HMS Avenger (F185)

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NameHMS Avenger
Laid down30 October 1974
Launched20 November 1975
PNS Tippu Sultan, former HMS Avenger
History
United Kingdom
NameHMS Avenger
BuilderYarrow Shipbuilders
Laid down30 October 1974
Launched20 November 1975
Commissioned15 April 1978
Decommissioned23 September 1994
Home portHMNB Devonport
IdentificationPennant number: F185
Honours and
awards
Falkland Islands 1982
FateSold to Pakistan on 23 September 1994
Pakistan
NamePNS Tippu Sultan
Acquired23 September 1994
IdentificationPennant number: D185
FateExpended as a target 27 April 2020
General characteristics
Class & typeType 21 frigate
Displacement3,250 tons full load
Length384 ft (117 m)
Beam41 ft 9 in (12.73 m)
Draught19 ft 6 in (5.94 m)
Propulsion
Speed32 knots (59 km/h; 37 mph) official, 37 knots achievable on bursts
Range4,000 nmi (7,400 km; 4,600 mi) at 17 knots (31 km/h; 20 mph)
Complement177
Armament
Aircraft carried1 × Westland Wasp helicopter, later refitted for 1 × Alouette III and 1 × Westland Lynx

HMS Avenger was a Type 21 frigate of the Royal Navy. Built by Yarrow Shipbuilders Ltd, Glasgow, Scotland, she was completed with Exocet launchers in 'B' position.

En route to the Falklands with the Bristol Group

In 1981, following the appointment of Captain Hugo White, Avenger became leader of the 4th Frigate Squadron. She was a late arrival to the Falklands War, departing the United Kingdom on 10 May 1982 and arriving on 25 May. This was the fastest transit achieved by any vessel involved in the conflict, covering the distance in 14 days.[1] The Rolls-Royce Olympus turbines fitted to Type 21 frigates enabled them to maintain high speeds, although this capability was not widely publicised at the time. Avenger averaged 28 knots, and the Type 21 class subsequently became informally known as the "Boy Racers".[2]

During the campaign Captain White commanded Avenger, which on 30 May 1982 survived an Exocet missile attack aimed at the carrier HMS Invincible (R05). Her divers recovered a 20 mm Oerlikon gun from the wreck of HMS Antelope, which was remounted to augment her anti-aircraft capability and became known on board as "Antelope's Avenger".[3] On 11 June she provided naval gunfire support around Port Stanley. During this action she struck a house being used as a civilian shelter, resulting in the deaths of three Falkland Islander women and injuries to several others. They were the only British civilian casualties of the Falklands War.[4][5]

During the Falklands deployment, an alarming crack in the ship's hull progressively worsened with the stormy South Atlantic weather. On return to UK, she was taken in for refitting, with a steel plate being welded down each side of the ship to eliminate the problem. At the same time modifications were made to reduce hull noise.

On 4 May 1983, HMS Avenger, and sister ship HMS Ambuscade, were on the Royal Navy 'Armilla' patrol, a permanent presence in the Persian Gulf during the 1980s and 1990s. The Avenger's commanding officer, Captain Peter Woodhead, was returning from a visit ashore in the ships Westland Lynx, (registration XZ249) when it suffered a tail rotor control failure and, nose down, plunged into the sea off Muscat, Oman.[6] The Lynx helicopter never resurfaced from its entry into the sea and for a short time there was no sign of the aircrew or ship's captain.[7] As HMS Avenger approached the crash sight the crew observed some green clothed bodies breaking the surface on the water. When it was suggested to the Captain that a Westland Lynx helicopter from the Royal Army of Oman would be taking him and the other three crew members to the nearest hospital in Oman, he informed the medics "there is no fucking way I am getting into that helicopter".[8] Captain Woodhead and the three other crew members survived the incident, with Woodhead sustaining a non-life changing injury to his back.[9]

After the war she remained leader of the 4th Frigate Squadron until 1986.

Pakistan Navy service

Notes

Publications

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