Leander class (1959)
Leander class | |
---|---|
HMS Apollo |
|
Overview | |
Type | Frigates |
units | 53 units built for
|
Shipyard |
More than 12 in total, see individual ships |
period of service |
Since 1953 |
Technical specifications | |
Unless otherwise stated, technical data refer to batch I. | |
displacement |
2500 tons |
length |
113.4 meters |
width |
13.1 meters |
Draft |
4.5 meters |
crew |
260 |
drive |
2 Babcock & Wilcox oil- fired steam boilers |
speed |
27 knots |
Range |
4600 nautical miles at 15 knots |
Armament |
Basic equipment
|
The Leander-class , also known as the Type 12I (Type 12 Improved ), was a class of multi-purpose frigates in the Royal Navy . Leander class ships were also exported to many other countries, some of which are still in service today. With over 50 units built, including 26 for the Royal Navy, it is probably the most successful British frigate class of the post-war period. By the British TV series Warship of the BBC , the class gained an extraordinary reputation.
history
The Leander class is the logical further development of the frigate classes Whitby (Type 12) and Rothesay (Type 12M), which are only equipped for submarine hunting. The Leander class was built between 1959 and 1973 in three batches , which largely differ. What they all have in common, however, is the length of 113 meters and the propulsion system with two oil-fired boilers that drive the two propellers via two steam turbines and bring the ships to speeds of up to 28 knots. The naming of the British units was consistently based on figures from Roman and Greek mythology. The special features also included the fact that these were the last ships of the Royal Navy, which were at least partially still built at the naval shipyards in Portsmouth and Devonport. The design of the Amazon class resulted from the experience with the Leander class.
In the Royal Navy, the ships were mainly used for submarine hunting, very often also in carrier groups. The Leanders also took part in missions; so they helped evacuate British citizens from Cyprus and four units were deployed in the 1982 Falklands War . The HMS Argonaut was hit by two bombs, but they did not explode. Therefore, the ship suffered no irreparable damage and could be repaired again.
Between 1989 and 1992 all units of the class were decommissioned, on the one hand because the ships were reaching the end of their lifespan and on the other hand because the Royal Navy was massively downsized in the course of the end of the Cold War.
variants
Great Britain
Batch I
Batch I comprised eight ships, each 12.5 m wide and displacing around 2800 t. Somewhat unusual for the time, a Westland Wasp helicopter was already part of the equipment on the Leander class ships . The armament of the ships originally consisted of two 114 mm guns in a twin turret, two Bofors 40 mm anti-aircraft guns, two Oerlikon 20 mm guns and an anti-submarine mortar. Later, the flak were replaced by more modern SeaCat anti-aircraft missile systems. In order to be able to counter the increasing threat posed by the Soviet submarine fleet, the 114 mm guns were also replaced by the Australian Ikara anti-submarine missile system.
Batch II
The eight ships of the second batch are largely very similar to those of the first batch. Probably the biggest change was a slightly improved propulsion system. At the beginning of the 1970s, however, the ships underwent extensive modernization. In place of the Ikara system from the first batch, the 114mm guns were replaced with four Exocet anti-ship missiles . In addition, the anti-submarine mortar was replaced by two torpedo launchers and the helicopter hangar was completely redesigned to accommodate the much larger Westland Lynx .
Batch III
The third batch brought big changes to the previous ones. The ships were made wider by 60 cm and received a further improved propulsion system. The original armament consisted of two 20mm Oerlikon guns, two 114mm guns in a twin turret, SeaCat anti-aircraft missiles and an anti-submarine mortar. However, five of the ten ships were modernized during their service life. All armament except for the two 20 mm guns was removed and Exocet anti-ship missiles, Sea Wolf anti-aircraft missiles and a third 20 mm gun were installed instead .
