Experiment (ship) explained
Many vessels have borne the name Experiment:
Naval vessels
- , thirteen ships of the Royal Navy
- , two ships of the United States Navy
Merchant vessels
- , c.1810 (unsuccessful) application of screw propulsion
- was launched on the River Thames and made three voyages for Calvert & Co. as a slave ship, carrying slaves from the Gold Coast to Jamaica before a French squadron captured her in 1795.
- Experiment (1792 ship) was launched at Leith. The British Royal Navy purchased her in 1797, used her as a gun-brig escorting convoys, and then sold her in 1802. New owners sailed her as a West Indiaman; she was last listed in 1816.
- , launched in 1798, transported convicts to New South Wales in 1803
- , was launched at Calcutta and was lost in 1807
- transported convicts to New South Wales in 1809–10
- made three voyages for the British East India Company and was lost in 1808 on her fourth
- , one of Sydney's first ferries, a paddler originally powered by four horses on a treadmill