Ariete-class torpedo boat

Class overview
Operators
Preceded bySpica class
In commission1941–1945
Completed16
Lost14
General characteristics
TypeTorpedo boat
Displacement
  • 745 long tons (757 t) standard
  • 1,100 long tons (1,118 t) full load
Length83.5 m (273 ft 11 in)
Beam8.62 m (28 ft 3 in)
Draught3.15 m (10 ft 4 in)
Installed power22,000 hp (16,400 kW)
Propulsion
  • 2 shaft geared steam turbines
  • 2 boilers
Speed31.5 knots (36.2 mph; 58.3 km/h)
Complement158
Electronic warfare
& decoys
Sonar
Armament

The Ariete-class torpedo boats were a group of destroyer escorts built for the Italian Navy during World War II. They were enlarged versions of the Spica-class torpedo boats and designed to escort convoys to North Africa. Of the 42 units planned, sixteen ships were eventually ordered but only one was completed by the time of the armistice, Ariete, built in the Sestri Ponente shipyards and commissioned on 5 August 1943. The namesake ship was also the only one to survive the war. After the war it was ceded to the Yugoslav Navy (1949), and renamed Durmitor.

Most of the other ships were captured and completed by the Germans, entered service with the Kriegsmarine as Torpedoboot Ausland and eventually sunk in the course of operations across the Aegean and the Adriatic. Fionda (renamed TA46 by the Germans) was sunk in Fiume by an Allied bomber on 20 February 1945, together with her twin Balestra / TA47. Both ships at the time were unfinished. Recovered by the Yugoslavs in 1947, it was used to complete TA47, which entered service in the Yugoslav Navy as Učka. It was decommissioned in 1971.