Class overview | |
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Operators: | Royal Navy |
Preceded by: | Grampus class |
Succeeded by: | Drake class |
Built: | 1732 |
In commission: | 1732-1751 |
Completed: | 8 |
Lost: | 2 |
Retired: | 6 |
General characteristics (common specification) | |
Type: | Sloop-of-war |
Tons burthen: | 200 bm |
Length: | (see individual vessels) |
Beam: | (see individual vessels) |
Depth of hold: | (see individual vessels) |
Sail plan: | Snow |
Complement: | 80 |
Armament: |
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The Bonetta group was a batch of eight sloops of wooden construction built for the Royal Navy during 1732. Seven were ordered on 4 May 1732 to a common specification prepared by Jacob Allin, the Surveyor of the Navy. An additional vessel - the Trial (which had been ordered on 16 November 1731, but suspended on 7 January 1732) - was re-ordered on 6 July to be built to the same specification. The actual individual design was left up to the Master Shipwright in each Royal Dockyard at which they were built (except for the Hound and Trial, which were built by Deptford's Master Shipwright - Richard Stacey - but were to a design by Jacob Allin).
Although fitted with snow rigs and initially armed with eight 3-pounder guns, except the Shark which was rigged as a ketch and fitted with 4-pounders, this group was built with seven pairs of gunports on the upper deck (each port flanked by two pairs of row-ports).
The following is a list of the dimensions and tonnages of the individual vessels: