EML Sulev (M312)

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EML Sulev M312
Career (GER) GER Ensign
Name: Lindau (M1072)
Operator: German Navy
Builder: Burmeister-Werft Bremen-Burg, Germany
Launched: 16 February 1957
Commissioned: 24 April 1958
Decommissioned: 19 October 2000
Fate: Sold to Estonia
Career (Estonia) Estonian Ensign
Name: EML Sulev (M312)
Operator: Estonian Navy
Acquired: December 2000
Motto: Certum Est
Badge:
General characteristics
Class and type: Lindau class minehunter
Displacement: 495 tons full
Length: 47.1 m
Beam: 8.3 m
Draught: 3.7 m
Propulsion: 2 shafts propulsors
diesel drives
2x1470 kW Maybach MD 871 um/1-D drives
5x70 kW diesel drives RHS 518 Dn 5
Speed: 16.5 knots
Range: 1360 km
Complement: 6 officers, 31 sailors
Crew: 37
Sensors and
processing systems:
Navigation radar
Hull-mounted DSQS-11 mine-detection sonar
Armament: 1x40mm/70 Bofors automatic cannon
2x 12.7 mm Browning MG gun
Notes: Mine counter measures equipment:
2 × ECA PAP 104 Mk.5 remotely controlled submarines (ROV) with explosives
contact-sweeper

EML Sulev (M312) is a Lindau-class minehunter of the Estonian Navy Mineships Division. The commanding officer of the vessel is Lieutenant Janek Naur.

Contents

[edit] Introduction

The minehunter Sulev is the second vessel of the Estonian Navy Mineships Division and also the second modernized Lindau class minehunter. A cross-bow is on the coat of arms of the vessel which was also a friend of Kalevipoeg Sulev's son weapon. The ships motto is in Latin "Certum Est" which means in English "Secure it is". The coat of arms was designed by Priit Herodes. In August 2001 on the 5th Kuressaare naval day a cooperation contract was signed between the Kuressaare city council and the minehunter Sulev which gave the vessel a right to wear the Kuressaare town coat of arms and to introduce the city in all foreign harbors across the world.

[edit] History

The Sulev (M312) was built in West-Germany, in a Burmester shipyard in Bremen. The vessel was launched on the 16 February 1957 and she entered service a year later on the 24 April 1958. She was to become the first German naval ship built since the end of the Second World War in Germany. The ships name comes from a city called Lindau in Germany and marks also the minehunter class name which has in total of 18 vessels. Originally Lindau was a minelayer but was transformed into a minehunter in late 1970s. The German Navy decommissioned Lindau and one of her twin sisters Cuxhaven on 9 October 2003 and gave the vessels to the Estonian Navy to operate. On the ceremony the vessel received an Estonian name Sulev.[1]

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