St. Laurent class destroyer

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Class overview
Name: St. Laurent
Builders: Canadian Vickers, Burrard Yarrows, Halifax Shipyards, Marine Industries
Operators: Naval flag of Canada Canadian Forces Maritime Command
Canadian Blue Ensign Royal Canadian Navy
Preceded by: Prestonian-class ASW frigate FFE
Succeeded by: Restigouche-class destroyer escort DDE
In commission: 29 Oct 1955 - 5 Oct 1994
Planned: 14
Completed: 7
Lost: 2
Preserved: 1
General characteristics
Type: Destroyer Escort
Displacement:

As DDE: 2263 tons (normal), 2800 tons (deep load)[1]

As DDH:

2260 tons (normal), 3051 tons (deep load)[2]
Length: 371 feet (113.1 m)
Beam: 42 feet (12.8 m)
Draught:

As DDE: 13 feet (4.0 m)[3]

As DDH:14 feet (4.3 m)[4]
Propulsion: 2-shaft English-Electric geared steam turbines, 3 Babcock and Wilcox boilers 30,000 shp
Speed: 28.5 knots (52.8 km/h)[5]
Range: 4,750 nautical miles (8,797.0 km) at 14 knots (25.9 km/h)[6]
Complement:

As DDE: 249

As DDH: 213 plus 20 aircrew
Sensors and
processing systems:

As DDE:

  • 1 x SPS-12 air search radar
  • 1 x SPS-10B surface search radar
  • 1 x Sperry Mk.2 navigation radar
  • 1 x SQS-10 or -11 hull mounted active search and attack sonar
  • 1 x SQS-501 (Type 162) high frequency bottom profiling sonar
  • 1 x SQS-502 (Type 170) high frequency Limbo mortar control sonar
  • 1 x UQC-1B "Gertrude" underwater telephone
  • 1 x GUNAR (Mk.64 GFCS with 2 on-mount SPG-48 directors)

As DDH:

  • 1 x SPS-12 air search radar
  • 1 x SPS-10B surface search radar
  • 1 x Sperry Mk.2 navigation radar
  • 1 x URN 20 TACAN radar
  • 1 x SQS-10 or -11 hull mounted active search and attack sonar
  • 1 x SQS-501 (Type 162) high frequency bottom profiling sonar
  • 1 x SQS-502 (Type 170) high frequency Limbo mortar control sonar
  • 1 x SQS-504 VDS, medium frequency active search (except 233 after 1986)
  • 1 x UQC-1B "Gertrude" underwater telephone
  • 1 x GUNAR (Mk.64 GFCS with 1 on-mount SPG-48 director)
Electronic warfare
and decoys:

As DDE:

  • 1 x DAU HF/DF (high frequency direction finder)

As DDH:

  • 1 x WLR 1C radar warning
  • 1 x UPD 501 radar detection
  • 1 x SRD 501 HF/DF
Armament:

As DDE:

  • 2 x 3"/50 Mk.33 FMC twin mounts guns
  • 2 x 40mm "Boffin" single mount guns
  • 2 x Mk NC 10 Limbo ASW mortars
  • 2 x single Mk.2 "K-gun" launchers with homing torpedoes

As DDH:

  • 1 x 3"/50 Mk.33 FMC twin mount gun
  • 1 x Mk NC 10 Limbo ASW mortar
  • 2 x triple Mk.32 12.75 inch launchers firing Mk.44 or Mk.46 Mod 5 torpedoes
Aircraft carried:

As DDE:

none

As DDH:

Aviation facilities:

As DDE:

none

As DDH:

  • 1 x midships helicopter deck with Beartrap and hangar
Notes: Ships in class include: HMCS St. Laurent (DDH 205),HMCS Saguenay (DDH 206),HMCS Skeena (DDH 207),HMCS Ottawa (DDH 229),HMCS Margaree (DDH 230),HMCS Fraser (DDH 233),HMCS Assiniboine (DDH 234)


The St. Laurent class destroyer was a class of destroyers that served the Royal Canadian Navy and later the Canadian Forces from the mid-1950s to the mid-1990s.