Export successes
The Leander class could be exported to a large number of countries:
- Australia: River Class 6 units
- Chile: Condell Class 2 units
- New Zealand: 4 units (2 ex-RN)
- India:
- Nilgiri class 6 units
- Godavari class 3 units
- Brahmaputra class 3 units
- Netherlands: Van Speijk class 6 units
- Indonesia: 6 units (ex-Netherlands)
- Ecuador: 4 (2 ex-RN, 2 ex-Chile)
- Pakistan: 2 (ex-RN)
Australia
Between 1959 and 1971, six frigates designated as the River class were manufactured under license for the Australian Navy. The first four units correspond to the British Type 12 Whitby class , the Leander design was only adopted for the last two ships.
Chile
Chile received two ships built in Great Britain in the early 1970s, which were designated as Condell-class. The two ships were in service until 2007 and 2008, respectively, when the Chilean Navy delivered three more modern Duke- class ships. The two Condell-class units were then sold to Ecuador, where they replace two Leander-class ships that were bought second-hand by the Royal Navy in the early 1990s, some years older.
New Zealand
New Zealand received two ships built in England in the 1970s. Later two used units of the Royal Navy were taken over. All four units have now been decommissioned and sunk as wrecks for divers.
Netherlands
The Netherlands built six ships under license in the 1960s with a slightly modified design, which were known as the Van Speijk class. In the 1970s the ships were modernized and between 1986 and 1989 the ships were sold to Indonesia, where they are still in service today.
India
After Great Britain, most ships of this class were built in India ; altogether there were twelve ships in three subclasses.
The Nilgiri class built in the 1970s still largely corresponded to Batch I of the ships built in Great Britain. With the Godavari class , guided missile systems from Israel and Russia in particular were installed in the 1980s . The Brahmaputra class received new modern weapon systems and electronics in the early 2000s.
Another Leander-class ship that was retired from the Royal Navy has served as a training ship since the mid-1990s.
Pakistan
In the late 1990s, Pakistan received two used Leander ships from the Royal Navy, which are still in service today.
Ship list
The ships are only listed once in this list, i.e. only the newbuildings of the respective state.
Australia
River class
Surname | Ship identification | shipyard | Launch | Commissioning | Whereabouts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
HMAS Parramatta | EN 46 | Cockatoo Island Shipyard, Sydney | January 31, 1959 | 4th July 1961 | Canceled |
HMAS Yarra | EN 45 | Williamstown Navy Yard, Melbourne | September 30, 1958 | July 27, 1961 | Canceled |
HMAS Stuart | EN 48 | Cockatoo Island | April 8, 1961 | June 28, 1963 | Canceled |
HMAS Derwent | EN 49 | Williamstown Navy Yard | April 17, 1961 | April 30, 1964 | Sunk as an artificial reef |
HMAS Swan | DE 50 | Williamstown Navy Yard | December 16, 1967 | 20th January 1970 | Sunk as an artificial reef |
HMAS Torrens | EN 53 | Cockatoo Island | September 28, 1968 | 19th January 1971 | Sunk as a target ship |
Chile
Condell class
Surname | Ship identification | shipyard | Keel laying | Launch | Commissioning | Decommissioning | Whereabouts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Almirante Condell | PFG-06 | Yarrow Shipbuilders | June 1971 | June 12, 1972 | December 21, 1973 | December 11, 2007 | March 2008 to Ecuador as BAE Eloy Alfaro (FM 01) |
