Written by D-Mitch
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Almirante Grau (CLM-81) cruiser of the Peruvian Navy |
There are very few navies in the world today that have cruisers in their inventories. Two of the world's superpowers, as somebody could expected, the USA and Russia, have such warships in their fleets, ships that exceed the 10,000tons displacement and of length greater than 170 meters. The U.S. Navy has the Ticonderoga class (22 ships in active service) while the giant Zumwalt class destroyers, ships that are superior to cruisers, are under construction. Russia has one Kirov class cruiser in active service with another one under re-construction, which are the largest and most heavily armed surface combatant in the world today (thus sometimes they are classified as battlecruisers) and three Slava class cruisers. There are also navies in Asia that have ships that are classified as destroyers despite the fact that they have a displacement over than 10,000tons and they carry a very heavy armament. Such navies are the Japanese Navy with the Atago class and South Korean Navy with the mighty Senjong the Great class that is equipped with 128-cell vertical launching system (!), ships that are equal to cruisers in size (except the length) and armament. However, there is one more country except the "big two" that has also a cruiser in her inventory, a country with an important naval tradition and with a strong fleet. This country is Peru. Peruvian Navy's flagship today is BAP Almirante Grau (CLM-81), the last 6in gun armed cruiser in the world, a cruiser that its main armament consists of.. guns!
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BAP Almirante Grau (CLM-81) the last gun armed cruiser in active service today |
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BAP Almirante Grau |
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The two Dutch cruisers
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BAP Almirante Grau is a modified and modernized cruiser of the De Zeven Provinciën class (also called Eendracht-class) light cruisers. The two ships of the class were built by Rotterdamsche Droogdok Maatschappij (RDM) and Wilton-Fijenoord for the Royal Netherlands Navy (Koninklijke Marine) and they were laid down in 1939. The first was named Kijkduin, later changed to Eendracht, and the second one received the name De Zeven Provinciën. The construction was interrupted by the Nazi invasion of the Netherlands on 10 May 1940. The Germans continued work on De Zeven Provinciën which was more advanced than its twin; it was renamed KH2 and modified by fitting an "Atlantic bow". Work progressed very slowly as the dockyards' capacity was used for other purposes and sabotage by the Dutch resistance affected progress. On 24 December 1944, KH2 was launched for use as a blockship in the Nieuwe Waterweg of Rotterdam but this action was never carried out.
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The Dutch cruiser De Zeven Provinciën in Malta
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The cruiser after its modernization in Peruvian service |
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The cruiser with its original armament
in Peruvian service |
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The two sister-ships in formation |
After the end of World War II,
construction resumed on both ships to a modified design which
incorporated the lessons of the war. Armament consisted of four twin Bofors 152/53 mm guns, four twin Bofors 57/60 mm guns and eight single Bofors 40/70 mm
guns. Names were also changed with Eendracht becoming De Zeven Provinciën and the former De Zeven Provinciën being renamed De Ruyter (C-801). Both ships were finally commissioned by the Royal Netherlands Navy in 1953. Between 1962 and 1964, De Zeven Provinciën (C-802) underwent a refit by RDM which included the removal of the two aft 6in-turrets and the 57mm mounting and the installation of a RIM-2 Terrier SAM system (twin-arm launcher) with the associated fire missile control radars, the magazine for 40 missiles and a 3-D long-range air-search radar. Lack of funds precluded the same modifications from being carried out in De Ruyter, which was decommissioned in 1973. Her sister ship followed in 1976; the cruisers were replaced in Dutch service by the two Tromp-class frigates.
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Almirante Grau cruiser before the modernization |
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Almirante Grau firing its guns. Photo: David Fliesen, USN |
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Ship's bow and armor |
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The armor is visible on the hull |
The ship has a displacement of 12,170tons at full load,
length of 187.3m, beam of 17.2m, maximum speed of 32knots and range
of
6,900n.m. with 15knots speed. The ship as it origins from WWII, has an armor, specifically the belt armor is of 50-76mm while the turrets and the conning tower have 50-125mm armor. Today, the Almirante Grau is the only warship in active service with any armor at all. She has a crew of 650 people.