This was the first major class of warship designed and built in Canada. They were similar to the British Type 12 Whitby class frigate, but used more American equipment than British. There were seven ships of the class commissioned between 1955 and 1957.

They were originally intended as destroyer escorts (DDE) but were later refitted and reclassed as destroyer helicopter escorts (DDH).

Contents

[edit] Construction

The need for the St. Laurent class came about in 1949 when Canada joined NATO and the Cold War was in its infancy. The RCN was assigned responsibility for anti-submarine warfare and controlling sea space in the western North Atlantic.

Design work for a new class of destroyer escorts began that year with the original completion date slated for 1955. They were designed by Montreal naval architects German and Milne "under the direction of a senior constructor, Rowland Baker, seconded from the [British] Director of Naval Construction... Baker produced a design basically similar to the Whitby [Type 12], but incorporating several ideas of his own....To flatter Canadian susceptibilities, Baker was careful to make the appearance as different as possible from the Whitby, but the ship that resulted was virtually a Type 12 specification (albeit with a different hull form) translated by a different design team."[7]

The St Laurent class were "built to an operational requirement much like that which produced the British Type 12, and powered by the same machinery plant, she was strikingly different. The rounded deck-edge forward was adopted to prevent ice forming."[8] She was designed to operate in harsh Canadian conditions. They were built to counter nuclear, biological and chemical attack conditions, which lead to a design with a rounded hull, a continuous main deck, and the addition of a prewetting system to wash away contaminants. The living spaces on the ship were part of a "citadel" which could be sealed off from contamination for the crew safety. The ships were sometimes referred to as "Cadillacs" for their relatively luxurious crew compartments.

Other innovative features not found on other ships of its time included an operations room separate from the bridge, from which the captain could command the ship while in combat, 12 separate internal telephone systems, air conditioning, and the latest advances in radar and sonar technology.

The St. Laurent class originally called for 14 vessels to be commissioned no later than 1955, however changing design specifications due to the rapidly changing Cold War naval environment, as well as Canada's wartime priorities during the Korean War saw only the first 7 completed by 1957. The remaining 7 vessels were built as the follow-on Restigouche-class to incorporate advancements in naval warship design in the preceding years.[9]

[edit] Armament

The St. Laurent class was fitted with twin 3 inch .50 calibre guns for engaging both surface and air targets. Her anti-submarine armament consisted of a pair of triple barrelled Limbo ASW mortars in a stern well. The stern well had a roller top to close it off from following seas. "As in the the case of the Type 12, the design included provision for long-range homing torpedoes (in this case BIDDER [Mk 20E] or the US Mark 35. They were never fitted however."[10]

[edit] Machinery

The vessels of the St. Laurent class had two Babcock & Wilcox water tube boilers installed[11] providing 600 PSI (4.1 MPa, 42 kgf/cm²) at 850 °F (454.4 °C)[12].

The steam produced by these boilers was directed at two geared steam turbines which powered two shafts, providing 30,000 HP (22 MW) to drive the ship at a maximum speed of 28.5 knots (52.8 km/h).[13] By the early 1990s, the quoted maximum speed was only 27 kt.[14]

"Propelling machinery is of British design. Yarrow & Co Ltd, Scotstoun, Glasgow, received an order from Canadian Vickers for the supply of a complete set of machinery for the St. Laurent, the other ships being supplied with machinery manufactured in Canada. The main turbines and machinery are of English Electric design."[15]

[edit] DDH conversion

The RCN acquired a fleet of 41 CH-124 Sea King anti-submarine warfare helicopters in 1963. At this time it was decided to refit and reclass the St. Laurent vessels from Destroyer Escort (DDE) to Destroyer Helicopter (DDH).

