World War I • s • s • s • s • s • s • s • s • s • s •
R-class submarines • cruisers • s • s • s • s • s
World War II • The 3-inch/50 was standard-issue on at least 63 classes of ships that have a strong association with World War II. The total number of vessels amounts to • 3 battleships • 10 light cruisers • 119 submarines (est. maximum 119 installed) • 498 destroyer escorts and frigates (1494 installed, 111 removed) • 1110 patrol boats, mine sweepers and submarine chasers (1110 up to 1453 installed) • 161 landing craft / amphibious assault ships (247 installed) • 116+ auxiliaries (274 installed) • The submarines were built in the 1930s under the limitations of the
Washington Naval Treaty and
its successors during a
period of isolationism and
economic austerity. The division into classes was typically a result of construction during a particular fiscal year, but the number built each year was small. The
Gatos became a mass-produced iteration of this line of research and development, because they coincided with the
Two-Ocean Navy Act. Starting with the class of submarines, the
5-inch/25-caliber gun became the standard deck gun of the US Navy • 2 (FY33) • 10
Porpoise (FY34, FY35) • 6 (FY36) • 10 (FY37, FY38) • 12 (FY39, FY40) • 2 (FY40) • 77 (FY41) •
Destroyer escorts were a relative late-comer with production commencing in 1942 and were all mass-produced. They were quick to build and entered service in 1943. Later war-time classes had a main armament of two
5-inch/38,
APD conversions had one such gun. Separation into classes is a result of different propulsion systems used and whether or not torpedoes were carried. • 3 guns per vessel • probably all manually loaded Mark 21 or Mark 22 • 65 (diesel-electric, short hull, no torpedoes) • 102 (turbo-electric, 3 torpedoes) • 37 converted to APDs after commissioning, all 3-inch guns removed • 72 (diesel-electric, 3 torpedoes) • 85 (geared diesel, 3 torpedoes) • 78 s • 32 of 97
Evarts and 46 of 148
Buckley converted before commissioning, all 3-inch guns retained • 75 s (3 guns per ship) • essentially a destroyer escort with a merchant hull and triple expansion steam engines) • 21 s (3 guns per ship) • 21 of 96
Tacoma in Royal Navy service • Converted destroyers of the WW1-era and classes were equipped with 3-inch/50 guns while being converted to high speed transports (3 guns), minelayers (3), minesweepers (3) or seaplane tenders (2), those that stayed as destroyers were refitted with up to 6 guns. • Patrol boats of less than 1000 tons, some of which were
wooden boats. These minesweepers were equipped with
anti-submarine warfare equipment and their designs are closely related to the submarine chasers. Submarine chasers can be characterized as smaller, cheaper, coastal waters destroyer escorts. All ships in this group used diesel propulsion. • 2 s (1 per boat) • 343 s (1 or 2 per boat) • 123 s (1 per boat) • 68 s (1 per boat • 95 s (1 per boat) • 481
yard minesweepers (1 per boat) • Amphibious Assault Ships • 130
Landing Craft Support (1 per vessel) •
Attack transports • Based on pre-war cargo ships • 8 (4 per ship) • 2 (4 per ship) • 5 (4 per ship) • (4) • (1) •
Type C3 ship • 7 (4 per ship) • 3 (4 per ship) • 2 (2 per ship) •
Type P1 ship • 2 (4 per ship) • Auxiliary vessels, typically made of a cargo or tanker hull •
T1 tanker • 23 s (4 per ship) • 34 s (1 per ship) •
T2 tanker • 16 (geared turbine) s (4 per ship) • 14 (turbo-electric) s (4 per ship) • 12 (turbo-electric) s (4 per ship) •
T3 tanker • 5 s (4 per ship) • 23 of 35 s (4 per ship) •
C1 Cargo • 63 s (C1-M-AV1) (1 per ship) •
C2 Cargo • 7 s (C2-S-B1) (4 per ship) • 2 s (C2-S-AJ1) (4 per ship) • 8 s (C2-S-AJ1) (4 per ship) • 7 s (4 per ship) •
C3 Cargo • 4 s (4 per ship) •
Liberty Ships • 18 s (Z-ET1-S-C3) (1 per ship) • 48 of 65 s (EC2-S-C1) (1 per ship) • 16 s (Z-EC2-S-C5) (2 per ship) • 11 s (EC2-S-C1) (1 per ship) • 40 s (1 per ship) • 15 s (1 per ship) • 32 s (1 per ship) • 10 s (1 per ship) • 12 s (1 per ship) • 49 s (1 per boat) • 29 fleet tugs (1 per boat) • 27 fleet tugs (1 per boat) • 17 s (1 per ship) • 6 s (3 or 4 per ship) • 9 s (2 per ship) • 3 s (1 per ship) • 2 s (2 per ship) • 4 s (1 per ship) • 13 s (1 per ship) • 6 s (1 per ship) • 20 s (1 per ship) •
Others • s (6 to 8 per ship, upgraded from 2) • (10, upgraded from 8) • s (10 per ship, upgraded from 8) • s • Temporarily installed on various other ships in lieu of
1.1"/75-caliber guns Post–World War II Individual ships: • – built with 2 twin mounts • – built with 4 twin mounts, reduced to 2 during 1967 refit (Canada) • – refit with 7 twin mounts • – refit with 8 twin mounts • – refit with 2 twin mounts as training ship • – built with 4 twin mounts • – built with 2 single mounts • – built with 6 twin mounts • – refit with 6 twin mounts
Ship classes: • s – refit up to 6 guns • s – built with 4 twin mounts • s – built with one Mark 33 twin mount forward (Canada) • s – built with a single mount • – built with 4 single mounts • s – built with 4 twin mounts • s – refit up to 20 guns • s – built with 2 single mounts • s – built with 4 twin mounts • s – built with 1 twin and 1 single mount • s – built with 4 twin mounts • s – built with 2 single mounts • s – built with 3 twin mounts • s – built with 1 twin and 2 single mounts • s – built with 2 twin mounts • s – built with 12 twin mounts • s – refit up to 24 guns • s – built with 2 twin mounts • s – refit up to 6 guns • s – built with 2 twin mounts • s – refit up to 6 guns • s – converted from
Liberty ships with 2 single mounts • s – built with 4 twin mounts, some reduced to 2 mounts to provide space for missile launchers • s – built with 4 twin mounts • s – built with 2 twin mounts • s – built with one Mark 33 twin mount aft except , which received two Mark 33 twin mounts (one forward, one aft) (Canada) • s – built with 4 twin mounts • s – refit up to 40 guns • s – built with 2 twin mounts • s – built with 4 or 6 twin mounts • s – built with 2 twin mounts • s – refit up to 20 guns • s – built with 4 twin mounts • s – built with one Mark 33 twin mount aft, those refitted to the Improved
Restigouche configuration had them removed (Canada) • s – built with 2 twin mounts • s – built with 4 twin mounts • s – built with 2 twin mounts • s – built originally with 2 Mark 33 twin mounts, later had one mount removed (Canada) • s – built with 2 twin mounts • s – built with 3 twin mounts • s – built with 6 twin mounts • s – built with 4 twin mounts • s – built with 2 single and 10 twin mounts • s – built with 1 single mount == Gallery ==