HMNZS Monowai (A06)

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Career (New Zealand) Naval flag of New Zealand Royal New Zealand Navy
Builder: Grangemouth Dockyard
Laid down: 1960
Acquired: 1975
Commissioned: 1977
Decommissioned: 1997
Status: scrapped 2002
General characteristics
Class and type: hydrographic survey vessel
Displacement: 3,900 tons full load
Length: 90.8/82.3 m (298/270 ft)
Beam: 14.1 m (46.2 ft)
Draught: 5.2 m (17.1 ft)
Propulsion:

twin 7 cylinder Clark Sultzer diesels

3,640 hp (2,694 kW)
Speed: 14 knots
Complement: 126
Armament: 2x20 mm Oerlikon (fitted 1980)
Aircraft carried: one Wasp helicopter (from 1982)

HMNZS Monowai (A06) was a hydrographic survey vessel of the Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN) from when she was commissioned in 1977 until 1997.

She had previously been the Zealand Government Island supply/passenger vessel GMV Moana Roa. She was acquired in 1975 and converted over a two year period to replace her predecessor HMNZS Lachlan.

During her naval service she was known as the "ghost of the coast" as she quietly remapped most of the New Zealand coastline including the Chatham, Cambell and Auckland Islands as well as the many sub-Antarctic islands in New Zealand's responsibility.

However Monowai's duties were not all hydrographic. She acted as a resupply vessel to Campbell and other sub-Antarctic island. She served as an "official residence" for VIPs and dignitaries at Pacific Island conferences. She monitored Chinese missile splashdown tests, stood by Fiji after military coups with a platoon of naval gunners to assist in possible NZ civilian evacuations, participated in the ANZCAN cable route survey and in international searches for sea mounts and shoals. She carried a helicopter and undertook rescue or aid missions, saving the lives of eight people during the New Zealand to Tonga Yacht Regatta.

Monowai was replaced in 1997 by HMNZS Resolution, formerly USNS Tenacious. She was sold to Scottish buyers in 1998. She was laid up at Lowestoft in England after being found unsuitable for her intended use until 2002 when she was finally sent to Spanish shipbreakers.

Monowai was the second of two ships with this name to serve in the Royal New Zealand Navy. She was named after the New Zealand glacial lake Monowai. Monowai is a Māori word meaning "channel full of water".

[edit] See also

Survey ships of the Royal New Zealand Navy

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  • McDougall, R J (1989) New Zealand Naval Vessels. Page 120-121. Government Printing Office. ISBN 9780477013994