Prompted by the posts by Roy and Andy concerning metacentric height, I realised that I can quite easily use the CAD software to calculate the centre of buoyancy in the vertical direction - is that what you were thinking of when you first raised the topic Andy? I've attached a picture showing the result of this calculation for section 10 which is approx mid-ship, although I guess I would need to repeat this for all the sections and average them together in some way. It is about 1 inch below the water line, but it seems to me that this would only be really useful if I knew the centre of gravity - which I have no way of predicting.
I do not know the metacentric height of the M or R-class ships, but apparently the stability range of the M-class destroyers was 86 degrees deep loading and 76 degrees light. The period of roll from one extreme to the opposite was just 2-3 seconds! (I guess that is one aspect of why destroyer crew were paid hard lying).
Apparently these were very stable ships because, at that time, the machinery was heavy and armament light. As for superstructure, they basically didn't have much at all. The bridge was the main structure - see photo which shows an R-class bridge. This was larger than the M-class bridge, but still very light - it needed a splinter matress to give some degree of protection. Apparently this all changed by WW2 when machinery was lighter, armaments heavier and superstructure greatly increased, so the range of stability had become smaller (70 - 61 degrees) and roll times were 8-9 seconds.
Regards Mike