Tribal-class frigate
Class overview | |
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Name: | Type 81 or Tribal class |
Operators: | |
Preceded by: | Blackwood class |
Succeeded by: | Type 21 |
Completed: | 7 |
Retired: | 4 |
General characteristics [1] | |
Type: | Frigate |
Displacement: |
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Length: | |
Beam: | 42 ft 3 in (12.88 m) |
Draught: |
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Propulsion: |
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Speed: | 27 knots (50 km/h; 31 mph) (COSAG) |
Range: | 4,500 nautical miles (8,300 km; 5,200 mi) at 12 knots (22 km/h; 14 mph) |
Complement: | 253 |
Sensors and processing systems: | |
Armament: |
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Aircraft carried: | 1 × Westland Wasp helicopter |
The Type 81, or Tribal class, were ordered and built as Sloops [3] to carry out similar duties to the immediate post war Improved Black Swan Sloops and Loch class frigates in the Gulf. In the mid 1960s the seven Tribals were reclassified as second class general-purpose frigates for the same reasons as the 21st century reclassification of the USN Littoral Combat ships, to maintain frigate numbers. After the British withdrawal from East of Suez in 1971 the Tribals operated in the Nato North Atlantic sphere with the only update the fitting of Seacat missiles to all by 1977, [4] limited by their single propeller and low speed of 24 knots. In 1979-80 age and crew and fuel shortages, saw them transferred to the stand by squadrons, three being reactivated in 1982 in the Falklands crisis for training and West Indian guardship duties.
History
The Tribals were designed during the 1950s as a response to the increasing cost of single-role vessels such as the Type 14s. They were first such 'multi role' vessels for the Royal Navy. They were designed specifically with colonial 'gunboat' duties in mind, particularly in the Middle East. They were therefore designed to be self-contained warships with weapon and sensor systems to cover many possible engagements, air conditioning to allow extended tropical deployment and such 'modern' habitability features as all bunk accommodation (as opposed to hammocks). The fitting of gas turbine boost engines was specifically intended to allow the frigates to almostly instantly leave ports and naval bases in the event of nuclear war, rather than have to spend four to six hours to flash up the steam boilers. The G6 gas turbine proved reliable and was generally used to leave port during the frigates career and paved the way for gas turbine propulsion to become universal in the RN within 30 years.
Design
They were the first class of the Royal Navy to be designed from the start to operate a helicopter and the first small escorts to carry a long-range air search radar, the Type 965 with a single 'rake' AKE-1 antenna. They were armed with two 4.5-inch (114 mm) Mark 5 main guns salvaged from scrapped Second World War destroyers. Although these mountings were refurbished with Remote Power Control (RPC) operation, they still required manual loading on an exposed mounting. Originally the intended gun armament was two twin 4-inch (102 mm) Second World War standard mounts, then planning switched to arming them first with the twin 3-inch (76 mm) 70 caliber and then two single automatic 4-inch guns[5] of the sort fitted to the Chilean Almirante Williams class. The automatic guns were rejected on account of weight, space and cost.[5] From the outset they were designed to carry the new GWS-21 Sea Cat[6] anti-aircraft missile system but all except Zulu initially shipped single Mark 7 Bofors guns in lieu. The rest of the class were fitted with Sea Cat in the 1970s[7] using surplus missile systems, leftover from Battle-class destroyers and County-class destroyer refits.
The Tribals were the first modern RN ships designed to use a combination of power sources, a feature which had been trialled with limited success in the 1930s in the minelayer HMS Adventure. An additive mix of steam and gas turbine called "COmbined Steam and Gas" COSAG was used. This gave the rapid start-up and acceleration of a gas turbine engine coupled with the cruising efficiency and reliability of the steam turbine. They would cruise on the steam plant and use both systems driving the same shaft for a high-speed "boost". They suffered however from being single-shaft vessels which severely limited manoeuvrability, acceleration and deceleration. The single screw proved significantly limiting when they were used in the 1970s Cod Wars in terms of manoeuvering in ramming manoeuvers, for and against, Icelandic coast guard cutters. The cramped awkward nature of the helicopter pad and handling provision was also exposed in the 1976 Cod War and was a major reason that some Rothesay-class frigates were given further refits in preference to the Tribals and maintained in higher status reserve in the early 1980s limitations on defence spending.
