Type 15 frigate

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The Type 15 frigate was a class of British anti-submarine frigates of the Royal Navy. They were conversions based on the hulls of World War II-era destroyers built to the standard War Emergency Programme "utility" design.

History

By 1945 the wartime "utility" vessels were obsolescent as destroyers due to their relatively small size and makeshift armament. Future construction would be based on ever larger vessels, such as the Template:Sclass2 and Template:Sclass. Rapid advances in German U-boat technology with the Template:Convert Type XXI and Template:Convert Type XXVI rendered even some of the most modern Royal Navy escorts obsolete. This technology was being put into production by the Soviet Navy in the form of the Template:Sclass2. The Royal Navy began designing and constructing new fast anti-submarine frigates of the Type 12 and Type 14 design to counter this threat. However, it would be some time before these vessels could be brought into service and budget constraints limited the number of new hulls that could be constructed.

The solution to the problem lay in the 47 War Emergency Programme destroyers that remained in Royal Navy service, most of which were only a few years old and had seen little active service. Accordingly, plans were drawn up to convert these vessels into fast anti-submarine frigates incorporating as many lessons learned during wartime experience as possible. Ultimately, 23 of the utility destroyers were fully converted into Type 15 first-rate anti-submarine frigates, and a further ten were given limited conversions, and designated Type 16 frigates.

The US Navy followed suit in 1960–65, with the "FRAM" program, by which Template:Sclass, Template:Sclass and Template:Sclasss were progressively upgraded, pending the arrival of new Template:Sclasss and Template:Sclasss in 1969.

Conversion

File:Troubridge 1969.jpg
Late-conversion Template:HMS with the revised bridge.

The superstructure had a low profile to limit the effects of blast from nuclear explosions. The forward superstructure extended across the ship, with the front curved and reinforced to resist the impact of waves at 25 knots in rough weather. The forecastle was extended aft to provide additional internal volume. The bridge was at forecastle deck level. The operations room was behind and slightly below the bridge to provide sight from the bridge's rear windows. The ship's wheel and radio room were underneath as their was no room at forecastle deck level.Template:Sfn

The ship was designed to be fought while sealed against CBRN effects; a periscope for the captain and plastic bubbles for lookouts were included. Command and control was supposed to be from the operations rooms instead of from the bridge. In practice, an experienced officer had to be on the bridge for safety, particularly when manoeuvring at high-speed with nearby ships.Template:Sfn The last ships raised the bridge one level to improve ship handling; the Bofor guns were moved to the front of the superstructure to accommodate the new bridge location.Template:Sfn

All of the minor transverse bulkheads were new additions.Template:Sfn

Diesel power generation capacity was increased from 100 kW to 350 kW; capacity was limited by volume in the machinery spaces for survivability. Fuel capacity was reduced by the new 4 inch magazine, but estimated range exceeded requirements. Agouti propeller silencing was added, which increased ship life by up to 25 years.Template:Sfn

The radars were the target indicating Type 293Q and surface search Type 277Q. The Type 170 and 172 sonars were fitted.Template:Sfn

A twin 4-inch gun was mounted aft; on the forecastle it would be too wet and block the bridge's view. The heavy steam plant prevented the use of the twin 4.5 inch gun. The twin Bofors was initially placed on top of the bridge. Fire control was "austere"; there was a Close Range Blind-Fire director for the 4-inch guns and a Simple Tachymetric Director for the Bofors. The Bofors' optical and radar directors were amalgamated to provide space and weight for the Type 277Q.Template:Sfn

The ships were initially fitted with Squid ASW mortars;Template:Sfn not all may have had Squid replaced by the intended two Limbos.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". The original concept was for three fixed torpedo tubes on each side with twelve torpedoes; by 1949, larger ASW torpedoes reduced this to two tubes on each side with eight reloads, and then to eight tubes without reloads between the 4-inch gun and the funnel. The intended torpedoes did not materialize and the torpedoes were deleted in 1953. Only Template:HMS was fitted with the tubes for trials.Template:Sfn

Template:HMS performed trials with an aft flight deck and a Fairey Ultra-light Helicopter after completing a refit in December 1956. Template:HMS performed the first direction of a helicopter - a Saunders Roe P531 - using sensor data in late-1959.Template:Sfn

Ships

In 1949-1950, there were 27 conversions planned between 1949 to 1957. When the Korean War started, this changed to 24, to be completed by 1954. By mid-1951, 22 conversions were planned.Template:Sfn Another ship was later added; it was originally to be converted into a Type 16 frigate.Template:Sfn The navy's 1954 internal strategy review resulted in a recommendation to cancel six conversions due to obsolescence.Template:Sfn The programme encountered delays and the conversion of the 23 ships was completed in 1956.Template:Sfn

