The Ajax class was designed as a shallow-draught version of the preceding that was also smaller and cheaper; unfortunately the need, imposed by budgetary constraints, to produce a smaller ship produced a vessel with all of the shortcomings of Inflexible but with none of her virtues.[1] The ships had a length between perpendiculars of 280feet and were 300feet long overall, some 44feet shorter than Inflexible. They had a beam of 66feet, and a draught of 23feet and displaced 8510LT. Their crew consisted of 345 officers and ratings, over 3000LT less than Inflexible. The Ajax-class ships were bad seaboats and steered very erratically, especially at high speed. More deadwood was added to their sterns in 1886 in a partially successful attempt to rectify the problem.[2]
The Ajax class was powered by a pair of inverted, vertical, compound-expansion steam engines. These were built by John Penn and Sons and each drove a single propeller using steam provided by 10 cylindrical boilers. The engines were designed to produce a total of 6000ihp for a speed of 13kn. The ships carried a maximum of 970LT of coal, enough to steam 2100nmi at .[3]
They copied the main armament layout of Inflexible with their turrets arranged en echelon so that both turrets could fire directly ahead and to each side, although this was more theoretical than practical due to damage from muzzle blast. Each turret mounted a pair of rifled muzzle-loading RML 12.5inches guns.[4] Their shells weighed 809lb while the gun itself weighed 38LT. The guns had a muzzle velocity of 1575ft/s and were credited with the ability to penetrate a nominal of wrought iron armour at the muzzle.[5] To attack the unarmoured portion of their opponents, the Ajax class was fitted with a pair of rifled breech-loading BL 6inches, 80-pounder guns.[6] For defence against torpedo boats, they carried six quick-firing QF 6-pdr 57mm Nordenfelt guns. The ships also mounted a pair of above-water 14inches torpedo launchers[3] and could carry a 60feet torpedo boat.[7]
The Ajax class copied Inflexibles armour scheme of a heavily armoured citadel with unamoured ends and sides, but unlike their predecessor, they lacked enough buoyancy to remain afloat if their ends were flooded. The citadel was 104feet long and the armour was composed of wrought iron plates 10inchesand8inchesin (andin) thick, separated and backed by 10 inches of teak at the waterline, reducing above and below the waterline to an armoured thickness of 15inches in a similar sandwich. The citadel was closed off by fore and aft transverse bulkheads that were 16.5inches thick above water and 13.5inches below. The armoured deck was thick from bow to stern. The turrets were protected by compound armour plates 16inchesto14inchesin (toin) thick and 12inches plates defended the conning tower.[8]
Ajax, the fourth ship of her name to serve in the Royal Navy,[9] was named for the mythological hero.[10] The ship was laid down on 21 March 1876 in No. 4 Slipway, Pembroke Dockyard, Wales, and was launched on 10 March 1880 by Mrs. George Parkin, wife of the dockyard's Captain-Superintendent.[11] She was completed on 30 March 1883 at a cost of £548,393.[1]
Ajax was not commissioned until 30 April 1885 and was assigned to the Particular Service Squadron commanded by Admiral Geoffrey Hornby.[12] That summer, the squadron evaluated the weapons and defences of a fortified harbour, Berehaven (now Castletownbere), Ireland, against torpedo boats and other threats.[13] In August 1885, when tensions with Russia had subsided, she was posted as guard ship at Greenock. Ajax accidentally collided with the turret ship in 1887 off Portland. The latter had one compartment below water holed, but Ajax only received two holes in her bow.[14] The ship participated in the annual manoeuvres in August 1889 and a shell exploded in one of her 12.5-inch gun barrels on 2 September, wounding one man.[15] The ship was reduced to reserve at Chatham Dockyard in 1891. Her BL six-inch, 80-pounder guns were replaced by QF six-inch guns in 1897. She was further reduced to Dockyard Reserve in November 1901, and was sold to Castles for scrap in March 1904[16] and subsequently broken up at Charlton.[17]