HMS Llandaff (F61)

Career (UK)
Name: HMS Llandaff (F61)
Ordered: 28 June 1951
Builder: Hawthorn Leslie and Company
Laid down: 27 August 1953
Launched: 30 November 1955
Commissioned: 11 April 1958
Fate: Transferred to the Bangladeshi Navy 10 December 1976 as the Umar Farooq
General characteristics
Class and type: Salisbury-class frigate
Displacement: 2,170 tons standard
2,400 tons full load
Length: 340 ft (100 m) o/a
Beam: 40 ft (12 m)
Draught: 15 ft 6 in (4.72 m)
Propulsion: 8 × ASR1 diesels, 12,400 shp, 2 shafts
Speed: 24 kn (44 km/h)
Range: 7,500 nmi (13,900 km) at 16 kn (30 km/h)
Complement: 235
Sensors and
processing systems:
Type 960 air search radar, later Type 965 AKE-2
Type 293Q target indication radar, later Type 993n
Type 982 aircraft direction radar, laterType 986
Type 277Q height finding radar, later Type 278
Type 974 navigation radarlater Type 978
Type 285 fire control radar on director Mark 6M
Type 262 fire control on STAAG mount
Type 1010 Cossor Mark 10 IFF
Type 174 search sonar
Type 170 attack sonar
Armament: 1 × twin 4.5 in gun Mark 6
1 × twin 40 mm Bofors gun STAAG Mark 2, later 1 × twin 40 mm Bofors gun Mk.5
1 × Squid A/S mortar

HMS Llandaff (F61) was a Salisbury-class or Type 61 aircraft direction frigate of the British Royal Navy, named for the district of Llandaff in Cardiff, Wales.

She was built by Hawthorn Leslie and Company at Hebburn on the River Tyne, launched in 1955 and completed in 1958, when she was the first ship to be trained by the newly established Flag Officer Sea Training organisation at Portland.[1]

The Llandaff transferred to the Bangladeshi Navy at Royal Albert Dock, London 10 December 1976 as the Umar Farooq. She is still in active service as of December 2010. She was convered into a training ship where under training officers and sailors get sea time. During long refit female officers gun room and heads were made so that female under training can also be trained. In Bangladesh Navy she took flag showing and training visits abroad mentionable among them are the good will visit to India, Pakistan and Maldives in 1989,participation in Korean International Fleet Review in 1998, etc. With other 3 frigates she forms the 7th Frigate Squadron and stationed in Chittagong, Bangladesh. [1]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Deccan Chronicle, Bangladesh Navy ship docks in city, 19 December 2010