Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Type 23 frigate

Encyclopedia : T : TY : TYP : Type 23 frigate



 

Type 23 class frigate
HMS Richmond
General Characteristics
Complement: 185
Displacement: 4,900 tonnes full load
Length: 133m (436.2ft)
Beam: 16.1m (52.8ft)
Draught: 5 m
Propulsion: CODLAG (Combined Diesel-electric and Gas). Two Rolls-Royce Spey 34,000hp (25MW) gas turbines; two Alstom 1.5MW electric motors.
Speed: 28kts (52km/h) maximum. 12,500km at 15kts (28km/h)
Aircraft: 1 Lynx HMA 8 helicopter, or Merlin HM.1

The Type 23 frigate is a class of warship serving with the Royal Navy, also known as the Duke class. Sixteen have been built, with the final vessel, HMS St Albans (F83) launched in May 2000. These ships currently comprise around half of the entire surface escort fleet of the Royal Navy.

Origin

The Type 23 was initially conceived as a cheap and simple anti-submarine warfare platform, with a Lynx or EH-101 Merlin helicopter and a towed-array sonar, intended to replace the frigates of the Leander class. They were to hunt and destroy Soviet submarines in the North Atlantic, and it was even proposed initially that they would not mount anti-aircraft missiles. Instead the Sea Wolf missile system was to be carried by the Fort class replenishment ship, one of which was to support typically four Type 23s, providing servicing facilities for the force's helicopters; the Type 23 would have facilities only for rearming and refuelling them.

Current Development

As a result of lessons learnt from the Falklands War, the design grew in size and complexity to encompass a medium calibre gun for shore bombardment, and Sea Wolf as a defence against sea-skimming anti-ship missiles such as Exocet. With the addition of Harpoon surface-to-surface missiles, the Type 23 had evolved into a complex and balanced warship which introduced a host of new technologies and concepts to the Royal Navy, including: extensive radar signature reduction design measures, automisation to substantially reduce crew size, a CODLAG (Combined Diesel-electric and Gas) propulsion system providing very quiet running for anti-submarine operations along with excellent range, and — after a false start — a fully-distributed combat management system.

As a result they have proven to be excellent ships, despite the fact that the highly specialised role for which they were intended disappeared just as the first examples were entering service.

HMS Norfolk (F230) was the first of the class to enter service, commissioned into the Fleet on June 1, 1990 at a cost of £135.449 million[[Citing sources citation needed]]. Later vessels cost £60-96 million. The annual costs of running a Type 23 is around £16 million.

On July 21, 2004, in a review of defence spending, Defence Secretary Geoff Hoon announced HMS Norfolk, HMS Marlborough (F233) and HMS Grafton (F80) were to be paid off. In 2005 it was announced that the three vessels would be sold to the Chilean Navy, to be delivered in 2008. In September 2005 BAE Systems was awarded a £134 million contract to prepare the frigates for transfer.

Weapon Systems

* 2 x quad Harpoon missile launchers
* VLS GWS 26 Mod 1 Sea Wolf SAM system
* 1-4.5in (114mm) Vickers Mk 8 gun (all ships being upgraded with the Mod 1)
* 2 x Oerlikon 30 mm L/75 KCB guns on Laurence Scott DS-30B mounting. Being upgraded to remote control with electro-optic director
* 4 Cray Marine 324mm (2 Twin) TT. Marconi Stingray.
* NATO Seagnat, Type 182 and DLF3 decoy launchers
Aircraft:
*Westland Lynx HM8 helicopter, or Merlin HM.1
*Armament:
** Sea Skua missiles (Lynx only)
** Stingray torpedoes
** depth charges
Sensors:
* Air/surface Search: BAE Systems Radar Type 996, 3D surveillance
* Navigation: Kelvin Hughes Radar Type 1007 or Racal Decca Type 1008
* Fire control: 2 BAE Systems Type 911
* Bow sonar: Thales Underwater Systems Type 2050
* Towed sonar: Ultra Electronics Type 2031Z, being replaced by Type 2087 in eight ships

Ships

Name Pennant Builder Launched Commissioned Home port Status
HMS Norfolk F230 YSL, Glasgow July 11, 1987 November 24, 1989 Devonport Sold to Chilean Navy
HMS Argyll F231 YSL April 8, 1989 May 30, 1991 Devonport Active
HMS Lancaster F229 YSL May 24, 1990 May 1, 1991 Portsmouth Active
HMS Marlborough F233 Swan Hunter , Wallsend January 21, 1991 June 14, 1991 Portsmouth Sold to Chilean Navy
HMS Iron Duke F234 YSL March 2, 1991 May 30, 1991 Portsmouth Active
HMS Monmouth F235 YSL November 23, 1991 1993 Devonport Active
HMS Montrose F236 YSL July 31, 1992 June 2, 1994 Devonport Active
HMS Westminster F237 Swan Hunter February 9, 1992 1994 Portsmouth Active
HMS Northumberland F238 Swan Hunter April 1992 May 1994 Devonport Active
HMS Richmond F239 Swan Hunter April 6, 1993 October 1996 Portsmouth Active
HMS Somerset F82 YSL June 24, 1994 September 20, 1996 Devonport Active
HMS Grafton F80 YSL November 5, 1994 May 1997 Portsmouth Sold to Chilean Navy
HMS Sutherland F81 YSL March 9, 1996 July 4, 1997 Devonport Active
HMS Kent F78 YSL May 28, 1998 February 2000 Portsmouth Active
HMS Portland F79 Marconi Marine (YSL) December 15, 2000 May 3, 2001 Devonport Active
HMS St Albans F83 BAE Systems Marine (YSL) May 6, 2000 November 2001 Portsmouth Active

Fictional Type 23 frigates


Type 23 frigate
Norfolk | Argyll | Lancaster | Marlborough | Iron Duke | Monmouth | Montrose | Westminster | Northumberland | Richmond | Somerset | Grafton | Sutherland | Kent | Portland | St Albans

List of frigates of the Royal Navy

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.


Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: