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Please convert all infobox measurements (I am referring to tonnes).
Done. I believe that they are
long tons (the traditional unit of ship measurement?) but the source isn't specific.
Background
"...the deteriorating international situation..." This would be a questionable exegesis for a reader. Maybe you could elucidate a little.
"...there was not enough time to repaint it." In what coloration?
"...with the gold and headed, avoiding Dunkirk..." Why did it avoid Dunkirk?
"...the crew of A4 took their ship to Bilbao in neutral Spain to avoid having to be German prisoners of war." Was this to avoid what was believed to be an imminent British surrender?
That's an interesting point. I don't believe they actually considered staying in Britain, which was as foreign to them as Germany (despite being on the same side). Plus, there was not yet a Free Belgian army or government to tell them what to do! Clarified, anyway!Brigade Piron (
talk)
11:54, 30 August 2013 (UTC)reply
Excellent work, but one thing I forgot to mention above is that in the infobox, you state the ship was scrapped in Spain, however in the prose, you state it was returned to Belgium and then scrapped. Please clarify. After resolving that, I will pass the article.
QatarStarsLeague (
talk)
14:16, 30 August 2013 (UTC)reply
G'day, I see that this article is currently undergoing a GA review. Good work on improving the article so far. I have reviewed a few ship articles in the past and I'm concerned that the coverage does not meet the criteria. For instance, from experience it seems usual to include details such tonnage, length, speed, beam, power, draught/draft, complement, etc. in the body. Currently these sorts of details only appear in the infobox, where they are uncited. Additionally, the infobox mentions that the ship was transferred to Belgium in 1920, and that it was known by a couple of names over different periods (e.g. "Pilote 4 (1920-1939, 1946) and Patrouilleur A4 (1939-1945)") but this information doesn't appear in the body. Could this information please be added with a corresponding citation? Additionally, for GA I think these two sentences should be referenced: "After Belgium was invaded on 10 May 1940, there was not enough time to repaint it in a more discrete colour scheme." and "A4 also carried Hubert Ansiaux, the civil servant charged with the gold evacuation and future Governor of the National Bank, to England." Please let me know what you think. Regards,
AustralianRupert (
talk)
08:46, 31 August 2013 (UTC)reply
Thanks for your comments, I will do my best to implement your suggestions. I have cited the second sentence and will look for another reference for the first. However, I'm afraid the others pose a bit of a problem. I do not know why the boat's name was changed - I assume because it was recomissioned as a patrol boat, rather than as a pilot boat, but that would be conjecture/original research. The other part is also slightly problematic. I do not know how it would be possible to mention the specifications of the boat in the text without boring the reader to death with information already present in the infobox. The boat is notable for what it did rather than its class or specifications per se. Could I footnote or reference the infobox instead? Brigade Piron (
talk)
09:59, 31 August 2013 (UTC)reply
G'day, referencing the infobox would be a partial solution, but my main concern is that you are not meeting the coverage requirement for a ship article at GA level. It seems common practice in ship articles that reach GA. For instance,
French ironclad Suffren,
German battleship Scharnhorst,
HMS Tiptoe (P332), and many others at
Wikipedia:Good articles/Warfare#Warships include a "design and description" or "construction and characteristics" section (or something similar). I'm not saying that you should include a separate section like that, but perhaps you could work in some more of those details into the Background section to provide the reader with a better understanding of what the ship actually was. Perhaps some advice could be sought from the editors at
WT:SHIPS about how to best present this information? Regarding the issue with the name, no dramas, I don't think you need to necessarily say why the name changed, particularly if you don't know, but the fact that it did change should be mentioned in the body with a reference.
AustralianRupert (
talk)
11:37, 31 August 2013 (UTC)reply
I'm not sure I agree. In the examples you cite, the ships are notable for their existence as much as for their careers and so stats form a major part of "what they were". For A4, it is only notable for what it did in 1940 - the Mersey class is so unremarkable that it doesn't even merit an article here, and only very short extracts elsewhere. I could add that it was a small and slow boat (which would be relevant, including these two measurements) and cite accordingly, but otherwise I would be very much against lengthy discussions of a non-notable subject.Brigade Piron (
talk)
12:57, 31 August 2013 (UTC)reply
To clarify, I'm not asking for a lengthy discussion of it. You could probably get away with adding only a few short sentences. For example, if you were to reword the first paragraph of the Background section using something like this, it would probably be sufficient coverage (so long as it could be referenced):
Pilote A4 (later Patrouilleur A4) was purchased by the Belgian
Corps de Marine in 1920, having previously served in the British
Royal Navy during the
First World War as HMS John Ebbs (FY3566). A Mersey-class naval trawler, the vessel had been built by Cochranes in
Selby,
North Yorkshire, and launched on 2 October 1917.
Displacing 344 long tons (350 t), the vessel was 148 feet (45 m) long, and had a
draught of 4.5 metres (15 ft). Fitted with engines that were capable of producing 600 horsepower (450 kW), it could travel at between 9 and10 knots. With a complement of 27, the Belgians armed the ship with two
Maxim machine guns on the bridge and a
47mm gun at the
stern. In 1939, A4 was waiting to be scrapped, but the deteriorating international situation caused by German expansionism led to its reactivation by the Ministry of Defence.
A recent edit suggested that the Mersey class is named for the lead ship in the class. I haven't searched very thoroughly, but haven't found any evidence that such a ship existed. These two sources suggest that there was no naval trawler called Mersey: