Oslo class frigate

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The last Oslo class frigate in commission, HNoMS Narvik, during a port visit in Trondheim in 2006.
Career Norwegian Navy flag
Ordered: 1960
Laid down: ?
Launched: January 17, 1964
Commissioned: January 29, 1966
Decommissioned: June, 1998- 1st August, 2007 (Planed)
General Characteristics
Displacement: 1,735 tonnes normally, 2,100 tonnes maximum
Length: 96.6 metres
Beam: 11.2 metres
Draft: 5.5 metres
Powerplant Twin steam boilers, one high pressure and one low pressure steam turbine
Power: 14,914 kilowatts
Speed: 25+ knots
Endurance: 3900 nm at 15 knots
Complement: 120 (129 max) officers and men
Armament:
Guns 2 × US 3" cannon
1 × Bofors 40mm/70 anti-aircraft gun
2 × 20mm Rheinmetall anti-aircraft guns
2 × 12.7mm anti-aircraft guns
Missiles 6 × Penguin SSMs (usually not mounted)
1 × 8-cell Raytheon RIM-7M Sea Sparrow Mk 29 SAM system
ASW 6 × Kongsberg Terne ASW
2×3 324mm US Mk 32 torpedo launchers (Sting Ray torpedoes)
Countermeasures 4 × Mark 36 SRBOC chaff launchers
Radar: Siemens/Plessey AWS-9
Sonar Medium frequency Thomson-CSF Sintra/Simrad TSM 2633 combined hull and VDS active sonar
High frequency Terne III active sonar

Oslo class frigates are a Royal Norwegian Navy frigate design, based on the U.S. Navy Dealey class destroyer escorts. The forward hull was customized to suit Norwegian sea conditions better (higher freeboard) and several sub-systems were European built. [1]

Contents

All ships were built at the Navy Main Yard in Horten, Norway between 1964 and 1966. The construction of the vessels was part of the Navy rebuilding program, approved by the Norwegian government in 1960. Half of the project expenses were funded by the United States as a part of the Mutual Defense Assistance Program, MDAP (a program that ran from when it was passed by the Congress in October 1949 until 1967-68).

In the late 1970s, the class received new armament, most notably Penguin, Sea Sparrow and Mark 32 torpedo launchers. Another modernization was carried out in the 1980s.

During 1995 and 1996, after the HNoMS Oslo experienced an engine failure, and subsequently sank after sailing in heavy weather, the rest of the class was once again modernized. The hulls were strengthened, which in turn increased the displacement with 200 tonnes. [2]

Five frigates of this class were built. All of them were modernized during the period 1987-1990. They bear the prefix KNM (Kongelig Norske Marine, meaning Royal Norwegian Navy) in Norwegian and HNoMS (His Norwegian Majesty's Ship) in English.

Oslo class — significant dates
Name Pennant number Launched Commissioned Decommissioned
Oslo F300 January 17, 1964 January 29, 1966 Sank in 1994
Bergen F301 August 23, 1965 June 22, 1967 August 3, 2005
Trondheim F302 September 4, 1964 June 2, 1966 June 2006
Stavanger F303 February 4, 1966 December 8, 1967 June, 1998
Narvik F304 January 8, 1965 November 30, 1966 Still active
HNoMS Bergen in its namesake city Bergen for the last time before being decommissioned in 2005.
HNoMS Bergen in its namesake city Bergen for the last time before being decommissioned in 2005.

The lead ship, Oslo, ran aground at Marsteinen on January 24, 1994, and on January 25 she was taken under tow. She sank on the same day outside Steinneset in Austevoll county.

Stavanger was taken out of service in 1998. It was later used for target practice and sunk in 2001 by a single DM2A3 torpedo launched from the Ula class submarine Utstein (S 302). [3] Bergen was decommissioned in August 2005, and is currently used as an office facility.

On March 17, 2006 at 20:10 CET, the Trondheim ran aground outside of the Lines island in Sør-Trøndelag. No personal injuries among the 121-man crew were reported. The incident was reported from the ship itself, and at 20:30 it came loose again. Water flooded two compartments (paint storage and forward pump room) of the ship. The compartments were sealed and three ships were sent to assist the frigate. [4] The frigate was towed to port in Bergen by the coast guard vessel KV Tromsø. [5]

All of the Oslo class frigates are due to be replaced with new Fridtjof Nansen class frigates starting in mid 2006. [6] When Narvik, the last active ship of the class, is decommissioned (planned 1st August 2007) she will be transferred to the Royal Norwegian Navy Museum in Horten. [7]

  1. ^  (Norwegian) Adresseavisen, KNM Trondheim tar inn vann
  2. ^  (Norwegian) Forsvarsnett, Godt redningsarbeid
  3. ^  (Norwegian) Forsvarsnett, Oslo-klassen
  4. ^  (Norwegian) Forsvarsnett, Narvik to be museum ship
  5. ^  Chris Chant, Warships Today, ISBN 1-84509-007-1 (page 112)
  6. ^  Stavanger sunk by Utstein, YouTube video

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