Grey Havoc

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At the same time as the Design 1047 battlecruiser project was being worked on, the Dutch need for dedicated naval tankers, especially to support operations around the Netherlands East Indies could no longer be ignored, so what was intended to be a eventual two-ship class was (belatedly) authorised by the Dutch Government. Unfortunately, like the 1047 and other programs & defense measures, it proved to be too little, too late:

Tankboot No.1

Design history [1]

Before the war, the fleet did not have a tanker dedicated to support naval operations at sea. This situation made the ships dependent on bases with fuel depots, and reduced operationally flexibility. The navy found a makeshift solution in chartering commercial tankers flying the Dutch flag, which were employed for short periods of time. The downside of this approach was that:

  • The Navy had to plan far ahead to make sure sufficient tankers were available in the Netherlands East Indies. This required careful planning by the navy, and a flexible attitude with the shipping companies. As a rule, two to eight weeks passed between chartering a tanker and the ship becoming available for operations. One can imagine this arrangement did not work well in case of emergency.
  • The tankers were not suited for fleet operations: they did not have the equipment needed to refuel the fleet at sea, they were unarmed and too slow to keep up with the warships at cruising speed.
  • The use of tankers under charter was expensive in comparison to building and operating an own tanker.

The need for a tanker designed specifically for support of fleet operations was felt clearly whenever international tensions would rise and as a result, naval operations increased. Therefore, the Minister of Defence asked for funds under the 1939 Navy Budget to construct a naval tanker designed specifically to support naval operations. The Minister of Defence also informed parliament that there was in fact an operational need for two tankers, so he did not exclude the possibility that funds for the construction of a second tanker would be asked for in a following Navy Budget. The second tanker never materialized.

The ship authorized under the Navy Budget for 1939 was laid down in the Netherlands under the provisional name Tankboot No.1. The design had all the characteristics of an excellent fleet support ship: high speed, excellent armament and a large fuel capacity.[2] The German invasion of the Netherlands in May, 1940 prevented completion for the Royal Netherlands Navy. The German Kriegsmarine authorized the completion of the ship and commissioned her with the name Kärnten.

In the years between May 1940 (the fall of the Netherlands) and March, 1942 (the fall of the Netherlands East Indies), the Royal Netherlands Navy was forced to continue the practice using commercial tankers. The Navy came close to purchasing a commercial tanker in South America in 1940 or 1941, but the deal broke when the Navy found out the tanker had a relatively complicated (diesel-electric) propulsion plant.[3]
______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

[1]: This information is taken from [MB39], pp. 123-160 unless otherwise noted.
[2]: More information on the arrangements for refueling while underway is much appreciated.
[3]: Information in this paragraph taken from [Boss], volume 2. More information on this deal is appreciated.

 

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Thanks for this information Grey Havoc
Am I right in making the assumption that 'specialised naval tankers' were a rarity in navies at the time of 1939?
If this is the case, then the Dutch Navy was well ahead of it's time??
(P.S. Out of curiosity, can I ask the forum when 'specialised naval tankers' first become operational and by which navy

Regards
Pioneer
 
Pioneer said:
Thanks for this information Grey Havoc
Am I right in making the assumption that 'specialised naval tankers' were a rarity in navies at the time of 1939?
If this is the case, then the Dutch Navy was well ahead of it's time??
(P.S. Out of curiosity, can I ask the forum when 'specialised naval tankers' first become operational and by which navy

Regards
Pioneer
The USN has had them since WWI
 
I seem to recall that although the Royal Navy 'toyed' with tankers early on, the fuel was carried in drums/cans!!
Inter-war when underway refuelling was eventually used, and I think until combined operations in the Pacific in WW2 with the USN, the R.N. used the simpler astern fuelling position, and also they used flexible metal (zinc?) hoses, and it was after the capture of the German Altmark and the discovery of the Germans use of rubber hoses that things really started to move forwards.


I think the U.S. Navy were the first to take up serious underway replenishment partly due to the fact that they operated over the much greater distances in the Pacific Ocean, whereas the Royal Navy had its network of bases and depots around the Empire.
 
The RN used hoses and pumping equipment as early as 1906. See here: http://historicalrfa.org/archived-rfa-stories/1021-the-things-we-do-part-1

As a note, there are bits missing from that story, apparently a class of five boats were ordered in 1911 with equipment intended to allow their use for oiling at sea:

RFA Burma
RFA Mixol
RFA Thermol
RFA Trefoil
RFA Turmoil

Note:

She carried 2500 tons of fuel in 12 tanks and had 4 RAS points and 2 pumps which were capable of discharging 400 tons of fuel per hour

From: http://historicalrfa.org/rfa-thermol-ships-details
 
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Sorry, got things confused.


It was the early storage of aviation fuel that was in cans in very early days, before the RN went over to tanks on aviation capable ships - oops!
 
I've read the Ships Cover at the NMM describing the early RFA experiments at underway oil replenishment and the methods used were, as you might expect, clumsy in the extreme to the extent of being essentially impractical under wartime operational conditions. The early RFA oilers were referred to as "oil tank ships" and that was essentially their role: mobile oil tanks that warships would fuel from in harbor.
 
There is a bit in this thesis (p228-229)

March / April 1941 seems to have seen the Admiralty taking a much greater interest in fuelling at sea. Various trials with cruisers and meetings according to “The Royal Fleet Auxiliary - A Century of Service” e.g. 25th March 1941:-

“Oiling at sea - Admiralty meeting ‘Oiling of Capital ships and Cruisers at Sea’ (chaired by the Vice Chief of Naval Staff) to determine British requirements and policy on oiling at sea and a study of German methods in comparison with RN stirrup method.”

That thesis also has an appendix 18 (p311) detailing the Admiralty fuel storage, both at home and abroad, as of 1936 and the 5-6 year plan to expand it. Much of this is designed to support the movement of a fleet from the U.K. to Singapore via the Med and Indian Ocean, to defeat the Japanese.
 
Sorry, got things confused.


It was the early storage of aviation fuel that was in cans in very early days, before the RN went over to tanks on aviation capable ships - oops!
It was the loss of the seaplane carrier Ben-my-Chree in 1917 through fire in its canned petrol storage, that had a heavy influence on the RN’s handling of petrol in its carriers right through until petrol ceased to be a fuel for carrier aircraft and helicopters in the early 1960s. While often criticised as limiting carrier petrol capacity when compared with that of other navies, no British designed carrier was lost to fire as a result of those greater precautions.
 
David C. Fuquea's article Advantage Japan: The Imperial Japanese Navy’s
Superior High Seas Refueling Capability published in the January 2020 edition of the Journal of Military History is very eye-opening in regards to Japan's at-sea-refueling capabilities in the late interwar and early war period. They were considerably more advanced than they have previously been portrayed as, with Japanese Naval Academy Textbooks describing side-by-side refueling techniques as early as 1926 and had a significant building program for Fast Tankers in the interwar era.
 

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