"The 3-inch, 50 calibre anti-aircraft twin gun mountings were originally installed without shields , but gun shields have now [1963] been fitted. The gun housings are of fibre glass."[16] In advance of modifying the St. Laurent vessels, the RCN had experimented with operating helicopters from small warships when it modified the Prestonian-class frigate HMCS Buckingham (FFE 314) in 1957 "with a pre-fabricated helicopter platform fitted above the quarter deck, for ASW helicopter reconnaissance and to test the feasibility of operating helicopters from anti-submarines escort vessels of this size." [17] "Trials were successfully carried out, using a Sikorsky HO4S-3 helicopter."[18] "The deck was subsequently removed and installed in the new destroyer escort HMCS Ottawa (DDE 229)" [19] The prefabricated helicopter platform "was fitted over the after well in Ottawa in August 1957 to test the feasibility of operating helicopters from anti-submarines escort vessels of this class; but this experimental flight apron was subsequently removed."[20] "Further trials were conducted, using an RCAF Sikorsky S-58. On the basis of the trials, the concept of operating helicopters from destroyers was recommended and received approval in principle."[21] "Two things were needed. One was a helicopter capable of all-weather day and night operation (the HO4S-3 was not). The other was a system for handling and securing a helicopter on a small flight deck in rough seas." "The former was found, in the 9.5 ton Sikorsky CHSS-2 Sea King. The landing-handling problem was solved by the beartrap." "During the trials, it was found that landing was not so much a problem as was the handling of the helicopter after it had landed. Manhandling was neither quick enough nor certain enough to establish the measure of control necessary to ensure that, in certain circumstances, the helicopter will not take charge, and go over the side." "The Navy went to the drawing boards and came up with a scheme that promised to make the concept practicable. Conceived by the RCN, the haul-down and beartrap system was engineered by Fairey Aviation, Dartmouth, N.S. A prototype was designed and built by Fairey, under RCN supervision, and was installed in HMCS Assiniboine during her 1962-63 conversion" (see below). "Trials with a newly-acquired Sea King began late in 1963. By mid-1964 the daytime trials were completed and pronounced successful. Using the new system, no manhandling was needed to get the helicopter on the deck and in or out of the hangar. The helicopter was solidly secured on landing and remained so until the next take-off." "In conjunction with the helicopter carrying features and hangar facilities, roll-damping fins were added to the destroyers being so built or converted. These fins reduce the roll of the ship and aid landing and take-off operations during rough weather."[22]

With the advent of the nuclear submarine, it became apparent that the ships needed to be further upgraded.[23] all seven ships of the St Laurent class were fitted with helicopter platforms and SQS 504 Variable Depth Sonar (VDS).

The St Laurent was fitted with VDS late in 1961, platform to be added later. When ships were fitted with the helicopter platform, the single funnel was altered to twin stepped funnels to permit the forward extension of the helicopter hangar.[24] Stabilizing systems were added to allow for helicopter recovery in any sea conditions, and a single CH-124 Sea King was carried.[25] To make room for the helicopter deck, the rear 3 inch gun mounting and one of the Limbos were removed.[26]

Assinibione was the first vessel in the class to receive the full upgrade, re-commissioning as a DDH on 28 June 1963.[27]

[edit] DELEX program

In the late 1970s, under the Destroyer Life Extension (DELEX) program was commissioned to upgrade ten of the St. Laurent and Restigouche-class ships with new electronics, machinery, and hull upgrades and repairs. The intent of DELEX was to extend the life of these ships for another 15 years of service while the Halifax-class frigates were being designed and built as part of the Canadian Patrol Frigate Program.

DELEX included the installation of a Naval Tactical Data System (NTDS) known as the Automatic Data Link Plotting System (ADLIPS), as well as the Canadian Electronic Warfare System (CANEWS), and a new communication suite.

The DELEX program was very successful as it allowed older ships to participate in a modern electronic battle field using tactical data links between ships and aircraft.

[edit] Ships

Note that pennant numbers were originally prefixed DDE but were changed to DDH in the early 1960s[28][29][30].

