the capstan pushing against the bars to raise the anchor. Around 144 men were needed to raise the largest anchor, the huge anchor cable made of hemp was very heavy especially when wet. The anchor rope cable was carefully coiled to prevent the cable from rotting and the crew stored it on a special slatted floor allowing the water to drain off and air to circulate around the rope to dry. Below the water line additional protection was needed for the ships oak hull due to the teredo worm. The teredos are not worms at all, but rather saltwater clams notorious for boring into and destroying anything wooden immersed in sea water, like a wooden ship. The remedy for ships of the period was covering the hulls bottom with copper sheeting. Victory’s hull needed 3,923 copper sheets of 4ft by 1ft pieces (15,692 sqft) weighing a total of 17 tons.

Six boats carried aboard HMS Victory were comprised of a Launch, Barge, 3 Cutters and a Pinnace which is a light boat, propelled by sails or oars, formerly used as a tender for guiding merchant and war vessels. These boats were used for many purposes including conveying stores, personnel, mooring and anchoring the ship. They were also employed for towing when calm wind stalled the ship. The Launch was the largest of the boats on board being 34 feet (10.3m) long and used for carrying men and supplies, and at times anchor work. The boat was usually rowed by 16 oarsmen, and could also be sailed. Troops were ferried to shore in the boats and were the first assault craft to be used in war. The boats were not considered lifeboats, to lower a boat took too much time to save a sailor who fell overboard, life at sea was expendable. During battle removing wooden objects was necessary to reduce collateral damage of splintered wood flying across the deck. All wood items were sent below the main and gun decks, like mess tables, benches and furniture. The boats were towed behind to limit cannon hits creating flying splinters. When clearing the decks for action was called an experienced crew could clear the decks in a ship the size of Victory in ten minutes.

All cannon on the Victory were short ranged smooth bore muzzle loaders. Three main types of shot were used in the cannon, round solid shot, used to pummel an enemy ship’s hull. Next dismantling shot, used to hammer down the masts and rigging, third was anti-personnel shot or grape shot, which were small iron balls used to maim and kill enemy crew members. A broadside was when all the cannons fired on one side of the ship. To keep the ship from listing badly the guns were fired one by one from bow to stern in a wave effect. Each carriage and cannon weighted about 1,500 lbs. A trick of the era to extend the range was to skip the cannon shot off the water like one would do with a pebble on a pond. When the enemy was sighted, the Royal Marine drummer would, Beat to Quarters, a special drum roll which on modern ships has reverted to sounding a bugle for Action Stations. Both methods are calls for Battle Stations and the crew would clear the decks for action and man the guns. Each cannon had its own crew which was typically twelve men and a boy, who would run to the lower decks for the gunpowder filled cartridges from the magazines below decks. All Royal Navy gun crews like the ones on Victory would go through countless drills to prepare their guns for firing by constantly practicing to fire a broadside continuously every ninety seconds. Most naval battles would often begin with great lines of opposing warships sailing past each other firing broadsides with no assured outcome. Normally what was required was close-quarter hand-to-hand fighting between the crews of ships alongside each other. In these deadly battles pikes, cutlasses, pistols and downward musket fire from the rigging was used with great accuracy by the crews on both sides.

On July 9, 1778 Victory put to sea along with a force of thirty ships of the line. A French fleet of twenty-nine ships was sighted 14 days later on July 23rd 100 miles (160 km) west of Ushant. The French had orders to avoid battle, and upon sighting the British fleet two of the French ships escaped into the port of Brest. Both fleets found themselves maneuvering during heavy winds in a squall. The battle began with the British more or less in a column and the French in a less effective position. In Battle weather can play a role, at the beginning the winds allowed the French to sail there First Ships of the Line against the British. At almost noon Victory opened fire on the Bretagne a 110 gun ship of the line which sailed in line with the Ville de Paris of 90 guns. The engagement was indecisive however Sir Hugh Palliser's British rear division suffered a great deal. Due to the loss of British ships Admiral Keppel was blamed and court marshaled however after review he was cleared for the actions during the first battle of Ushant.

At the second battle of Ushant in March 1780 Victory was commanded by Captain Henry Cromwell and flew the flag of Rear Admiral Richard Kempenfelt. Victory sailed with a total of 18 ships, eleven other ships of the line, a 50-gun fourth-rate, and five frigates, to overtake a French convoy that sailed from Brest. Kempenfelt was unaware that the convoy was protected by 21 ships of the line with Adrimal de Guichen in command. Kempenfelt ordered a chase when the French fleet was sighted on December 12th. When the British sighted the French greater compliment of ships, Kempenfelt was forced to withdraw with the 15 captured prize ships from the French convoy. As in the first battle the weather removed the possibility for a decisive battle with the French.

On May 11 1803 the war between Britain and France and Napoleon Bonaparte evolved with Spain becoming allied with France. Five days before, Vice-Admiral Nelson hoisted his flag in Victory 1803. Samuel Sutton was assigned as his flag captain of Victory as she sailed as Nelson’s flag ship of the Mediterranean fleet. The color was changed from red to the black and yellow scheme. Her gun ports were originally yellow to match the hull but later repainted black, giving a pattern called the Nelson’s checkerboard.

