Kedah-class offshore patrol vessel

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Class overview
Builders: Blohm + Voss/HDW, German Naval Group (GNG) and Boustead Naval Shipyard (Formerly PCS-ND)
Operators:  Royal Malaysian Navy
Completed: 6
Active: 6
General characteristics
Type: MEKO 100 RMN
Displacement: 1,850 tons full load
Length: 91.1 metres
Beam: 12.85 metres
Draught: 3.4 metres
Propulsion: Main Propulsion: 2x Caterpillar 3616 (5450kW) diesel, 16000 bhp, 2 shafts, 2 controllable pitch propellers, CAE Integrated Platform Management System
Speed: 22+ kts
Range: 6050nm@12 knots
Endurance: 21 days
Complement: 78 (accom. for 98)
Sensors and
processing systems:

Combat System: Atlas Elektronik COSYS-110 M1/ARGOS
Search radar:EADS TRS-3D/ 16ES
Fire control radars:Oerlikon Contraves TMX/EO X-band with electro-optic fire director
Thermal Imager: Rheinmetall TMEO
Sonar: L-3 ELAC Nautik NDS-3060 Obstacle Avoidance sonar

IFF System: Aeromaritime
Electronic warfare
& decoys:

ESM: Thales Sceptre-X

Decoy: Sippican ALEX/SRBOC chaff / decoy launching system
Armament:

Guns :

  • 1 x 76mm 62cal OTO Melara Rapid DP
  • 1 x Oto Melara / Mauser 30mm short-range gun
  • 2 x 12.7 Machine Guns
Aircraft carried: 1 x Super Lynx 300
Aviation facilities: Stern hangar
Helicopter landing platform

The Kedah class is a class of offshore patrol vessels, also referred to as New Generation Patrol Vessels, of the Royal Malaysian Navy. The class is named after the lead ship of the class, KD Kedah. The Kedah class is based on the MEKO 100 design by Blohm + Voss. A total of 27 ships were planned; however, due to programme delays and overruns, only six were ordered.

History

In the 1990s the Royal Malaysian Navy (RMN) identified the need to replace the 30-year-old Vosper Thornycroft-built patrol boats then in use. After receiving approval from Malaysian Government, the RMN ran a competition for the design of the new class of patrol ships in 1996. The competition field was narrowed to submissions from the German Naval Group consortium, Australian Transfield Group,[1] and British Shipyards Vosper Thornycroft and Yarrow Shipbuilders.

The German Naval Group consortium was declared the winner and a contract for six vessels was signed by the RMN and PSC-Naval Dockyard on September 5, 1998—a unit cost of 270 million dollar for one vessel.

Progress delay

The shipbuilding has been plagued by financial and technical problems and delays. The first setback occurred when the first hull completed by PSC-Naval Dockyard failed to pass pre-delivery sea trials due to technical problems and quality issues. The crisis continued until the Malaysian government replaced the management team.[2] The programme resumed, but the scandal discouraged the Malaysian Government from further investments.

In June 2006, after a total of 18 months of delays, the Royal Malaysian Navy commissioned KD Kedah, followed by a second hull, KD Pahang in August of the same year, and a third hull, KD Perak on November 12, 2007. By July 2009, six vessels had been launched.

Design

The Kedah class is based on the MEKO 100 patrol vessels. They are designed to have low radar detectability, low noise, low heat dissipation, and have an economical cruising speed. An advanced control system is used to monitor and control the platform machinery of the ships, including propulsion, electrical, damage control, and auxiliary machinery and systems.

Due to the small ship complement, the design relies on a high degree of automation for improved operational effectiveness and survivability of the ships. The design uses intelligent electronics and sensors interconnected by data buses. This enables monitoring and control of machinery from several shipboard locations. The ship has redundant systems to improve survivability.

The modular design of the MEKO allows for the fitting of ships' systems without the actual fixture of armaments and other combat equipment. This concept is known as fitted for but not with and is akin to the concept of “Plug and Play” in modern-day computers. Systems can be added by installing the required modules as the situation warrants, and once installed, the new systems platform can be used without further work on the ships' control systems.

Ships of the class

Pennant Name Laid down Shipyard Launched Commissioned
F171 KD Kedah November 13, 2001 Blohm + Voss March 21, 2003 June 5, 2006
F172 KD Pahang December 21, 2001 HDW October 2, 2003 August 3, 2006
F173 KD Perak March 2002 Boustead Naval Shipyard Sdn Bhd November 12, 2007 June 3, 2009
F174 KD Terengganu August 2004 Boustead Naval Shipyard Sdn Bhd December 6, 2007 December 8, 2009
F175 KD Kelantan July 2005 Boustead Naval Shipyard Sdn Bhd November 24, 2008 May 8, 2010
F176 KD Selangor July 2006 Boustead Naval Shipyard Sdn Bhd July 23, 2009 December 28, 2010

All ships of the class so far named were named after states in Peninsular Malaysia (Kedah, Pahang, Perak, Terengganu, Kelantan, and Selangor). KD Pahang replaces the former KD Sri Pahang, a Vosper Thornycroft-built 30m patrol boat, which has been decommissioned.The ship will be upgrade with missile[3][4]

Similar designs

K130 corvettes (based on the Meko A-100 Design) for the German Navy began building in July 2004. Five are to be built for the German Navy: two by Blohm + Voss, two by Lürssen, and one by Nordseewerke. They were scheduled to enter service between May 2007 and November 2008.

Gallery

See also

References

External links

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