Shortcomings
The costs for the Tribal Class ships escalated above the costs first envisaged and the original order of ships, (over twenty), was cancelled after the first seven ships had been completed. Only 4 would have been built if it had been possible to cancel the contractual commitments the Royal Navy had entered into for the supply of complex engines and machinery [8] for eight frigates. The ships were rather small, at 360 feet (110 m), which reduced the options for later modernisation and were always going to be limited by their single-shaft propulsion. The class were still good warships in spite of being fitted with outdated guns, (they were described by some as 'guided flagpoles')[9] if sometimes capable of 18rpm for the first two minutes, and proved the usefulness of the general purpose frigate concept and gas turbine propulsion, but the average unit costs of the Type 81s completed in 1963-64 was £500,000 more than the first 8 Leanders[10] and the final cost of over ₤5 million of the first Tribal, Ashanti, completed in 1961 was considered too high and hence limited the number actually built. (The original intent was to build 23 Type 81s) This meant that further 1960s RN frigate development would be based on the more conservative steam powered Type 12 'Whitby' Class, subsequently modernised in the Type 12M 'Rothesay' Class and finalised in the excellent Type 12I Leander. The later Royal Navy Type 21 'Amazon Class' General Purpose Frigates were originally envisaged for a similar gunboat role to the Tribal Class ships and to operate East of Suez.
Service
The class served throughout the 1960s and into the 1970s fulfilling their designed general purpose "colonial gunboat" role. When change in British foreign policy made this role redundant they found themselves being pressed into service in home waters in the Cod Wars of the 1970s. They were not particularly suited to these duties however, as they had a hull form optimised for the calm, shallow water of the Persian Gulf and with only a single shaft were unable to manoeuvre with the Icelandic patrol vessels at close quarters.
All were decommissioned from the Royal Navy during the mid-to-late 1970s with the manpower crisis also attributing to the rapid removal of the class from service. They were however given a brief reprieve by the Falklands War, with 3 mothballed Tribals (Gurkha, Tartar and Zulu) being reactivated to cover ships deployed to the South Atlantic or undergoing long-term repairs after the conflict. The remaining units were cannibalised for spare parts to enable the 3 ships to be refitted. These ships were sold in 1984 to Indonesia.
Ships
Pennant | Name | Builder | Laid Down | Launched | Accepted into service | Commissioned | Estimated building cost[11] | Fate |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
F117 | Ashanti | (a) Yarrow & Co Ltd, Glasgow (b) Associated Electrica Industries Ltd, Manchester [12] |
15 January 1958 [13] | 9 March 1959 [13] | November 1961 [12] | 23 November 1961 [13] | £5,315,000 [12] | Sunk as target 1988 |
F131 | Nubian | (a) HM Dockyard, Portsmouth (b) Associated Electrica Industries Ltd, Manchester [14] |
7 September 1959 [13] | 6 September 1960 [13] | November 1962 [14] | 9 October 1962 [13] | £4,360,000 [14] | Sunk as target 1987 |
F122 | Gurkha | (a) JI Thornycroft & Co Ltd, Southampton (b) JI Thornycroft & Co Ltd, Southampton (steam and gas turbines) (b) Parsons Marine Turbine Co Ltd, Wallsend-on-Tyne (gearing) [14] |
3 November 1958 [13] | 11 July 1960 [13] | February 1963 [14] | 13 February 1963 [13] | £4,865,000 [14] | Indonesian 332 KRI Wilhelmus Zakarias Yohannes |
F119 | Eskimo | (a) JS White & Co Ltd, Cowes, Isle of Wight (b) JS White & Co Ltd, Cowes, Isle of Wight (steam and gas turbines) (b) Fairfield Shipbuilding and Engineering Co Ltd, Govan, Glasgow (gearing) [14] |
