Italian destroyer Ascaro
| Chinese Empire | |
|---|---|
| Name | Tsing Po (or Ching Po) |
| Ordered | 1910 |
| Builder | Gio. Ansaldo & C., Genoa, Kingdom of Italy |
| Laid down | 1911 |
| Fate | Sold to Kingdom of Italy 1912 |
| Italy | |
| Name | Ascaro |
| Namesake | Ascaro, the Italian singular for an askari, an African colonial soldier |
| Acquired | 1912 |
| Launched | 6 December 1912 |
| Completed | 21 July 1913 |
| Commissioned | July 1913 |
| Reclassified | Torpedo boat 1 July 1921 |
| Identification | Pennant number AS, AO |
| Stricken | 31 May 1930 |
| Fate | Scrapped |
| General characteristics | |
| Class & type | Soldato-class destroyer |
| Displacement | 395–415 long tons (401–422 t) |
| Length | |
| Beam | 6.1 m (20 ft 0 in) |
| Draught | 2.1 m (6 ft 11 in) |
| Propulsion |
|
| Speed | 28.5 knots (52.8 km/h; 32.8 mph) |
| Range | 1,500 nmi (2,800 km; 1,700 mi) at 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph) |
| Complement | 55 |
| Armament |
|
Ascaro ("Askari") was a Soldato-class ("Soldier"-class) destroyer of the Italian Regia Marina ("Royal Navy"). Commissioned in 1913, she served during World War I. Reclassified as a torpedo boat in 1921, she was stricken in 1930.