Victory was passing the island of Toro on 4 April, 1805, Nelson cruised towards Sicily expecting the French fleet would be sailing for Egypt, however Villeneuve was entering Cádiz to connect with the Spanish fleet. When French Admiral Villeneuve learned that he was to be removed from command he took his ships to sea on the morning of October 19, sailing north towards the Mediterranean and unknowingly towards the British fleet, launching the Battle of Trafalgar. The first casualty on Monday morning October 21, 1805 was the landsman Aaron Crocan a seaman with less than a year's experience at sea. At five thirty he fell overboard from HMS Conqueror into a heavy swell and was never seen again. As a boat was started to be lowered a shout from the masthead called “ship ahoy”, the combined fleet had been spotted and was about 11 miles away. From Victory Nelson issued a rapid series of signals to gather the fleet towards the enemy. The British ships began to form up behind Victory and the Royal Sovereign. The French and Spanish Grand Fleet sailed in line about two hundred yards apart. The Grand Fleet had 40 sail and the British had 32 ships, at about 8am most of the British crews had breakfast, soon Nelson's famous last signal was sent, "England expects that every man will do his duty".

The normal battle at sea of the day would have been both fleets sailing parallel against each other firing broadsides. Nelson inVictory decided to divide his fleet into two battle lines and sail through the enemy fleet at a 90 degree perpendicular angle. This initiative strategy became the “crossing the T” plan or being able to fire a broadside at your enemy while they could only fire forward or aft with minimum cannon towards the British ships. Victory lost 57 killed and 102 wounded, Admiral Nelson was shot and mortally wounded. The British fleet killed was 449 and had 1,246 wounded with no ships lost. The French lost 2,218 men and had 1,155 sailors wounded. The Spanish men killed were 1,025 and 1,383 wounded. 7,000 men were captured on 21 French and Spanish ships, along with one ship destroyed. The battle made Britain the master of the seas and Nelson the supreme hero in British history with Victory becoming the most principle warship of sail, even to this day.

Today HMS Victory remains in commission as the flagship of the Royal Navy's Home Command. She is the oldest commissioned warship in the world in her role as a museum ship supported on cradles in dry dock. The USS Constitution, launched 30 years later, is the oldest commissioned warship still afloat.



Specifications for the HMS Victory (1765)
Dimensions:
Length: 227.5ft (69.34m)
Beam: 51.9ft (15.82m)
Draught: 28.8ft (8.78m)

Performance:
Surface Speed: 8kts (9mph)
Range: Essentially Unlimited


Structure:
Complement: 875
Suface Displacement: 3,500tons
Power:
Engine(s): Sails - 6,510 sq yd (5440 m²)
Armament Suite:
Armament as designed in 1765:

Lower deck - 30 x 42 pound guns
Middle deck - 28 x 24 pound guns
Upper deck - 30 x 12 pound guns
Quarter deck - 10 x 6 pound guns
Forecastle - 2 x 6 pound guns

1778 March 12. Commissioned. Armament:

Lower deck - 30 x 32 pound guns
Middle deck - 28 x 24 pound guns
Upper deck - 30 x 12 pound guns
Quarter deck - 10 x 6 pound guns
Forecastle - 2 x 6 pound guns

1779 April. Maintenance and re-fitting after a year at sea. Armament:

Lower deck - 30 x 42 pound guns
Middle deck - 28 x 24 pound guns
Upper deck - 30 x 12 pound guns
Quarter deck - 10 x 6 pound guns
Forecastle - 2 x 6 pound guns

1780 March. Maintenance and re-fitting after a year at sea. Armament:

Lower deck - 30 x 42 pound guns
Middle deck - 28 x 24 pound guns
Upper deck - 30 x 12 pound guns
Quarter deck - 10 x 6 pound guns
Poop deck - 6 x 18 pound carronades
Forecastle - 2 × 6 pound guns; 2 × 24 pound carronades

1782 November - March. Paid off at Portsmouth and subject to repair. Armament:

Lower deck - 30 x 42 pound guns
Middle deck - 28 x 24 pound guns
Upper deck - 30 x 12 pound guns
Quarter deck - 10 x 12 pound guns
Poop deck - 6 x 18 pound carronades
Forecastle - 2 × 12 pound guns

1806 March - May. Repairs and recoppering at Chatham. Armament:

Lower deck - 30 x 32 pound guns
Middle deck - 28 x 24 pound guns
Upper deck - 32 x 12 pound guns
Quarter deck - 4 x 12 pound guns
Quarter deck - 8 x 32 pound carronades
Forecastle - 2 x 32 pound carronades

1807 November Refitted. Armament:

Lower deck - 30 x 32 pound guns
Middle deck - 28 x 18 pound guns
Upper deck - 30 x 12 pound guns
Quarter deck - 8 x 32 pound carronades
Forecastle - 2 x 32 pound carronades
Forecastle - 2 x 12 pound guns

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