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Modified photo of Almirante Grau cruiser of the Peruvian Navy. For a high resolution image click here. |
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The front turrets. Photo: Halcon 24 |
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The aft gun turrets. Photo: Halcon 24 |
The main armament consists of eight (8) dual role Bofors 6in (152mm/53cal) guns in four armored twin gun turrets, two at front of the ship and two aft, a classic gun arrangement of WWII cruisers. This gun is currently the largest naval gun still in active service and one of the oldest (designed in 1942). Except the Dutch De Zeven Provincien class these guns equipped the two Swedish cruisers of Tre Kronor class in the past. The rate of fire is 10-15rds/min and the maximum firing range is over 26km for surface targets and 15,250 for aerial targets. Each shell weights 45.8kg.
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View from the front |
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One of the two aft gun turrets. Photo: Halcon 24 |
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Aft gun turrets. Photo: Halcon 24 |
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View from the stern |
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Aft gun turret. Photo: Halcon 24 |
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OTO Melara 40mm gun mounting |
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OTO Melara 40mm automatic gun |
At each side of the superstructure there are two OTO Melara naval mounts with two 40mm/70cal
guns each that perform the role of the close-in weapon systems (CIWS). It may be presumed that these mounts belong to the Compact version with
600rnds/min (2×300rnds/min) and not to newer variants such as the Fast Forty. The maximum horizontal range is about 12,500m, the
range for AA targets is greater than 8km while the effective firing
range of the system is 4km.
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40mm single gun mountings |
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Two of the four 40mm single guns.
Photo: Halcon 24 |
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40mm gun mounting |
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40mm single gun mountings and salute guns |
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The cruiser's starboard |
The cruiser also is equipped with four (4) Bofors 40mm/70cal guns fitted on Type 564 naval mountings. These guns have a rate of fire approximately 240rds/min.
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Otomat/Teseo launchers (twin?) |
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The older Otomat SSM launchers |
As it was mentioned already in the introduction, the ship carries eight (8) MBDA Otomat/Teseo Mk2A
block I/II guided anti-ship missiles in eight single launchers located amidships. The missile
has a range of up to 180km, a high
subsonic speed Mach 0.9 and carries a warhead of 210kg capable piercing
up to 80mm of steel. The warhead is designed to explode inside the ship
with the force of the explosion directed to the bottom of the target
ship. Capable of ranges from 6-180km in all directions, the system
relies on powerful mission planning (3-D way-points, terminal sea
skimming profile, simultaneous attack from different directions). Target
data is derived from the ship's Command System or taken directly from
the ship's surface search radar. Mission Planning allows the selection
of different firing modes (such as Fire and Forget or midcourse guided)
and of specific trajectories and evasive manoeuvres. Cruise and approach
phases may be either fully inertial or partially guided from the launch
ship through a radio-link. Mid course re-vectoring from a co-operating
ship or helicopter is also possible. The excellent capabilities of the
missile (short reaction time, Fire and Forget, INS/GPS navigation, high
target selection, ECCM and anti-CIWS manoeuvres, warhead lethality with
no collateral damage) allow the system to operate effectively in
littoral warfare environments, as well as in blue waters. The terminal
attack phase is based upon an autonomous terminal guidance using an
active homing head with improved target selection capabilities in
complex scenarios. It should be mentioned that Otomat surface-to-surface missile (SSM) is one of the most
powerful of all modern western anti-ship missiles having a mid course
data-link and land attack capability.
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The configuration of the armament and sensors |
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Notice the two saluting guns atop the 40mm gun mounts |
In addition to the guns and missiles, the ship has two stern depth charge racks. According to some sources, the soft-kill weapons include two Matra Défense Dagaie decoy launchers and one Matra Défense Sagaie decoy launcher (though I could not located their position).
