Laksamana Class Corvette

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Royal Malaysian Navy corvette Laksamana Muhammad Amin comes alongside USS Fort McHenry (LSD 43) during the at-sea portion of the Malaysia phase of exercise Cooperation Afloat Readiness and Training (CARAT).
Royal Malaysian Naval Ensign General Characteristics
Displacement: 675 tons full load
Length: 62.3 meters (204 feet)
Beam: 9.3 meters (30.5 feet)
Draught: 2.8 meters (9 feet)
Armament: Guns : 1 x 76 mm OTO DP gun and 1 x dual 40 mm AA

SAM : 4-cell Albatros SAM (12 Aspide missiles)

SSM : 6 x Otomat II SSM

ASW : 6 x 12.75 inch torpedo tubes

Electronics: Air/Sea Search Radar : RAN-12 air/surface search

Navigation Radar : Kelvin Hughes 1007 navigation radar

ASW : Diodon hull Sonar

Fire Control : 2 RTN-10X

EW : Gamma suite, SCLAR chaff

Aircraft: none
Propulsion: 4 diesels driving 4 shafts developing 20,400 bhp,
Speed: 36 knots
Range: 2,300 nautical miles at 18 knots
Complement: 56

The Laksamana Class is a class of small missile corvettes comprising 4 ships currently in service with the Royal Malaysian Navy.

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The Laksamana class corvettes were originally purchased by the Iraqi Navy as the Assad class corvettes, but whose delivery were delayed and later cancelled following international sanctions against Iraq following the invasion of Kuwait by Iraq.

In October 1995 the Malaysian Ministry of Finance signed a contract with Fincantieri for the supply of two 650t missile corvettes for the Royal Malaysian Navy. A further two missile corvettes were ordered in February 1997. Some specific aspects of the ships' design were modified and the ships were refitted to meet the requirements of the Royal Malaysian Navy.

The first two ships, named KD Laksamana Hang Nadim and KD Laksamana Tun Abdul Jamil, were commissioned in July 1997. The second two, named KD Laksamana Muhammed Amin and KD Laksamana Tun Pusmah, were delivered in July 1999.

The ships are all named after famous Malay warriors who have earned the title Laksamana during their lifetimes. ("Laksamana" would translate as an Admiral in modern usage, but in the Malay Sultanates, the title would be more as a minister of the realm (a warrior) who is responsible for defense of the realm. The Laksamana is the second most senior position the the Malay court, lower only to the Bendahara) [1]

The four ships of the class are:

Hull No. Name Former Name Date Launched Date Commissioned
F134 Laksamana Hang Nadim (ex- Khalid ibn al Walid, F216) 5-Jul-1983 28-Jul-1997
F135 Laksamana Tun Abdul Jamil (ex- Saad ibn abi Wakkad, F218) 30-Dec-1983 28-Jul-1997
F136 Laksamana Muhammed Amin (ex Abdullah ibn Abi Serh, F214) 5-Jul-1983 Jul-1999
F137 Laksamana Tun Pusmah (ex Salah Aldin Ayoobi, F220) 30-Mar-1984 Jul-1999

All 4 ships of the Laksamana Class is presently serving in the 24th CORVETTE Squadron of the Royal Malaysian Navy.

The Laksamana class packs a lot of punch in a small hull. The Laksamana Class is armed with the MBDA Otomat Mark 2/Teseo long-range sea-skimming missile with six missile launchers installed on the stern deck, three pointing to port and three pointing starboard. The missiles are armed with a 210kg high-explosive warhead, fitted with impact and proximity fuses. The speed of the missile is Mach 0.9 and the range is 120km.

A medium-range air defence is provided with the semi-active radar homing MBDA Albatross SAM system, providing defence against aircraft and incoming anti-ship missiles. The Albatross system fires the Mach 2.5 Aspide missile over a 15km range to deliver a 33kg warhead.

The Laksamana is also armed with two triple Whitehead Alenia ILAS-3 torpedolaunchers installed one each side on the main deck, firing the A244/S anti-submarine torpedoes that uses the active, passive and mixed mode homing to a target range of 7km.

The Laksamana Class is armed with a 76mm 62 calibre Oto Melara Super Rapid gun is installed on the bow deck in front of the citadel. The firing rate is 120 rounds/minute and range is up to 16km. The ships are also armed with the 40mm Oto Melara L70 twin gun in the multi-role mode over a range of 12.5km and firing rate of 300 rounds/minute

A 105mm decoy launcher is installed on both the port and starboard side of the ship. Each launcher has six launch tubes and is capable of firing illuminating rounds or chaff rounds to counter hostile radars and radar guided missiles.

The ship's radar suite consists of a RAN 12L/X air and surface search radar, operating in D and I bands and a Kelvin Hughes 1007 navigation radar operating at I band. The ship is also fitted with a Global Positioning System (GPS).

The ship's electronic warfare suite comprises the INS-3 radar interceptor and the TQN-2 radar jammer

Underwater sensors provided is the ASO 94-41 hull mounted active search and attack sonar supplied by Atlas Elektronik.

The ships are powered by 4 MTU 20V 956 TB 92 diesel engines developing 14.8MW sustained power driving four shafts. Three diesel generators each yield 280KVA. The engines provide a dash speed of 36 knots, a maximum sustained speed of 34 knots and an economical speed of 18 knots. The range at 18 knots is 2,300 nautical miles.

The 4 Assad (Wadi M'Ragh) corvettes built for Libya are of a similar design and the Laksamana is based on the Assad Class.

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