RFA Grey Rover (A269)

The RFA Grey Rover around the coast of South Georgia Falkland Islands, October 2005.
Career (UK)
Ordered: January 1968
Builder: Swan Hunter
Yard number: 7
Laid down: 28 February 1968
Launched: 17 April 1969
Commissioned: 10 March 1970
Decommissioned: 24 February 2006
Fate: Sold for scrap
Status: Scrapped
General characteristics
Class and type:Rover class
Displacement:16,160 tonnes[1]
6,822 tonnes deadweight (DWT)
Length:461 ft (140.5 m)
Beam:63 ft (19.2 m)
Draught:24 ft (7.3 m)
Propulsion:2 × SEMT-Pielstick 16 PA 4 diesls
1 × shaft
Bow thruster
15,360 hp (11.5 MW)
Speed:19 knots (35 km/h)
Range:15,000 miles (24,000 km) at 15 knots (28 km/h)
Capacity:3,000 m³ of fuel
Complement:16 officers
31 ratings
Sensors and
processing systems:
Sperry Marine Visionmaster radars and ECDIS. 1690 I band navigation radars
Electronic warfare
and decoys:
2 × Corvus and 2 × Plessey Shield decoy launchers
Graseby Type 182 towed torpedo decoy
Armament:2 × Oerlikon 20 mm guns
2 × 7.62 mm machine guns
Aircraft carried:Helicopter deck but no hangar

RFA Grey Rover (A269) was a Rover class small fleet tanker of the Royal Fleet Auxiliary. She was decommissioned in 2006.

Launch and commissioning

Grey Rover was launched at the Swan Hunter yard, Hebburn on Tyne, on 17 April 1969. The Lady Sponsor was Lady Parker, the wife of Vice Admiral Sir John Parker KBE, CB, DSC who was Flag Officer Medway. She was completed on 10 April 1970 and accepted into service 3-months later than planned. In September 1970, she took over from Black Ranger as FOST tanker.

Operation Corporate

During Operation Corporate (the Falklands War), Grey Rover was the only operational RFA tanker which remained on the home coast. She carried out RAS trials with STUFT ships en route to the Falkland Islands in the SW Approaches to the English Channel whilst herself based at Portland. The smallest vessel worked with was the trawler F/V Farnella and the largest was the liner RMS Queen Elizabeth 2. [2]

Drugs seizure

On 2 February 2006, while supporting the Type 42 destroyer HMS Southampton in the Caribbean as part of Atlantic Patrol Task (North), Grey Rover was involved in the boarding of merchant vessel M/V Rampage and the seizure of 3.5t of cocaine with an estimated street value of £350 million. [3]

Decommissioning

Grey Rover's last refit was 15 June - 27 November 1998 which extended her service life into the 21st century. On 1 November 2004, the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Defence Procurement Lord Bach announced that Grey Rover would have a decommissioning date of 2007. She paid off early on 15 March 2006 and was towed to Canada Dock, Liverpool for scrapping. [4] [5] [6] Her scrapping was recorded in a time-lapse video.[7]

References

  1. http://www.royalnavy.mod.uk/The-Fleet/Royal-Fleet-Auxiliary/Tankers/RFA-Black-Rover
  2. QE2 in the Falklands War
  3. UK ships seize £350m drugs cache
  4. Hansard 1 November 2004
  5. Hansard 12 November 2004
  6. Leavesley International

External links