The Derfflinger class was a class of three battlecruisers of the Imperial German Navy. All three of the ships saw active service with the High Seas Fleet during World War I. They were interned at Scapa Flow following the armistice in November 1918, and were scuttled after the end of the war. The last two ships in the class were scrapped after World War II.
About Derfflinger-class battlecruiser in brief

5 cm weapons. This was because the latest British battleships had thicker main belt armor, up to 300 millimeters. Since the German battlecruizers were intended to fight in the line of battle, their armament needed to be sufficiently powerful to penetrate the armor of their British opponents. The new ships also used a similar propulsion system, and as a result of the increased displacement were slightly slower. The design board chose the 5- turrets to be mounted in four twin turrets on the centreline of the ship. On 1 September 1910, the design board decided the 5 turrets would be kept in the same layout as the Seyd litz. The ship was commissioned shortly after the outbreak of war, and was present at most of the naval actions in the North Sea, including the battles of Dogger Bank and Jutland. The three ships were slightly longer at 212m at waterline and 80m at the waterline, and 210m overall at water line and 80 m overall, at the three battleships were 210m long at the Waterline and 40 m at waterline. The four shaft arrangement for their engines would allow the new ships to equip a diesel engine on the central shaft. This would substantially increase the cruising range, and would ease the transfer of fuel and reduce the number of crew needed to operate the ships’ machinery. The increase in gun caliber added only 36 tons to the ships’ displacement.
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