Tjeld class patrol boat
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Tjeld class patrol boat |
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Career | |
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Ordered: | 1958 |
Laid down: | 1958 |
Launched: | 1959-1966 |
Commissioned: | 1960-1966 |
General Characteristics | |
Length | 24,5 m (80‘4“) |
Beam | 7,5 m (24‘7“) |
Draft | 2,08 m (6‘10“) |
Displacement | 82 tons |
Propulsion | Twin Napier Deltic Turboblown diesel engines (Total 6200 HP) |
Complement | 18 men in Norwegian Navy |
Armament | One 40 mm Bofors gun One 20 mm Rheinmetall gun Four 21“ torpedotubes |
Speed | 45 knots |
Sensors | Radar |
The Tjeld class is a class of fast patrol boats (FPB) designed in Norway. They have been used as torpedo boats in Norway where this type of vessel was called MTB or motor torpedo boat (motortorpedobåt). The class is also known as the Nasty class.
The prototype Nasty was designed, built and tested during the fall of 1957. The Tjeld class was developed and introduced by Boat Services Ltd. A/S, Oslo, in close cooperation with experienced officers of the Royal Norwegian Navy, serving on Fast Patrol Boats during World War II. The Chief Designer was Naval Architect Jan Herman Linge. The Tjeld class vessels built in Norway were built at A/S Westermoen Båtbyggeri og Mek Verksted in Mandal.
Boats were sold to USA, Greece and West Germany.
Six vessels were built in the USA by John Trumpy and Sons [1] of Annapolis, Maryland (some parts, such as the keel and stem were imported).
The US Navy used them as PTF boats in the Vietnam War.
Contents |
[edit] Vessels
[edit] Royal Norwegian Navy
22 vessels built in Norway from 1959 to 1966. This list is of the ships in the order of launch whith the year of lauch, the year the ship left the Norwegian Navy's hands and any other information about the fate of the ship.
All the vessels are named after birds or fish (and three sea mammals). Some of the boats were renamed as the bird names were going to be used for the Hauk class patrol boat. The boats took over the names of other Tjeld class vessels which were sold in 1981.
- HNoMS Tjeld (1959-1992) Renamed Sel. Transferred to Naval Reserve and used by Sea Home Guard. Sold for scrapping 1992.
- HNoMS Skarv (1959-1981) Sold to Stapletask Ltd, Sittingbourne, Kent, England.
- HNoMS Teist (1960-1981) Sold to Stapletask Ltd, Sittingbourne, Kent, England.
- HNoMS Jo (1960-1981) Sold to Stapletask Ltd, Sittingbourne, Kent, England.
- HNoMS Lom (1961-1981) Sold to Stapletask Ltd, Sittingbourne, Kent, England.
- HNoMS Stegg (1961-1992) Renamed Hval. Transferred to Naval Reserve and used by Sea Home Guard. Sold for scrapping 1992.
- HNoMS Hauk (1961-1992) Renamed Laks. Transferred to Naval Reserve and used by Sea Home Guard. Sold for scrapping 1992.
- HNoMS Falk (1961-1981) Sold to Stapletask Ltd, Sittingbourne, Kent, England.
- HNoMS Ravn (1961-1992) Renamed Knurr. Transferred to Naval Reserve and used by Sea Home Guard. Sold for scrapping 1992.
- HNoMS Gribb (1961-?) Renamed Delfin. Transferred to Naval Reserve and used by Sea Home Guard. Was planned to be preserved by Kværner Mandal A/S, but later sold for scrapping.
- HNoMS Geir (1962-1981) Sold to Stapletask Ltd, Sittingbourne, Kent, England.
- HNoMS Erle (1962-1981) Sold to Stapletask Ltd, Sittingbourne, Kent, England.
- HNoMS Sel (1963-1981) Sold to Stapletask Ltd, Sittingbourne, Kent, England.
- HNoMS Hval (1964-1981) Sold to Stapletask Ltd, Sittingbourne, Kent, England.
- HNoMS Laks (1964-1981) Sold to Stapletask Ltd, Sittingbourne, Kent, England.
- HNoMS Hai (1964-?) Transferred to Naval Reserve and used by Sea Home Guard. Plans are currently underway for Hai to be preserved as a museum ship in Fredrikstad.
- HNoMS Knurr (1964-1981) Sold to Stapletask Ltd, Sittingbourne, Kent, England.
- HNoMS Lyr (1965-1992) Transferred to Naval Reserve and used by Sea Home Guard. Sold for scrapping 1992.
- HNoMS Skrei (1965-?) Transferred to Naval Reserve and used by Sea Home Guard. Transferred to the Royal Norwegian Navy Museum and preserved as a museum ship.
- HNoMS Delfin (1966-1984) Given to Friends of the Shetland bus as a preservation project, but the project failed and the ship was given to a private person.
[edit] US Navy
14 vessels built in Norway and sold to USA. Six vessels built on licence in USA. This list contains the names of the vessels, first year of service in the US Navy, the year they left US Navy hands and any other informtion concerning their fate.
- USS PTF 1 Not a Tjeld class?
- USS PTF 2 Not a Tjeld class?
- USS PTF 3 (1963-?) Currently under restoration in USA.
- USS PTF 4 (1963-1965)
- USS PTF 5 (1963-?)
- USS PTF 6 (1963-?)
- USS PTF 7 (1963-?)
- USS PTF 8 (1963-?)
- USS PTF 9
- USS PTF 10 (1965-?)
- USS PTF 11 (1965-?)
- USS PTF 12 (1965-?)
- USS PTF 13 (1965-?)
- USS PTF 14 (1965-1966)
- USS PTF 15 (?-1966)
- USS PTF 16 (?-1966)
- USS PTF 17 (1968-?) Built in USA.
- USS PTF 18 (1968-?) Built in USA.
- USS PTF 19 (1968-?) Built in USA.
- USS PTF 20 (1968-?) Built in USA.
- USS PTF 21 (1970-?) Built in USA.
- [USS PTF 22] (1970-?) Built in USA.
[edit] Hellenic Navy
Six vessels made in Norway and sold to Greece.
- HS Andromeda (P196)
- HS Kiknos (P198)
- HS Pigasos (P199)
- HS Toxotis (P228)
[edit] German Navy
Two vessels made in Norway and sold to the German Navy. They were called Schnellboot Typ 152 Klasse Nasty in Germany. These were later transferred to the Turkish Navy as war reparations.
[edit] Turkish Navy
[edit] External links
Royal Norwegian Navy patrol boat classes | ||||||||||||||||
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