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FIGHTING SHIPS OF THE WORLD
CANADA
CRUISERS
UGANDA light cruiser (1943/1944)


Ships


Name No Yard No Builder Laid down Launched Comp Fate
Uganda, 1.1952 - Quebec 66, 1950- CCL31   Vickers-Armstrong, Tyne, UK 20.7.1939 7.8.1941 3.1.1943 // 10.1944 stricken 6.1956


Technical data


Displacement standard, t

8530

Displacement full, t

10830 - 11090

Length, m

164.0 pp 169.3 oa

Breadth, m

18.9

Draught, m

6.04 deep load (later 6.20 - 6.32)

No of shafts

4

Machinery

4 sets Parsons steam geared turbines, 4 Admiralty 3-drum boilers

Power, h. p.

72500

Max speed, kts

31.5

Fuel, t

oil 1613 - 1700

Endurance, nm(kts)10100(12)
Armour, mm

belt: 89 - 83, bulkheads: 51 - 38, turrets: 51 - 25, barbettes: up to 25,  deck: 51 - 32

Armament

3 x 3 - 152/50 BL Mk XXIII, 4 x 2 - 102/45 QF Mk XVI, 3 x 4 - 40/39 2pdr QF Mk VIII, 10 x 2 - 20/70 Oerlikon Mk II/IV, 2 x 3 - 533 TT, 2 aircraft (Walrus, Seafox, Kingfisher, Sea Otter, Seamew), 1 catapult D-IV-H

Electronic equipment

type 272, type 281, type 284, type 285 radars

Complement

730, 920 war



Standard scale images


<i>Gambia</i> 1943
Gambia 1943
<i>Quebec </i>1955
Quebec 1955


Project history

Occurrence of Colony class became one of consequences of London conference in 1936 limited displacement of newly designed cruisers by 8000t. Design of Southampton class was revised under these requirements and result was more compact Fiji in which  length of hull was more than to 10m shortened at the expense of cramped arrangement. Usage of less power machinery and easier armouring have allowed to store the same armament as at a prototype, and a transom stern has given the chance to avoid strong fall of speed (on 0.5kts). Waterline belt became a little thin but at the expense of a smaller length of the hull reached end barbettes, and thickness of an armour deck even has increased. Return to more simple vertical stacks and masts became characteristic kind of these ships.

Small metacentric height was main lack of design and it has created serious problems at wartime updates: it was necessary to land one of main turrets for placing of numerous AA guns and the electronic equipment on most of class in the end of war .

The last 3 ships of Fiji class (2nd group) were completed under some changed design considering experience of the first year of war: with the strengthened antiaircraft arms. Because of already mentioned very cramped arrangement one main turret had landed and catapult was removed (hangars have been left, but were used for other purposes).

Protection

Armoured belt extended from "A" to "Y" barbettes and to upper deck abreast boiler rooms and fore engine room and to main deck abreast aft engine room, CCC and magazines. Its thickness was 89 mm abreast magazines and 83 mm abreast machinery. Belt was closed by 51 - 38-mm bulkheads. Armoured deck was 51-mm thick (32-mm with 38-mm slopes over steering gear). Transom stern was 38-mm thick.

Modernizations 12.

1944: - 6 x 2 - 20/70, catapult with seaplanes, type 272, type 284 radars; + 2 x 4 - 40/39 2pdr QF Mk VIII, 4 x 1 - 40/39 2pdr QF Mk VIII, 8 x 1 - 20/70 Oerlikon Mk II/IV, type 274, type 277, type 293 radars

6/1945: - 4 x 2 - 20/70, type 281 radar; + 4 x 1 - 20/70 Oerlikon Mk II/IV, type 281B radar

Naval service

No significant events.

© Ivan Gogin, 2015