HMAS Leeuwin (A 245) explained

HMAS Leeuwin (HS 01/A 245) is the lead ship of the Leeuwin-class of hydrographic survey vessels operated by the Royal Australian Navy (RAN).

Design and construction

See main article: Leeuwin-class survey vessel. Leeuwin has a displacement of 2,170 tons at full load.[1] She is long, with a beam of, and a draught of .[1] Main propulsion machinery consists of four GEC Alsthom 6RK 215 diesel generators, which supply two Alsthom electric motors, each driving a propeller shaft.[1] A Schottel bow thruster is fitted for additional manoeuvrability.[1] Maximum speed is, with a range of at .[1]

The sensor suite consists of a STN Atlas 9600 APRA I-band navigational radar, a C-Tech CMAS 36/39 hull-mounted sonar, an Atlas Fansweep-20 multibeam echo sounder, an Atlas Hydrographic Deso single-beam echo sounder, and a Klein 2000 towed sonar.[1] The sonars and echo sounders allow the vessels to chart waters up to deep.[2] There are three sets of davits fitted to carry Fantome-class survey boats.[1] The ship is fitted with a helicopter deck, previously for an AS 350B Squirrel helicopter detached from 723 Squadron, although there are no long-term hosting facilities.[1] She is armed with two single 12.7 mm machine guns.[2] The ship's company consists of 10 officers and 46 sailors, plus up to 5 trainees.[1] The Leeuwin class were the first RAN ships to use a multi-crewing concept, with three complements used to operate the two vessels.[2]

Leeuwin was ordered from NQEA on 2 April 1996, and built at the company's shipyard in Cairns.[1] She was laid down on 9 May 1997 and launched on 23 June 1998.[2] Leeuwin and sister ship Melville underwent a joint commissioning ceremony on 27 May 2000.[1] Leeuwin initially carried the pennant number "HS 01", but this was changed to "A 245" in 2004.[2] She is named after Cape Leeuwin, the south-west-most point of the Australian continent.

Operational history

In late 2001, Leeuwin began to operate in support of border protection operations in addition to her normal hydrographic duties.[2] [3] In January 2002, Leeuwin was repainted from white to grey.[2] [3]

In October 2013, Leeuwin participated in the International Fleet Review 2013 in Sydney.[4] The fleet was reviewed by Governor-General Quentin Bryce on 5 October from Leeuwins helicopter deck, with Bryce accompanied by Prince Harry.[5]

Leeuwin sailed to Fiji in July 2015 for a seabed-mapping operation around Rotuma Island.[6] This was the first RAN deployment to the region in eight years, since the deterioration of ties between the nations after the 2006 Fijian coup d'état.[6]

References

Notes and References

  1. Saunders (ed.), Jane's Fighting Ships 2008–2009, p. 33
  2. Wertheim (ed.), The Naval Institute Guide to Combat Fleets of the World, p. 26
  3. Bateman et al., in Rothwell & VanderZwaag (eds.), Towards principled ocean governance, p. 130
  4. Web site: Participating Warships . 2013 . International Fleet Review 2013 website . Royal Australian Navy . https://web.archive.org/web/20131210092404/http://www.navy.gov.au/ifr/participants/warships . 10 December 2013 . 14 December 2015 . dead.
  5. News: International Fleet Review: seven to watch for when the ships come in . Walsh . Fiona . 4 October 2013 . The Guardian. 7 October 2013.
  6. News: Australian frigate on seabed survey mission . Talebula . Kate . 14 July 2015 . Fiji Times. 19 July 2015.