Almirante Lynch | PFG-07 | Yarrow Shipbuilders | December 1971 | 2nd December 1971 | May 25, 1974 | 4th July 2007 | March 2008 to Ecuador |
Great Britain
Ship identification | Surname | Shipyard | Keel laying | Launch | Put into service | Whereabouts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Batch I | ||||||
F109 | Leander | Harland & Wolff , Belfast | 04/10/1959 | 06/28/1961 | 03/27/1963 | Sunk in 1989 as a target ship |
F114 | Ajax | Cammell Laird , Birkenhead | 10/12/1959 | 08/16/1962 | December 10, 1963 | Scrapped in 1988 |
F10 | Aurora | John Brown & Company , Clydebank | 06/01/1961 | 11/28/1962 | 04/09/1964 | Scrapped in 1990 |
F15 | Euryalus | Scotts Shipbuilding & Engineering Company, Greenock | 11/02/1961 | 06/06/1963 | 16.09.1964 | Scrapped in 1990 |
F104 | Dido | Yarrow Shipbuilders | 12/02/1961 | 12/22/1962 | 03/27/1963 | 1983 as HMNZS Southland to New Zealand, sunk in 1995 as an artificial reef |
F18 | Galatea | Swan Hunter , Wallsend | 12/29/1961 | 05/23/1963 | 04/25/1964 | Sunk in 1988 as a target ship |
F38 | Arethusa | J. Samuel White , Cowes | 07.09.1962 | 05/11/1963 | 11/24/1965 | Sunk in 1991 as a target ship |
F39 | Naiad | Yarrow Shipbuilders | 10/30/1962 | 04/11/1963 | 03/15/1965 | Sunk as a target ship in 1990 |
Batch 2 | ||||||
F28 | Cleopatra | HM Dockyard Devonport | 06/19/1963 | 03/25/1964 | 01/04/1966 | Sold for scrapping in 1991 |
F40 | Sirius | HM Dockyard Portsmouth | 08/09/1963 | 09/22/1964 | 06/15/1966 | Sunk in 1998 as a target ship |
F42 | Phoebe | Alexander Stephen & Sons, Linthouse | 06/03/1963 | 07/08/1964 | 04/15/1966 | Sold for scrapping in 1992 |
F45 | Minerva | Vickers Armstrongs , Walker | 07/25/1963 | December 19, 1964 | 05/14/1966 | Sold for scrapping in 1993 |
F47 | Danae | HM Dockyard, Devonport | December 16, 1964 | 11/24/1965 | 07.09.1967 | 1990 to Ecuador as Morán Valverde |
F52 | Juno | John I. Thornycroft & Company, Woolston | 07/16/1964 | 11/24/1965 | 07/18/1967 | Sold for scrapping in 1994 |
F56 | Argonaut | Hawthorn Leslie, Hebburn | 11/27/1964 | 02/08/1966 | 08/17/1967 | Sold for scrapping in 1995 |
F127 | Penelope | Vickers Armstrongs | 03/14/1961 | 08/17/1962 | October 31, 1963 | 1991 to Ecuador as Presidente Eloy Alfaro |
Batch 3 | ||||||
F12 | Achilles * | Yarrow Shipbuilders | December 01, 1967 | 11/21/1968 | 07/09/1970 | 1990 sold to Chile as Ministro Zenteno , 2006 |
F16 | Diomede * | Yarrow Shipbuilders | 01/30/1968 | 03/15/1969 | 04/02/1971 | 1988 to Pakistan as Shamsher (F 263) |
F57 | Andromeda | HM Dockyard, Portsmouth | May 25, 1966 | 05/24/1967 | 12/02/1968 | 1995 to India as Krishna |
F58 | Hermione | Alexander Stephen & Sons | December 06, 1965 | 04/26/1967 | 07/11/1969 | Sold for scrapping in 1997 |
F60 | Jupiter | Yarrow Shipbuilders | 10/03/1966 | 02/29/1968 | 08/09/1969 | Sold for scrapping in 1997 |
F69 | Bacchante * | Vickers Armstrongs | October 27, 1966 | 02/29/1968 | 10/17/1969 | 1982 as HMNZS Wellington to New Zealand, sunk in 2005 as an artificial reef |
F70 | Apollo * | Yarrow Shipbuilders | 05/01/1969 | October 15, 1970 | 05/28/1972 | 1988 to Pakistan as Zulfiquar (F 262) |
F71 | Scylla * | HM Dockyard, Portsmouth | 05/17/1967 | 08/08/1968 | 02/12/1970 | Sunk in 2004 as an artificial reef |
F72 | Ariadne * | Yarrow Shipbuilders | 11/01/1969 | 09/10/1971 | 02/10/1973 | 1992 to Chile as General Baquedano , sunk in 2004 as a target ship |
F75 | Charybdis | Harland & Wolff | 01/27/1967 | 02/28/1968 | 06/02/1969 | Sunk in 1993 as a target ship |
* = not modernized
India
Nilgiri- class
Surname | Ship identification | shipyard | Commissioning | Decommissioning | Whereabouts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
