*** Welcome to piglix ***

SMS Lussin

SMS Lussin NH 88902.jpg
SMS Lussin early in her career
History
Austria-Hungary
Name: Lussin
Builder: Stabilimento Tecnico Triestino
Laid down: September 1882
Launched: 22 December 1883
Completed: 12 July 1884
Fate: Ceded to Italy, 1920
Italy
Name: Sorrento
Acquired: 1920
Commissioned: 11 September 1924
Struck: 1928
Fate: Broken up
General characteristics
Displacement:
  • 1,011.17 metric tons (995.20 long tons; 1,114.62 short tons) normal
  • 1,122.5 t (1,104.8 long tons; 1,237.3 short tons) full load
Length: 79.75 meters (261 ft 8 in) loa
Beam: 8.42 m (27 ft 7 in)
Draft: 4.06 m (13 ft 4 in)
Installed power:
Propulsion: 2 × compound steam engines
Speed: 12.95 knots (23.98 km/h; 14.90 mph)
Range: 850 nautical miles (1,570 km; 980 mi) at 11 knots (20 km/h; 13 mph)
Armament:
  • 2 × 15 cm (5.9 in) guns
  • 1 × 6.6 cm (2.6 in) landing gun
  • 1 × 13.8 in (350 mm) torpedo tube
Armor: Deck: 19 mm (0.75 in)

SMS Lussin was a torpedo cruiser of the Austro-Hungarian Navy, a modified version of the preceding Zara class. As envisaged by the Marinekommandant (Navy Commander), Vice Admiral Friedrich von Pöck, Lussin would be the leader of a flotilla of torpedo boats, with the additional capability of carrying out scouting duties. The ship proved to be too slow and too lightly armed for either of these tasks, so she spent the majority of her career as a training ship for engine and boiler room personnel, along with occasional stints with the main fleet for training exercises. She took part in only one significant operation, an international blockade of Greece in 1886 to prevent the country from declaring war on the Ottoman Empire. In 1910–1913, Lussin was rebuilt as an admiralty yacht, and she spent World War I as a barracks ship for German U-boat crews based in Pola. After the war, she was ceded to Italy as a war prize, renamed Sorrento, and briefly saw service as a mother ship for MAS boats from 1924 to 1928, when she was discarded.

In the early 1880s, Vice Admiral Friedrich von Pöck, the head of the Marinesektion (Admiralty), ordered four torpedo cruisers. Pöck was unable to secure funding for new ironclads, and so he turned to less expensive vessels to modernize the fleet. The ships would fill several roles, including scouting for the ironclad fleet and leading flotillas of torpedo boats. The first three of the new vessels—the Zara class—were built to the same basic design.


...
Wikipedia

...