RFA Reliant (A131)
History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name: | RFA Reliant |
Builder: | Gdańsk Shipyard |
Launched: | 6 July 1976 |
Completed: | 20 January 1977 as Astronomer |
Commissioned: | 16 November 1983 as Reliant |
Decommissioned: | 25 July 1986 |
Renamed: | April 1989 as Wealthy River |
Struck: | 1986 |
Fate: | Sold back into merchant service on 27 October 1986 and renamed Admiralty Island. Arrived at Alang for demolition on 9 July 1998 |
General characteristics | |
Displacement: | 28,000 tons full load |
Length: | 204 m (669 ft) |
Beam: | 31 m (102 ft) |
Draught: | 7.9 m (26 ft) |
Propulsion: | 1 x 10 cyl Sulzer diesel, 29,000 bhp. One shaft |
Speed: | 28 knots (52 km/h) |
Complement: |
|
Armament: | 4 x 20 mm guns |
Aircraft carried: | Up to five Westland Sea King |
RFA Reliant (A131) was a helicopter support ship of the Royal Fleet Auxiliary.[1][2][3] She was built in 1977 in Poland, at the Gdańsk Shipyard, as a conventional container ship with roll-on/roll-off capability for loading vehicles and containers. She was named Astronomer. She was taken up from the trade in 1982 for service in the Falklands War as an aircraft transport after being fitted with a temporary mid-ships flight deck and hangar forward. At the end of 1982 she was chartered by the UK MoD and a more substantial conversion was undertaken, and was fitted with the Arapaho containerized aircraft handling system, a hangar and a flight deck and she was commissioned into the RFA Fleet as RFA Reliant III. Her first operational sortie was to the coast of Lebanon in support of the Multinational Force in Lebanon and the British Army units based in Beirut, eventually evacuating the same in February 1984. Upon returning to UK she proceeded to the Falklands for what was expected to be an extended deployment. However, it did not last long as the Arapaho system proved to be completely unsatisfactory for handling aircraft. She was decommissioned in 1986 and sold back into conventional merchant service.
References
- ↑ Marriott,Leo, 'Royal Navy Aircraft Carriers 1945-1990', pages 115-117, ISBN 0-7110-1561-9, Published by Ian Allan Ltd (Surrey, UK), 1985
- ↑ Adams,T.A., Smith,J.R., 'The Royal Fleet Auxiliary - A Century of Service', page 139, ISBN 1-86176-259-3, Jointly Published by Chatham Publishing (London, UK) & Stackpole Books (PA, USA) in association with the RFA Association, 2005
- ↑ James,Tony, 'The Royal Fleet Auxiliary 1905-85', page 128, ISBN 0-907771-21-1, Published by Maritime Books (Cornwall, UK), 1985