The Allende class is a series of four anti-submarine frigates used by the Mexican Navy. Allende-class frigates are former United States Navy -ships which were acquired beginning in 1997. They form the Mexican Gulf Fleet of the Mexican Navy. They are used for anti-submarine and offshore patrol duties. All four ships were taken out of service by 2016 and one was sunk as an artificial reef in 2022. In 2024, it was announced the other three hulls would be donated for use as artificial reefs.
The Allende-class frigates are former United States Navy s. They have a standard displacement of 30110NaN0 and 42600NaN0 at full load. The vessels measure 439feet long with a beam of 46feet and a maximum draught of 24feet. The ships are propelled by a Westinghouse steam turbine rated at 35000shp turning one shaft using steam provided by two Combustion Engineering/Babcock & Wilcox boilers at a working pressure of 1200psi and a temperature of . This gives the frigates a maximum speed of 27kn and a range of 4000nmi at on one boiler. The ships have a complement of 288 including 20 officers.
The frigates are armed with a reduced version of their American layouts. They mount a single FMC 5adj=onNaNadj=on/54-caliber Mk 42 dual-purpose gun mounted forward. For anti-submarine warfare (ASW), the frigates are equipped with an ASROC Mk 16 octuple launcher with a reload system sited between the superstructure and the 5-inch gun. Two cells were re-configured to fire Harpoon surface-to-surface missiles in American service, but this ability was not transferred to the Mexican Navy. The Allende class also mounts two twin Mk 32 324mm torpedo launchers in fixed tubes for 22 Mk 46 torpedoes. The launchers are sited on the midships structure, angled outward at a 45° angle. Allende retains the Mk 25 launcher for the Sea Sparrow surface-to-air missiles that the vessels mounted in American service.
The class is equipped with fixed Mk 36 SRBOC 6-barreled decoy launchers for infrared and chaff, SLQ-25 Nixie towed torpedo decoys and SLQ-32CV2 electronic support measures. They mount a Mk 68 Mod gunfire control system for the 5-inch guns, a Mk 114 Mod 6 control system for the ASW armament, a Mk 1 target designation and a MMS target acquisition system. For radar, the Allende class have SPS-40 air search and SPS-10 or SPS-67 surface search. The vessels are equipped with SPG-53D/F fire control radar and SRN-15A TACAN. The Allende class have a SQS-26CX bow-mounted sonar capable of active search and attack. The frigates have a helipad located over the stern of the ship and a hangar capable of storing the MBB Bo 105 helicopter that operates off the vessels.
align=center colspan=6 | Allende class | |||||
Builder | Acquired | Commissioned | Status | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
F 211 (ex-E 50) | (ex-Stein) | Lockheed Shipbuilding and Construction Company | 29 January 1997 | 23 November 1998 | Decommissioned 2016, awaiting disposal[1] | |
F 212 (ex-E 51) | (ex-Marvin Shields) | Todd Shipyards | Deliberately sunk off Tuxpan, 27 April 2022.[2] | |||
F 213 (ex-E 52) | (ex-Pharris) | Avondale Shipyards | 2 February 2000 | 16 March 2000 | Decommissioned 2016, awaiting disposal | |
F 214 | (ex-Whipple) | Todd Shipyards | August 2001 | 1 November 2002 | Decommissioned 2016, awaiting disposal |
The first two ships were acquired by the Mexican Navy on 29 January 1997 and underwent refits for Mexican service. Both ships were commissioned on 23 November 1988. The third ship was acquired in 2000 and the fourth in 2001. Mina is based at Manzanillo, the other three at Tampico. Victoria commissioned on 16 March 2000 and Mina on 1 November 2002. By 2016, all four ships had been taken out of service by the Mexican Navy. One, Abasalo, was sunk as an artificial reef east of Tuxpan, Mexico.[2] The other three vessels were donated by the Mexican government for use as artificial reefs in 2024.[1]