from
MGB 2009 (formerly
MGB 509)
British Power Boats Early-war motor anti-submarine boats (MA/SBs) built by BPB Co. were converted from early 1941 into MGBs. These included 63-foot and 70-foot types. 63-foot MGBs (numbered
40–45) were of 24 t standard displacement and powered by 2-shaft Rolls-Royce petrol engines developing 2,200
bhp for a top speed of 40 knots. They were rearmed for the MGB role with 1 × 20 mm Oerlikon aft (some may have briefly carried a 40mm Rolls-Royce gun until the Oerlikon was available), a twin heavy machine gun turret on the coach-house roof and two to four
.303-inch (7.62mm) machine guns (two twin mounts would be mounted abreast the wheelhouse). The 70-foot MGBs were of several different original batches or types: MGB numbers
6 to
21 originally had 3-shaft
Napier petrol engines giving 1,650 bhp in total and a top speed of 27 knots, being later refitted with
Packards for 3,600 bhp and 38 kts, while
MGB 46 and
MGBs 50 to
67 had 3-shaft Rolls-Royce installations for 3,300 bhp and a top speed of 36.7 kts. All were of 28–30 t std displacement. Individual armament varied, but most boats had two twin HMG turrets abreast the bridge (some early models had the single dorsal turret seen on the 63-feet type); in the case of ex-French boats such as
MGB 66 these turrets replaced a pair of twin .303 turrets which had been carried side by side amidships. Heavier gun armament on these boats, located aft, was initially either a 2-pdr Rolls-Royce gun, or, less commonly, a
Boulton & Paul quadruple .303-inch MG turret. Surviving boats were later rearmed with a far more effective Oerlikon in the aft position. ; ft Motor Gun Boat :BPB built 34 purpose-built 72 ft MGBs (also referred to as 71.5-feet). Capable of 40 knots, they carried a hydraulically powered 2-pounder gun mount forwards for engaging other vessels, a twin powered 20mm mount on the aft cabin roof, and two twin .303-in machine guns, one on either side of the wheelhouse, for additional firepower in surface actions and defence from aircraft. They were also equipped with side-dropping depth charges and smoke generators at the stern. Some early boats carried a
Holman Projector anti-aircraft mortar right aft. :Over one hundred vessels of this class were built. The first ones were given identities MGB 74-97 The second series were numbered
MGB 107-onwards. After the initial 34 MGBs, further craft of the 71.5-feet type (in the sequence up to
176 and from
502 onwards) were of a modified type, known as a 'Type G' to the Canadians, and were intended to be MTBs. However, some of the earlier boats in the 'Type G' series were only ever equipped
for but not with 18-inch torpedo tubes, and otherwise were armed as the original 2-pdr MGB variant, functioning as gunboats in the mixed
29th Motor Torpedo Boat Flotilla alongside the torpedo-armed MTB versions from 1944.
Camper and Nicholson All Camper & Nicholson MGBs were composite-hulled craft. The entirely gun-armed
MGB 502 class was preceded by the experimental
MGB 501, which was a unique vessel adapted from a combined MA/SB & MTB design and completed in 1942 as a combined MGB & MTB, with 1 × 2-pdr pom pom, 1 × Oerlikon cannon, 2 × twin 0.5-inch HMGs and 2 × 21-inch torpedo tubes. The
502 class were slightly enlarged but otherwise based on the design of
501. They dispensed with the torpedo tubes and shipped an armament of 1 × pom pom in MkXVI mounting, 1 × twin
Oerlikon in MkV mounting, 2 × twin
HMGs and a
6-pdr Hotchkiss gun Only
502,
503 and
509 were completed as MGBs;
504-
508 were completed as the fast blockade runners
Master Standfast,
Gay Corsair,
Gay Viking,
Hopewell and
Nonsuch. Dimensions for the
Camper and Nicholson motor gunboats (MGB 502 to MGB 509): • Length: • Beam: • Draught: • Displacement: 95 tons • Propulsion: 3 ×
Paxman VRB
diesel engines • Total power output: 3,000
bhp • Speed: • Maximum: • Continuous: • Complement: 21 • Endurance: at MGB 509 was powered by three Packard supercharged petrol engines giving a total output of and a maximum speed of 31 knots (27 knots continuous). Later re-numbered
MGB 2009, the central engine was replaced with a
Metrovick F.2 gas turbine engine in 1947.
Elco Elco built twelve MGBs for the Royal Navy.
Higgins Higgins built 12 MGBs and 15 MGBs.
Fairmile designs Fairmile Marine produced designs for small craft for the Royal Navy but most construction was carried out in other yards. The
Fairmile C motor gun boats were long boats. For flexibility the following
Fairmile D design (approx. 200 built) could be fitted out either as MGB or MTB. These equipped the Royal Canadian Navy, Royal Navy, and
Royal Norwegian Navy. == Survivors ==