22 October 1958 [13] | 20 March 1960 [13] | February 1963 [14] | 21 February 1963 [13] | £4,560,000 [14] | Sunk as target 1986 |
F133 | Tartar | (a) HM Dockyard, Devonport (b) Vickers-Armstrongs (Engineers) Ltd, Barrow-in-Furness (steam turbines and gearing) (b) Yarrow and Co Ltd, Glasgow (gas turbine) [15] |
22 October 1959 [13] | 19 September 1960 [13] | April 1963 [15] | 26 February 1962 [13] | £4,300,000 [15][16] | Indonesian 333 KRI Hasanuddin |
F125 | Mohawk | (a) Vickers-Armstrongs (Shipbuilders) Ltd, Barrow-in-Furness (b) Associated Electrical Industries Ltd, Manchester (gas turbine) (b) Vickers-Armstrongs (Engineers) Ltd, Barrow-in-Furness (steam turbines and gearing) [15] |
23 December 1960 [13] | 5 April 1962 [13] | December 1963 [15] | 29 November 1963 [13] | £4,750,000 [15] | Sold for scrap |
F124 | Zulu | (a) Alex Stephen & Sons, Ltd, Linthouse, Glasgow (b) JI Thornycroft & Co Ltd, Southampton (steam and gas turbines) (b) Parsons Marine Turbine Co Ltd, Wallsend-on-Tyne (gearing) [17] |
13 December 1960 [13] | 3 July 1962 [13] | April 1964 [17] | 17 April 1964 [13] | £5,100,000 [17] | Indonesian 331 KRI Martha Khristina Tiyahahu |
The building costs given above are official figures from the Navy/Defence Estimates. Note that Janes Fighting Ships quotes a slightly lower cost for Ashanti of £5,220,000,[13] as against £5,315,000 quoted in the 1962-63 Navy Estimates.[12]
Footnotes
- ↑ Gardiner and Chumbley 1995, p. 518.
- ↑ Blackman 1971, p. 356.
- ↑ N.Freidman.British Destroyers & Frigates. The Second World War & After. Seaforth, UK(2006),p 242
- ↑ ,Freidman. British Destroyers & Frigates. UK (2006),p247
- 1 2 Gardiner, Robert, ed. (1983). All the Worlds Fighting Ships 1947-1982. Pt One. The Western Powers. London: Conway. p. 162.
- ↑ Friedman, Norman (1991). Naval Institute Guide to Naval Weapons Systems. p. 410.
- ↑ Preston, Antony (1980). Warships of the World. London: Janes. pp. 168–9.
- ↑ Brown, F.K. Rebuilding the Royal Navy: Warship Design since 1945. p. 84.
- ↑ Preston, Anthony (1980). Warships of the World. London: Janes. p. 169.
- ↑ UK Defence Estimates 63-4 & 64-5
- ↑ "Unit cost, i.e. excluding cost of certain items (e.g. aircraft, First Outfits)."
Text from Defences Estimates - 1 2 3 4 Navy Estimates, 1962-63, pages 218-9, List and particulars of new ships which have been accepted or are expected to be accepted into HM service during the Financial Year ended 31 March 1962
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 Blackman, Raymond VB Jane's Fighting Ships, 1966-67, pub Sampson Low, Marston & Co Ltd, 1966, page 292.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Navy Estimates, 1963-64, page 71, List and particulars of new ships which have been accepted or are expected to be accepted into HM service during the Financial Year ended 31 March 1963
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Defence Estimates, 1964-65, page 73, Table 3 (Programme): List and particulars of new ships which have been accepted or are expected to be accepted into HM service during the Financial Year ended 31 March 1964
- ↑ Note that the 1963-64 naval estimates gave an estimated acceptance date of March 1963, and an estimated building cost of £4,205,000. Presumably the explanation is that the 1964-65 estimates are correct, and the 1963-64 proved optimistic.
- 1 2 3 Defence Estimates, 1965-66, page 75, Table 3 (Programme): List and particulars of new ships which have been accepted or are expected to be accepted into HM service during the Financial Year ended 31 March 1965
References
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- Blackman, Raymond V.B. Jane's Fighting Ships 1971–72. London: Sampson Low, Marston & Co, 1971. ISBN 0 354 00096 9.
- Gardiner, Robert and Stephen Chumbley. Conway's All The World's Fighting Ships 1947–1995. Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1995. ISBN 1-55750-132-7.
- Jane's Fighting Ships 1977-78, Jane's Yearbooks, ISBN 0-531-03277-9