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・ USS Meyer (DD-279)
・ USS Meyerkord (FF-1058)
・ USS Miami
・ USS Miami (1861)
・ USS Miami (CL-89)
・ USS Miami (SSN-755)
・ USS Miantonomah
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・ USS Miantonomah (CMc-5)
・ USS Miantonomoh
・ USS Miantonomoh (1863)
・ USS Miantonomoh (BM-5)
・ USS Michael Monsoor
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・ USS Michigan
USS Michigan (1843)
・ USS Michigan (BB-27)
・ USS Michigan (SSGN-727)
・ USS Micka (DE-176)
・ USS Midas (ARB-5)
・ USS Middlesex County (LST-983)
・ USS Midland (AK-195)
・ USS Midnight
・ USS Midnight (1861)
・ USS Midway
・ USS Midway (AG-41)
・ USS Midway (CV-41)
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・ USS Mifflin (APA-207)
・ USS Might (PG-94)


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USS Michigan (1843) : ウィキペディア英語版
USS Michigan (1843)

USS ''Michigan'' was the United States Navy's first iron-hulled warship and served during the American Civil War. She was renamed USS ''Wolverine'' in 1905.
==Construction and design==
The side wheel steamer ''Michigan'' was built in response to the British Government arming two steamers in response to the Canadian rebellions in the late 1830s with Secretary of the Navy Abel P. Upshur selecting an iron hull partly as a test of practicability of using such a "cheap and indestructible a material" for ships. The ship was designed by Samuel Hart, and fabricated in parts at Pittsburgh in the last half of 1842, transported overland and assembled at Erie. The launch on 5 December 1843 was unsuccessful with the ship sticking after moving some down the ways and efforts to complete the launch ended by nightfall. On returning in the morning Hart found ''Michigan'' had launched "herself in the night" and was floating offshore in Lake Erie.
By 1908 the ship was noted in the journal ''The American Marine Engineer'' as being the oldest metal hulled vessel then existing and of interest to engineers because of the ship's age. The two engines were inclined simple steam engines of with a stroke that were original and running well in 1908. The first of three sets of boilers were return flue type that lasted fifty years before finally being replaced by bricked in return tube types. The operating pressure was low, sufficient to drive the engines at 20 rpm, with engine room piping of thick copper connecting with brass flange joints. When, about 1905, the ship finally changed from kerosene lights to electric a special engine for the dynamo had to be constructed to operate on the low pressure steam. The steam was also used in a peculiar system for repelling boarders with hot water direct from the boiler. Coal consumption before the latest modifications was two tons per hour and after the modifications was as low as one half ton per hour. The ship carried two steam launches. The ship had never made even ten knots until dispatched from the harbor at Cleveland to Buffalo to prevent riots on the assassination of President William McKinley 6 September 1901 and, with the safeties weighted, she made almost fourteen knots at 30 rpm at one point.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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