United States Naval Institute Proceedings, Nide 27U.S. Naval Institute, 1901 |
Kirjan sisältä
Tulokset 1 - 5 kokonaismäärästä 100
Sivu 14
... weight , when small cranes were plentiful and convenient ; yet the system advocated by the enthusiasts of the old engineer corps is practically the same thing . There is room in the very limited space on ship- board for only what is ...
... weight , when small cranes were plentiful and convenient ; yet the system advocated by the enthusiasts of the old engineer corps is practically the same thing . There is room in the very limited space on ship- board for only what is ...
Sivu 29
... weight and influence which ages of experience have shown to be part and parcel of mere official position . Our American life rather causes us , in a general way , to rebel at the idea ; but there are certain entities and fixities which ...
... weight and influence which ages of experience have shown to be part and parcel of mere official position . Our American life rather causes us , in a general way , to rebel at the idea ; but there are certain entities and fixities which ...
Sivu 51
... weight of metal delivered and arc of fire , as one of the aggregation of batteries which by tactical movements must be concentrated upon the enemy . To arrive at a solution of this question the consideration of the weight , range ...
... weight of metal delivered and arc of fire , as one of the aggregation of batteries which by tactical movements must be concentrated upon the enemy . To arrive at a solution of this question the consideration of the weight , range ...
Sivu 54
... weight of armor is now devoted to a water - line belt , yet in all the history of naval warfare since guns have been used , it is the rarest thing to find recorded a ship sunk by gun - fire . In the days of sails , battleships were ...
... weight of armor is now devoted to a water - line belt , yet in all the history of naval warfare since guns have been used , it is the rarest thing to find recorded a ship sunk by gun - fire . In the days of sails , battleships were ...
Sivu 55
... weights carried . Speed , if increased much in large ships , seems likely to be accomplished by new designs in engines and boilers involving economic use and spacing of motive power rather than increase in volume and weight of ...
... weights carried . Speed , if increased much in large ships , seems likely to be accomplished by new designs in engines and boilers involving economic use and spacing of motive power rather than increase in volume and weight of ...
Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
6-inch guns action Admiral Affondatore ammunition Ancona armament armored cruiser Army artillery attack Austrian barbette battery battle battleships Belleville boilers belt blockade breech British broadside building Bureau caliber Captain casemates cent chief coal coast defense command construction cordite designed Dimensions.-Length displacement draft efficiency enemy enemy's engines explosion feet fighting fire fleet force fortifications forward four French gunboats harbor Hyacinth inches thick increase ironclads Island Italian knots launched Lieutenant Lissa machinery main deck Marine military mortars mounted NAVAL INSTITUTE nitrocellulose nitroglycerin officers operations ordnance Persano plate port pounds pressure projectile protected cruiser protective deck rifle sailing shell ships shore shot side smokeless powder speed squadron steam steel submarine submarine boats tactical target Tegetthoff tion tons torpedo boats torpedo tubes trial triple-expansion engines turrets U. S. Navy velocity vessels water-tube boilers weight yards
Suositut otteet
Sivu 557 - In the event of war with Spain, your duty will be to see that the Spanish squadron does not leave the Asiatic coast, and then offensive operations in the Philippine Islands.
Sivu 652 - marine. Second, must deprive an enemy of all strong positions where, protected by naval superiority, he might fix permanent quarters in our territory, maintain himself during the war, and keep the whole frontier in perpetual alarm. Third, must cover the great cities from attack; fourth, must prevent, as far as practicable, the great
Sivu 490 - Providence at this interval gave to my anxious wishes the usual land wind common in this bay, and my expectations were completed. We were all hands employed warping and towing off, and by the help of the light air, the whole were under sail and came to anchor out of reach of
Sivu 492 - this was a singular instance, in the achievement of which great skill was undoubtedly manifested, but which was also connected with peculiar circumstances, which they could not hope always to occur. It must not therefore, be expected, as a matter of course, that all such attempts in future must necessarily succeed.
Sivu 447 - to aim at permanent conquests is out of the question. America must be assaulted only on her coasts; her harbors destroyed; her shipping burned, and her seaport towns laid waste, are the only evils which she has reason to dread; and were a sufficient force embarked with these orders, no American war would be of long continuance.
Sivu 490 - were completed. We were all hands employed warping and towing off, and by the help of the light air, the whole were under sail and came to anchor out of reach of the shells about two in
Sivu 173 - Philippine Islands, Guam, or elsewhere beyond the continental limits of the United States, shall be considered as having been detailed for " shore duty beyond seas " and shall receive pay accordingly, with such additional pay as may be provided by law for service in island possessions of the United States.
Sivu 310 - was for some time, during the Napoleonic wars, occupied by the British, who fortified it, and when it was restored to Austria, the fortifications were repaired and improved. 45. Port St. Giorgio, which is about one and a half miles long and half a mile broad,
Sivu 173 - authorized to establish, and from time to time to modify, as the needs of the service may require, a classification of vessels of the navy, and to formulate appropriate rules governing assignments to command of vessels and squadrons.
Sivu 108 - Thomas Cavendish, caused all the principals of this island and of an hundred islands more, which he had made to pay tribute unto him (which tribute was in hogs, hens, potatoes, and cocos) to appear before him, and made himself and his company known unto them, that they were