Name Pennant Converted Fate
R class conversion
Template:HMS F138 Alex Stephens & Sons, Glasgow, 1952–1953 Sunk as target, 1981
Template:HMS F185 Royal Dockyard, Portsmouth, 1949–1951 Broken up, 1971
Template:HMS F193 Royal Dockyard, Devonport, 1949–1951 Broken up, 1967
Template:HMS F195 Royal Dockyard, Devonport, 1952–1953 Broken up, 1968
T class conversion
Template:HMS F09 Royal Dockyard, Portsmouth / J. Samuel White, Cowes, 1955–1957 Broken up, 1970
U and V class conversion
Template:HMS F197 Royal Dockyard, Chatham, 1953–1954 Paid off 1974. Broken up 1983
Template:HMS F83 Royal Dockyard, Chatham, 1953–1956 Training hulk, 1977. Broken up 1981
Template:HMS F17 Royal Dockyard, Devonport, 1952–1953 Broken up, 1970
Template:HMS F53 J. Samuel White, Cowes, 1953–1954 Sunk as Exocet missile- and Tigerfish torpedo-target in 1978
Template:HMS F141 J. I. Thornycroft, Woolston, Hampshire, 1954 Broken up, 1965
Template:HMS F08 Harland & Wolff, Liverpool, 1953–1954 Broken up, 1971
Template:HMS F196 Barclay Curle, Glasgow, 1952–1954 Scrapped 1966 to repair HMS Ulster
Template:HMS F200 Palmers Shipbuilding, Jarrow, 1953–1954 Scrapped 1967
Template:HMS F50 Royal Dockyard, Devonport, 1952–1954 Scrapped 1972
Template:HMS F29 Royal Dockyard, Portsmouth, 1952 Scrapped 1972
Template:HMS F93 J. I. Thornycroft, Woolston, 1951–1952 Scrapped 1965
Template:HMS F76 J. Samuel White, Cowes, 1951–1952 Scrapped 1972
Template:HMS F41 Royal Dockyard, Chatham, 1952–1953 Sold for scrap 28 October 1972
W and Z class conversion
Template:HMS F159 Scotts Shipbuilders, Greenock, 1952–1953 Used as radar training ship and for satellite communications trials. Scrapped 1971
Template:HMS F187 Palmers Shipbuilding, Jarrow, 1953–1954 Paid off 1974. Foundered while in use as a target ship in 1974.
Template:HMS F72 Royal Dockyard, Devonport, 1954 Broken up 1967
Template:HMS F157 Harland & Wolff, Belfast, 1951–1952 Sold to South African Navy as Script error: No such module "WPSHIPS utilities".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". 1957, sunk as target 1976
Template:HMS F102 Royal Dockyard, Chatham, 1954–1956 Broken up, 1970

Type 15s in film and models

HMS Wakeful and HMS Troubridge were both used in the filming of the 1965 cold-war drama The Bedford Incident, to depict the fictional "USS Bedford". The main exterior shots used a large model of a US Template:Sclass, but WakefulTemplate:'s Type 15 outline and F159 pennant number are clearly visible in the opening sequence, when Sidney Poitier arrives in a Whirlwind helicopter. Many of the interior shots were filmed in Troubridge, and British military equipment, including a rack of Lee–Enfield rifles and TroubridgeTemplate:'s novel forward-sloping bridge windows, can be seen.

In 1959 Triang Minic Ships produced a series of 1:1200 (one inch to 100 feet) metal models of Type 15 frigates, carrying the names Vigilant, Venus, Virago and Volage; the first two have open bridges, while the others' are closed. These toys were mass-produced in large numbers between 1959 and 1965, and did much to raise awareness of the post-war navy for the younger generation. At the same time the Frog (models) company produced an accurate plastic model kit of HMS Undine to a scale of 1:500. The moulds for this were sold to Russia in 1976, and it has been re-issued under the "Novo" trademark on several occasions. More recently, Uk company MT Miniatures has produced a 1:700th scale model of HMS Relentless in resin, white metal, and photo-etched brass.

See also

File:HMCS Crescent (DDE 226) underway in 1958.jpg
Canadian type 15 conversion Template:HMCS.

References

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Sources

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Further reading

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  • "Royal Navy Frigates 1945-1983" Leo Marriott, Ian Allan, 1983, Template:ISBN
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