INS Nilgiri | F33 | Mazagon Dock Limited | June 23, 1972 | 1996 | Sunk as a target ship |
INS Himgiri | F34 | Mazagon Dock Limited | 23rd November 1974 | May 6, 2005 | |
INS Udaygiri | F35 | Mazagon Dock Limited | 18th February 1976 | August 24, 2007 | |
INS Dunagiri | F36 | Mazagon Dock Limited | May 5th 1977 | October 20, 2010 | |
INS Taragiri | F41 | Mazagon Dock Limited | May 16, 1980 | June 27, 2013 | |
INS Vindhyagiri | F42 | Mazagon Dock Limited | July 8, 1981 | June 10, 2012 | Sunk and irreparably damaged on January 31, 2011 after a collision with the container ship Nordlake and subsequent fire in the Mumbai naval base. Was lifted and is to be sunk as a target ship. |
Godavari class
Surname | Ship identification | shipyard | Commissioning | Whereabouts |
---|---|---|---|---|
INS Godavari | F20 | Mazagon Dock Limited | December 10, 1983 | active |
INS Ganga | F22 | Mazagon Dock Limited | December 30, 1985 | active |
INS Gomati | F21 | Mazagon Dock Limited | April 16, 1988 | active |
Brahmaputra class
Surname | Ship identification | shipyard | Commissioning | Whereabouts |
---|---|---|---|---|
INS Brahmaputra | F31 | Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers | April 14, 2000 | active |
INS Betwa | F39 | Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers | July 7, 2004 | active |
INS Bea | F37 | Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers | July 11, 2005 | active |
New Zealand
Leander class
Surname | Ship identification | shipyard | Keel laying | Commissioning | Decommissioning | Whereabouts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
HMNZS Waikato | F 55 | Harland and Wolff | January 1964 | September 1966 | 1998 | 18 December 2000 sunk as an artificial reef |
HMNZS Canterbury | F 421 | Yarrow Shipbuilders | June 12, 1969 | October 22, 1971 | March 21, 2005 | November 3rd 2007 sunk as an artificial reef |
Netherlands
Van Speijk class
Surname | Ship identification | shipyard | Commissioning | Whereabouts |
---|---|---|---|---|
Van Speijk | F802 | Amsterdam dockyard | 1967 | sold to Indonesia as Slamet Riadi (352), 1986 |
Van Galen | F803 | Royal Scheldt | 1967 | sold to Indonesia as Yos Sudarso (353), 1987 |
Tjerk Hiddes | F804 | Amsterdam dockyard | 1967 | sold to Indonesia as Ahmad Yani (351), 1986 |
Van Nes | F805 | Royal Scheldt | 1967 | sold to Indonesia as Oswald Siahaan (354), 1986 |
Isaac Sweers | F814 | Amsterdam dockyard | 1967 | sold to Indonesia as Karel Satsuitubun (356) |
Eversten | F815 | Royal Scheldt | 1967 | sold to Indonesia as Abdul Halim Perdanakusuma (355), 1989 |
Trivia
- From 1973 to 1977, the British television series Warship was shot on a total of seven units of the class , which was used to advertise the Royal Navy.
- In the 1970s the Airfix company produced a plastic model kit of the Leander class.
Web links
- http://www.hazegray.org/navhist/rn/frigates/leander/
- Leander Class General Purpose Frigate (Type 12 Improved) ( Memento from December 12, 2006 in the Internet Archive )
- http://www.oldships.org.uk/SHIPS/TYPE_LIST/FRIGATE_CLASS/Leander_Class.htm
- http://www.historyofwar.org/articles/weapons_type12m.html
- Airfix Leander- class model at britmodeller.com
Footnotes
- ↑ David and Hugh Lyon; Siegfried Greiner: Warships from 1900 to today, technology and use . Buch und Zeit Verlagsgesellschaft mbH, Cologne 1979, p. 74 .
- ↑ Hamburg freighter sinks Indian frigate. ndr.de, February 2, 2011, archived from the original on August 16, 2012 ; Retrieved February 3, 2011 .