HTMS Bhumibol Adulyadej

HTMS Bhumibol Adulyadej (FFG-471) (Thai: เรือหลวงภูมิพลอดุลยเดช), is the lead ship of her class of frigates for the Royal Thai Navy, developed from the Gwanggaeto the Great-class destroyer. The DW-3000F hull is different from the Gwanggaeto the Great-class destroyer, due to the design of the ship having reduced radar cross section, and there are many other additional technologies added.[3]

HTMS Bhumibol Adulyadej (FFG 471)
History
Thailand
NameHTMS Bhumibol Adulyadej
NamesakeKing Bhumibol Adulyadej
Ordered2013
BuilderDaewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering, Busan, South Korea
Cost482 Million USD or 14,997 Million THB
Laid down15 May 2016
Launched23 January 2017
Commissioned7 January 2019
Identification471
StatusIn service
General characteristics
Class and typeBhumibol Adulyadej-class frigate[1]
Displacement3,700 tons full load
Length124.1 m
Beam14.40 m
Draught8 m
Installed power4 × Ship Service Power Generation (Each of 830 kW Rated output) Total output: 3,320 kW
Propulsion
  • 2 × Diesel engine MTU 16V1163 M94 8,000 horsepower, each producing 5,920 kilowatts (7,940 bhp) Total output: 11,840 kW (15,880 bhp)
  • 1 × General Electric LM2500 gas turbine 29,000 horsepower, each producing 25,100 kW (33,600 shp)
Speed33.3 knots (61 km/h; 38 mph)
Endurance4,000 nautical miles at 18 knots (7,408 km at 33 km/h)
Crew141 officers
Sensors and
processing systems
  • 1 × Sea Giraffe 4A AESA long range surveillance radar, Instrumented range: 350 km
  • 1 × Saab SEA GIRAFFE AMB medium range 3D surveillance radar, Instrumented range: 180 km
  • 1 × Wartsila X-band Navigation radar
  • 1 × Wartsila S-band Navigation radar
  • 1 × Tactical Air Navigation System
  • 1 × Surveillance camera
  • 2 × Saab CEROS 200 fire control radar
  • 1 × Saab EOS 500 Electro Optical Fire Control
  • 1 × Atlas ASO DSQS-24 Hull Mounted Sonar
  • 1 × Atlas ELEKTRONIK ACTAS Towed Array Sonar
  • 15 × Saab 9LV Mk4 Multi-Function Consoles
  • 2 × Continuous Wave Illuminators
  • 2 × Target Designation Sight: Bridge Pointer
  • 2 × Identification Friend or Foe
  • 1 × ADS – Broadcast
  • Stealth technology
  • Radar Cross Section Reduction
  • Infrared Reduction
  • Underwater Radiated Noise Reduction
  • Degaussing System
  • NBC Protection System
Electronic warfare
& decoys
  • 1 × Harris ES-3601 Radar-ESM
  • 1 × R&F DDF-255 Communication-ESM
  • 2 x 12 Terma Decoy DL-12T
  • 6 × 4 Terma Decoy Mk.137 Decoy Launchers for Canto-V
  • Active-offboard ECM
  • Mk 234 Nulka anti-ship missile decoy system
  • Naval Group CANTO-V anti-torpedo decoy system
Armament
Aviation facilities1 × S-70B Seahawk or MH-60S Knight hawk

Design

HTMS Bhumibol Adulyadej was constructed in South Korea. It is the first ship of the High-Performance Frigate Boat Project of the Royal Thai Navy. It is able to perform 3D combat operations on both the surface, underwater and air. It was commissioned on January 7, 2019, with the original name as HTMS Tha Chin (Thai: เรือหลวงท่าจีน). Later, with the royal benevolence of His Majesty King Vajiralongkorn, bestowed with the new name HTMS Bhumibol Adulyadej.[4][5]

Design and construction

The ship was developed based on the South Korean Navy Gwanggaeto the Great-class destroyer (KDX-I). The ship was built at Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering Co., Ltd, South Korea, from 2013 to 2018. The hull is designed using Stealth Technology. Both the hull and its systems are focused on reducing detection by opponents. And reduce heat radiation Reduces radar reflection and noise. The naval combat system is linked to the Air Force aircraft Link E, Link RTN, especially the link with HTMS Naresuan (FFG-421), HTMS Taksin (FFG-422) and HTMS Chakri Naruebet (CVH-911) with Link G, the Jas-39 Gripen multirole fighter aircraft is the Air Force's most advanced 4.5 generation fighter. As part of the development of Network Centric Warfare. High-performance frigates Designed hull and structure Support for improvements to be able to fire the RIM-66 Standard MR ground-to-air missile, including a plan to support it. The companies involved in the assembly system include the launch pad, the vertical missile launcher (Mk.41 VLS), the combat system. Fire control radar and target radar (Illuminator) can be improved to support the firing of such launch weapons when the Navy needs it and the budget situation allows.[6]

See also

References

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