In 1895, the Austro-Hungarian Navy purchased one prototype torpedo boat each from the British shipbuilder Yarrow and the German shipbuilder Schichau-Werke, two specialist builders of torpedo vessels.
Schichau's design was 47.3m (155.2feet) long overall and 45.9m (150.6feet) between perpendiculars, with a beam of 5.3m (17.4feet) and a draught of 2.7m (08.9feet). Displacement was 134t normal and 152t full load. Two coal-fired Thornycroft-Schutz water-tube boilers fed a single three-cylinder triple expansion steam engine which drove a single propeller shaft. The machinery was rated at 2300ihp giving a speed of . 30 tons of coal were carried, giving an endurance of 2600nmi at .
The ship was armed by two 47mm L/33 Skoda guns and three 450abbr=onNaNabbr=on torpedo tubes. The ship had a crew of 21.
The Schichau torpedo boat, named Natter, was laid down at Schichau's Elbing, Prussia (now Elbląg in Poland) shipyard in 1895, and launched in February 1896, later than the competing Yarrow-built torpedo boat . Testing, which was delayed by ice in the Baltic, showed a number of problems, including vibrations at high speed, cracking of the propeller shafts and failure of hull frames in the ship's stern. Attempts to rectify these faults included reinforcing the hull and experiments with different propellers, but were only partly successful. She was completed in November 1896. While both torpedo boats had similar stability and seaworthiness, Natter continued to suffer from vibrations at high speed, which prevented the German-built ship from reaching its contract speed due to fear of vibration-induced These problem stopped the German-built ship becoming fully operational, and was instead used as a mobile torpedo-battery at the port of Pola (now Pula in Croatia). Further orders went to Yarrow.
In 1910, Austria renamed most of its torpedo boats, with Natter becoming Tb 18. In 1910–1911, Tb 18 was rearmed, with the two torpedo tubes mounted on the ship's beams replaced by a single centreline tube. At the outbreak of the First World War, Tb 18 formed part of the Minesweeping flotilla of the Pola Local Defence Forces. She was employed on training duties in the war, and in 1917 was again rearmed, with a twin torpedo tube mount replacing one of the single tubes. Tb 18 was allocated to Great Britain as a War reparation as part of the Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye in 1919. She was scrapped in Italy in 1920.