Want this question answered?
None. HMS Dreadnought only sank one enemy ship, and that was a U-boat, which it sank by ramming.
Yes, the front of the bridge gets torn off
High speed for military purposes is any speed that their war machine can do and strike the enemy machine (tank, truck, jeep, ship, jet, helicopter, airplane, armored personnel carrier, etc.). Civilians are probably thinking that the military/naval forces have some secret after burner built into their vessels specifically for ramming. NOT THE CASE. If the tank commander, ship commander, airplane commander, etc. is angry enough, and his weapons didn't do the job, then it's, "...ramming speed!"
The submarine Nautilus. incidentally she had a periscope but did not employ torpedo tubes. assaults were conducted by ramming on the surface, a very hazardous tactic.
the first to sucessfully build a ship would be ansestors of the vikings. they are credited with sailing long distances.
Ferdinand Magellan is credited with that feat.
None; she scuttled herself.
Its initial weakness was lack of a navy to field against Carthage's. It then developed naval tactics of boarding rather than ship ramming used by Carthage.
The bow of the ship when she was trying to kill herself
you kill him by firing cannons at him, let him trail behind you and constantly fire backwards either that or test your luck ramming into him to see who wins. you have a better chance of winning when you hire people for you ship to increase your speed and repair your ship while your on it. that's all i got for you!
Its initial weakness was lack of a navy to field against Carthage's. It then developed naval tactics of boarding rather than ship ramming used by Carthage.
Its initial weakness was lack of a navy to field against Carthage's. It then developed naval tactics of boarding rather than ship ramming used by Carthage.