Career (UK) | |
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Name: | HMS Gleaner |
Operator: | Royal Navy |
Builder: | VT Halmatic, Porchester |
Launched: | 18 October 1983 |
Sponsored by: | Mrs. M. Read |
Commissioned: | 5 December 1983 |
Homeport: | HMNB Devonport, Plymouth |
Motto: | Fruges consumere nati Latin: "Born to reap its reward" |
Status: | in active service, as of 2012[update] |
Badge: | |
General characteristics | |
Displacement: | 26 tonnes |
Length: | 14.8 m |
Beam: | 4.7 m |
Draught: | 1.6 m |
Propulsion: | 2 × Volvo Penta TAMD 122 P-A diesel engines |
Speed: | 14 knots |
Complement: | 8 |
HMSML Gleaner (H86) is the smallest commissioned vessel in the Royal Navy with a length of just under 15 meters and a ship's company of just 8 (2 officers and 6 ratings). Commanded by Lieutenant Commander John Winn, she is currently based in Devonport, Plymouth. The ship prefix "HMSML" stands for Her Majesty's Survey Motor Launch.
She is the sixth ship to bear the name Gleaner and was commissioned on 5 December 1983. With a top speed of 14 knots, Gleaner was designed to conduct inshore surveys along the south coast of England, though she has since surveyed all around the coastline of Great Britain and visited various ports in Europe.
As an advanced survey vessel, Gleaner possesses an array of sophisicated technology, including multibeam and sidescan SONAR to collect bathymetry and seabed texture data and compile an accurate and detailed picture of the seabed for later analysis. Her survey equipment also includes a TSS POSMv positioning system, C-NAV GPS, Kongsberg EM3002 Multibeam Echo Sounder and Kongsberg EA400 Singlebeam Echo Sounder.
Gleaner also has the unique distinction of being the only Royal Navy ship to have visited landlocked Switzerland, having travelled up the Rhine to Basle in 1988. [1]
She was also in attendance at the 2010 Portsmouth Navy Days. [2][3]
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