Full-sized
destroyers must be able to steam as fast or faster than
cruisers and fast
capital ships such as
fleet carriers. This typically requires a speed of 28-40mph) (dependent upon the era and navy). They must carry
torpedoes and a smaller caliber of naval guns to use against enemy ships, anti-aircraft guns, and antisubmarine detection equipment and weapons. While these requirements made the destroyer a fast all-around combatant, this made them too valuable to be relegated to convoy escort duties. A destroyer escort needed only to be able to maneuver relative to a slow convoy (which in World War II would travel at ), be able to defend against aircraft, and detect, pursue, and attack
submarines. These lower requirements greatly reduce the size, cost, and crew required for the destroyer escort. Destroyer escorts were optimized for antisubmarine warfare, having a tighter turning radius and more specialized armament (such as the forward-firing
Hedgehog mortar) than fleet destroyers. The slower speed of destroyer escorts was not a liability in this context as
sonar was useless at speeds over . As an alternative to geared steam-turbine propulsion found in
sloops of similar purpose, size and speed (as well as full-sized destroyers and larger warships), many US destroyer escorts of the World War II period had diesel-electric or
turboelectric drive, in which the engine rooms functioned as power stations supplying current to electric motors sited close to the propellers. Electric drive was selected because it does not need gearboxes (produced on special precise machining tooling available in limited quantities, which were heavily in demand for the fast fleet destroyers) to adjust engine speed to the much lower optimal speed for the propellers. The current from the engine room can be used equally well for other purposes, and after the war, many destroyer escorts were re-used as floating power stations for coastal cities in
Latin America under programs funded by the
World Bank.. ships were the exception to this and they used a geared diesel engine to drive the propellers directly. s used the typical boiler and geared turbine propulsion system. Destroyer escorts were also useful for coastal antisubmarine and
radar picket ship duty. During World War II, seven destroyer escorts (DEs) were converted to radar picket destroyer escorts (DERs), supplementing radar picket destroyers. Although these were relegated to secondary roles after the war, in the mid-1950s, 36 more DEs were
converted to DERs, serving as such until 1960–1965. Their mission was to extend the
Distant Early Warning Line on both coasts, in conjunction with 16 s, which were converted
Liberty ships. During World War II, some 95 destroyer escorts were converted by the US to
high-speed transports (APDs). This involved adding an extra deck which allowed space for about 10 officers and 150 men. Two large
davits were also installed, one on either side of the ship, from which landing craft (
LCVPs) could be launched. ==Origins==