Royal Canadian Navy - St. Laurent class - Canadian Forces Maritime Command
Ship Original Pennant Number Builder Laid Down Launched Commiss-
ioned
Refits Completed Paid Off Fate
DDH DELEX
HMCS St. Laurent (DDH 205) DDE 205 Canadian Vickers, Montreal 22 Nov 1950 30 Nov 1951 29 Oct 1955 4 Oct 1963 Never 14 Jun 1974 Sold 1979. St. Laurent was being towed to breakers in Texas when she foundered and sank off Cape Hatteras on 12 Jan 1980.
HMCS Saguenay (DDH 206) DDE 206 Halifax Shipyards, Halifax 4 Apr 1951 30 Jul 1953 15 Dec 1956 14 May 1965 23 May 1980 26 Jun 1990 Sold 1990. Scuttled as an artificial reef off Lunenburg, Nova Scotia.
HMCS Skeena (DDH 207) DDE 207 Burrard Yarrows, Vancouver 1 Jun 1951 19 Aug 1952 30 Mar 1957 14 Aug 1965 20 Nov 1981 1 Nov 1993 For disposal 1994. Sold for scrap 1996.
HMCS Ottawa (DDH 229) DDE 229 Canadian Vickers, Montreal 8 Jun 1951 29 Apr 1953 10 Nov 1956 21 Oct 1964 26 Nov 1982 31 Jul 1992 Sold 1992; scrapped 1994.
HMCS Margaree (DDH 230) DDE 230 Halifax Shipyards, Halifax 12 Sep 1951 29 Mar 1956 5 Oct 1957 15 Oct 1965 28 Nov 1980 2 May 1992 Scrapped 1994.
HMCS Fraser (DDH 233) DDE 233 Burrard Yarrows, Vancouver and Esquimalt 11 Dec 1951 19 Feb 1953 28 Jun 1957 22 Oct 1966 28 May 1982 5 Oct 1994 For disposal 1994; laid up in Bridgewater, Nova Scotia.
HMCS Assiniboine (DDH 234) DDE 234 Marine Industries, Sorel 19 May 1952 12 Feb 1954 16 Aug 1956 28 Jun 1963 16 Nov 1979 14 Dec 1988 Harbour training ship at Halifax 1989. Scrapped 1995.

Note:

  • The first ship of the class, HMCS St. Laurent (DDE 205) was paid off in the early 1970s, and it was decided to sell her for scrap instead of undergo the DELEX program.

[edit] References

  1. ^ These were "officially revised figures" quoted in Janes Fighting Ships 1963-64
    Conways says 2000 tons standard displacement, 2600 deep load.
    Combat Fleets of the World 1978-79 says 2390 tons displacement, 2900 full load.
  2. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1992-93, p84.
  3. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1963-64
  4. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1992-93, p84.
  5. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1963-64
  6. ^ Combat Fleets of the World 1978-79
  7. ^ Conways, p44.
  8. ^ Friedman, The Postwar Naval Revolution p161.
  9. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1963-64, p35
  10. ^ Friedman, The Postwar Naval Revolution p.161
  11. ^ Canadian Navy of Yesterday & Today: St. Laurent class destroyer escort
  12. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1992-93
  13. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1963-64, p35
  14. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1992-93
  15. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1963-64, p35
  16. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1963-64 shows photographs of Skeena and Assiniboine with these taken in 1962 and 1963 respectively.
  17. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1963-64 p37.
  18. ^ Crowsnest Magazine - Vol 17, Nos 3 and 4 March-April 1965
  19. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1963-64 p37.
  20. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1963-64 p35.
  21. ^ Crowsnest Magazine - Vol 17, Nos 3 and 4 March-April 1965
  22. ^ Crowsnest Magazine - Vol 17, Nos 3 and 4 March-April 1965
  23. ^ Canadian Navy of Yesterday & Today: St. Laurent class destroyer escort
  24. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1963-64 p35.
  25. ^ Canadian Navy of Yesterday & Today: St. Laurent class destroyer escort
  26. ^ Canadian Navy of Yesterday & Today: St. Laurent class destroyer escort
  27. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1963-64 p35.
  28. ^ Janes Fighting Ships 1963-64
  29. ^ Conways, Janes Fighting Ships 1963-64
  30. ^ Canadian Navy of Yesterday & Today: St. Laurent class destroyer escort