Post filming the vessel was sold and was subsequently converted into a private yacht.
The Ton-class coastal minesweepers were constructed with wooden hulls and almost all of their structure was made from aluminium to reduce their magnetic signature to aid sweeping magnetic mines.[1] The ships displaced 360LT at standard load and 1940LT at deep load. They had a length between perpendiculars of 153feet, a beam of 27feet and a draught of 8feet.[2] The Tons were powered by two Napier Deltic diesel engines, each driving one propeller shaft. The engines developed a total of 6000bhp and gave a maximum speed of 15kn. They had a range of 2300nmi at and had a complement of 4 officers and 25 ratings. The Ton-class ships were armed with a single 40adj=on1adj=on Bofors and two 20adj=on1adj=on Oerlikon light AA guns on a single twin-gun mount.[3]
Packington was launched by Harland and Wolff on 3 July 1958 at their Belfast shipyard.[2] She was transferred to the South African Navy before she was commissioned on 20 September 1959 under the name of SAS Walvisbaai. The ship was retired in March 2001 and sold to the Walt Disney Company in 2003 to be used as the R/V Belafonte in the Wes Anderson film The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou.[4] Subsequently, she was sold to a private owner for $350,000.[5] In 2006 she began a lengthy conversion into a yacht in Dubai that saw her engines replaced by a pair of 1750bhp V-12 Caterpillar 3512B diesel engines, her deck renewed and her interior completely revamped. The work was completed by 2012 and the ship was renamed Mojo.[6] [7]