Many boats were designated MTBs. A variety of designs were adopted and built. For instance, a type, capable of , was shown in 1930.
British MTBs The following is an incomplete list of British motor torpedo boats:
Vosper "private venture boat" Commander
Peter Du Cane CBE, the managing director of
Vosper Ltd, designed a motor torpedo boat as a private venture in 1936. She was completed and launched in 1937. The vessel was bought by the
Admiralty and taken into service with the Royal Navy as MTB 102. • Length: • Beam: • Draft: , The installed powerplant of three
Isotta Fraschini Asso V-18 57-litre
petrol engines delivered which gave her a speed of light and when carrying a full load. • Crew: 2 officers, 10 men. Armament was two
torpedo tubes; depth charges, machine guns and
20mm Oerlikon were trialled on her.
MTB 102 was the fastest wartime British naval vessel in service. She was at
Dunkirk in 1940 for the
evacuation of British and French troops, where she served as Rear-Admiral
Frederic Wake-Walker's flagship after the destroyer
HMS Keith was sunk. She carried
Winston Churchill and
Dwight Eisenhower when they reviewed the fleet before the
Invasion of Normandy in 1944.
British Power Boat 60 ft MTB They were based on the
British Power Boat Company Type Two 63 ft HSL (
high-speed launch) originally designed for the
Royal Air Force for air-sea rescue but reduced to in length. They could carry two torpedoes and achieve a maximum speed of . The Royal Navy ordered their first (of a total of 18) in 1936. These entered service as MTB numbers 1 to 12 and 14 to 19. In the early days of the war, they were painted with different numbers and photos distributed to the press to give the impression the Royal Navy had more than they actually did. One photo was sent to the American monthly
Popular Science showing the number twenty-three.
British Power Boat 72 ft MTB base st
Haslar on 15 August 1944 Initially ordered as an MGB in 1941; they were converted to MTBs from 1942 by addition of two 18-inch tubes and a 6-pdr gun. Although 10 tons heavier after conversion they still made 39 knots. MGB 115130 were redesignated as MTB 434449 and MGB 131170 were completed as MTB 450489. In 1943 MTB 490509 were ordered.
Vosper 45 ft MTB Built as a private venture, the 45-ft MTBs were scaled down versions of larger Vosper design and intended to be carried by larger vessels. As MTB 104 to 107, these were taken up by Admiralty but found to be poor seakeeping and not used for combat. MTB 105 was carried aboard the
Special Service Vessel HMS Fidelity after her conversion to a Commando carrier for service in the Far East with T Company,
40 Commando.
Fidelity was torpedoed and sunk with great loss of life as part of
Convoy ON 154. The eight crew of MTB 105, along with two from one of ''Fidelity's'' floatplanes were the only survivors from the sinking.
Vosper 70 ft MTB Although various boat lengths were produced by Vosper for the Royal Navy, the "70 ft" boat was produced from 1940. The design was produced with modifications as MTBs 31-40, 57–66, 73−98, 222−245 and 347−362. Using three
Packard V1-12 marine engines, they were capable of around . Early models carried two
torpedo tubes, twin machine guns in a "bin" behind the bridge and two machine guns. They could also carry four
depth charges. The Vosper 70 was also used in other navies, such as
Romania's, which acquired three in 1939, with
NMS Viscolul the lead ship of the class.
Vosper 73 ft (Type I and Type II) Between 1943 and 1945, the
"Vosper 73ft" design appeared; this was a flush-decked type with a slight sheer forward, dispensing entirely with the low forecastle and scalloping of the majority of '70-footer' types. The type II differed from the Type I in that it carried a heavier gun armament at the expense of two torpedo tubes. Boats produced to this design carried pennant numbers MTB 380-395 and MTB 523-537. The Type II did not enter service before the end of the war but was in use after the war. ;Type I • Length: 73 ft (22 m) • Engine: 3 Packard 4M V12 engines for a total of 4,200 hp • Speed: • Range: at • Displacement: 47 t • Armament: • Four torpedo tubes •
Oerlikon 20 mm cannon • Two
0.303 in Vickers K machine guns (optionally two
Vickers .50 machine guns) • Crew: 13 ;Type II • Length 73 ft (22 m) • Engine 4,200 hp • Speed • Range at • Displacement 49 t • Armament • Two torpedoes • 57mm
QF 6-pdr Mark IIA gun on powered mounting • Twin 20mm Oerlikon aft • Two 0.303 Lewis Guns • Crew 13
Thornycroft 75 ft MTB The first two (MTB 24, 25) were actually 74 ft prototypes for the design ordered in 1938. Powered by three Isotta-Franschini engines they could reach 37 knots. The later ones, MTBs 49-56, had four Thornycroft RY12 engines but were too slow for operations.
J S White 75 ft MTB A development of the Vosper designs,
White had been building under sub-contract. After construction passed to
Polish Navy as S5-S10. Armed with two 18-inch torpedoes, 6-pounder gun forward, twin 20mm Oerlikon aft and two twin .303 machine gun mountings.
Fairmile D MTB The Fairmile D was a very large British MTB designed by Bill Holt and conceived by Fairmile Marine for the Royal Navy. Nicknamed "Dog Boats", they were designed to combat the known advantages of the German E-boats over previous British coastal craft designs. Larger than earlier MTB or
motor gun boat (MGB) designs, the Fairmile D was driven by four Packard 12-cylinder 1250 horsepower supercharged petrol engines and could achieve 29 knots (54 km/h; 33 mph) at full load. The boat carried 5,200 gallons of 100 octane fuel for a range, at maximum continuous speed, of 506 nautical miles. Armament varied according to role but could include four 18-inch or two 21-inch torpedoes, 6-pounder and 2-pounder guns, Oerlikons, multiple machine guns and depth charges.
Canadian MTBs These boats were designed by
Hubert Scott-Paine for the
Canadian Power Boat Company, and used by the
Royal Canadian Navy 29th MTB Flotilla. Originally designed as
motor gun boats (MGBs), carrying a 6-pounder (57mm, 2.24 inch) to engage enemy small craft, they were re-designated MTBs.
Scott-Paine type G 70 foot boat • Manufacturer: British Power Boats, Hythe • Displacement: 55 tons • Overall length: 72 ft 6 inches (21 m) • Breadth: 20 ft 7 inches (6.3 m) • Draught: 5 ft 8 inches (1.7 m) • Maximum speed: (new) • Armament: •
auto-loading QF 6-pounder (57mm, 2.24 inch) gun • Two torpedo tubes (two torpedoes) • .303 or .50
Vickers machine guns •
20mm Oerlikon or
40 mm Bofors gun • Powerplant – three
Rolls-Royce or
Packard 14M supercharged V-12 engines three shafts • Power – 3,750 hp total • Range –
radius of action at == Post-war usage ==