As Promised, the second and final installment.
Withdrawal and War
The ships continued their rotational South Atlantic deployments until budget cuts and issues maintaining the FIDF portion of the mixed crews saw the class withdrawn in turn as refit and dry-docking became due, their lack of a credible air defense capability also meaning that their unescorted presence on active duty, far from home was now less than ideal. Guardian herself was the last to fly her decommissioning pennant, returning from her final patrol in late 1981. All three ships thence re-entered familiar territory on the reserve fleet buoys at Portsmouth awaiting sale or scrap, until news of the Argentinian invasion of the Falklands and South Georgia froze all further rationalization of the navy. Whilst their lack of commonality with other fleet units militated against their reactivation, the conflict in their former home territory did lend the class a stay of execution till a more rational assessment could be made post-war.
Third Time’s a Charm
Following Britain’s successful liberation of the Falkland’s the necessity to once again provide a forthright and continual presence in the South Atlantic loomed as a problem for the stretched and budget pressured Royal Navy. HMS Endurance was reactivated and along with the increased presence on the Falkland’s brought about by the construction of RAF Mount Pleasant, RN fleet units were again stationed south to conduct sovereignty patrols and to deter any further Argentine aggression. Following the successful campaign by the islanders for recognition of autonomy and entry into the Commonwealth as a peer territory, The newly reborn Falklands Defense Force began to seek a means by which it could begin to share and eventually take over the naval sovereignty mission from the Royal Navy. The Answer; the Guardians!! But in order to fulfill this role effectively in the 80’s and 90’s, these 30+ year-old vessels with obsolete weapons and systems would need some serious TLC. Incorporating lessons from the Conflict and systems proven in contemporary RN vessels, Guardian and Gauntlet were comprehensively refitted by Cammell Laird at Birkenhead, emerging from dry-dock as completely different ships. Seawolf missile launchers replaced B and X turrets, and a raised helipad and retractable hanger were constructed at the stern in place of the ASW mortars, enabling the embarkation of lynx and SeaKing helicopters. Towed array sonar (as fitted to the type 22 frigates) was also included on the quarterdeck below the helipad. Air search and targeting radars along with fire direction systems, comms and habitability upgrades were also performed. Grenadier was not refitted and instead donated parts to her more fortunate sisters before being sunk as a target in 1984. A radically different FDS Guardian re-commissioned into the newly minted Falklands Defense Service – Navy in June 1985, three years to the day since the surrender of Argentine Forces. Gauntlet followed in early December, continuing in service and occasionally straying from home waters to participate in exercises or ‘show the flag’ until both were decommissioned in 1999. They were replaced in FDS service by the two members of the Commander Class (FFG), complemented by the Liberator Class OPVs and other fleet units of the growing FDS-N. FDS Guardian is maintained in Port Stanley as a muesum and war memorial.
Daring Class Destroyers (1959 – 1990)
FDS Guardian (D02); FDS Gauntlet (D03); FDS Grenadier (D04)
Built: 1949-1959
In Commission: 1959-1999
Number in Class: 3
Type: Destroyer (DD/G)
Displacement: Std: 2,830 tons, Full Load: 3820 tons
Length: 390ft (120m)
Beam: 43ft (13m)
Draft: 12.75ft (3.89m)
Propulsion: CODAG System;
2 x 2 Rolls-Royce Spey SM1A boost gas turbines (37,540 shp / 28 MW)
2 x 2 Rolls-Royce Tyne RM3C cruise gas turbines (9,700 shp/ 7.2 MW)
Speed: 30kts (56kph full)
18kts (33.3kph cruise)
Range: 7,500 nautical miles (14,000 km) at 15 kn (28 km/h)
Crew: 250 + up to 30 overload/embarked forces
Aviation: 1-2 Westland Lynx, or
1 x Westland SeaKing
Surface Action: 1 x QF 4.5”/45 (113mm) MkV Guns in 1 twin mount – UD Mk VI
2 × 30mm DS30M automated guns
2 × Miniguns
4 × General-purpose machine guns
Helo-mounted armament;
Hellfire air-to-surface missile
Excocet anti-ship missile
Air Action: 2 x SeaWolf anti-air missile launchers
Sub-surface action: 2 x STWS Mk.2 triple torpedo launcher with Stingray ASW torpedos
Helo-mounted armament;
Stingray torpedoes
Mk11 depth charges
Countermeasures: 4 x Marconi Sea Gnat 6-barrelled launchers
Graseby Type 182 towed torpedo decoy
ESM/ECM: MEL UAA-1 intercept + BAe AN/SSQ-108(V) Outboard tactical intercept and direction finding system
2 x Type 670 jammers (replaced by Type 675(2))
Sensors and Navigation: Type 1022 long range search and illumination radar
Kelvin Hughes Type 1006 navigation radar
BAe GSA 8 Sea Archer optronic director
2 x Marconi Type 911 directors (SeaWolf)
Ferranti Type 2050 search Sonar
Dowty Type 2031 VLF towed Sonar
And there you have it. Please give comment where you feel it's due - any and all helpful suggestions are weclome.
Cheers
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