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One of the two depth charge racks. Photo: Halcon 24 |
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From top to bottom: WM25, LIROD, TDS |
The cruiser is equipped with a Thales (former Signaal) WM25 combined surface search and fire control radar. The WM is a family of multi-channel Fire-Control Systems (FCS) designed for
gun, torpedo and missile systems using a combined radar antenna
system. It may be used as a primary fire-control system in small
warships (fast attack craft and above) while on larger warships it may
be a dedicated subsystem supporting the command and weapon control
system. It is designed to provide continuous air and surface warning,
navigation aid, combat information, target designation and weapon
control. This Combined Antenna System (CAS) may also be used as a
stand-alone command and weapon control system sometimes supplemented by
the combat management system of the ship. Each member of the WM family
is dedicated to a specific weapon fit and the majority are designed to
engage both air and surface targets. The exceptions are the WM24 which
has an additional ASW role, and the WM26 which is only for engaging
surface targets. The mini combat system is a fast reacting system,
including certain data handling facilities which are of great importance
during operations in a multi-target environment. Its high-quality
radar, provided with ECCM features, guarantees target detection and
engagement at maximum weapon range.
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Excellent photo of the foremast |
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The gangway of Almirante Grau cruiser. Photo: Halcon 24 |
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Almirante Grau. Photo: Marina de Guerra del Peru |
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LW-08 behind DA-08 |
The Thales LW08 is a 2-D radar system that equips the cruiser, a radar that performs the long-range air surveillance in D-band
(L-band), providing target indication to weapon control systems. This radar is fitted on the main mast. LW08
presents a clear picture of the environment; it does so, reliably, under
any circumstances. LW08 performs with great frequency agility over a
wide band, due to its synthesizer-driven TWT transmitter. Excellent
performance under various clutter conditions is ensured by the wide
dynamic range receiver with application of digital video processing,
supported by circular polarization. The LW08 antenna has a low side-lobe
level, which assists the system in operating under ECM conditions. The
radar can detect a small missile from 100km or a fighter aircraft from
230km flying with Mach 4 while the tracking capacity is 400 tracks.
Minimum range is 2km. It seems that the LW08 radar has been replaced with another system which I cannot identify, for sure it doesn't have Dutch or Italian origin, perhaps it's locally designed. Any help would be really appreciated!
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Photo of 2007 shows the main radars of the ship; DA08 (left) and a new radar
that has replaced the LW08 (right). Mod. photo: Piet Sinke |
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The DA08 radar and below the WM25.
Mod. photo: Marina de Guerra del Peru |
The Thales DA-08 2-D radar is a coherent E/F-band (S-band) radar for medium range surveillance,
providing target indication to weapon control systems. This radar derives from the LW-08. DA 08 is located on the foremast and it presents a clear
picture of the environment; it does so, reliably, under any
circumstances with accuracy; and it does it without adding great weight to the
superstructure of the ship due to its lightweight
construction and hydraulically controlled stabilization platform.
Excellent performance under various clutter conditions is ensured by the
wide dynamic range receiver with application of digital video
processing, supported by circular polarization. The DA-08 antenna has a low side-lobe level, which assists the system in
operating under ECM conditions. Claimed range on a 2m² target is 78-92n.m. and minimum range is 0.8n.m.
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Photo: Alexia M. Riveracorrea, USN |
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Photo: Captain Ted |
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Thales STIR 2.4 (top) and LIROD-8 |
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View of the cruiser |
The cruiser Almirante Grau is equipped with one Thales STIR 2.4
long-range radar tracking and missile illumination
system (2.4m antenna). STIR 2.4's long
range tracking and missile illumination performance support ship and
area defense. Their design is optimized for stealth target
detection in demanding littoral and ECM environments. STIRs are highly
capable medium-to-long range tracking and illumination dual-band (I/K)
radar systems. A full set of electro-optic equipment (TV/IR/laser)
complements the system for optimal performance in demanding
environments, The system has been designed primarily to control point
and area defence missile systems such as NATO Sea Sparrow, ESSM, Aster
and Standard Missiles. A secondary application is the direct control of
various caliber guns. The extreme stable front end results in excellent
detection of small targets in sea and land clutter environments. The
high dynamic range of the low noise receivers in combination with
advanced coherent Doppler processing ensure the detection of stealth
targets in heavy clutter. The instrumental range for the STIR 2.4
HP (High Power) exceeds the 500km (effective range for 1m² target is
about 150km for the HP version).
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Overhead view of Almirante Grau. Photo: Fuerza Militar Peru |
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The aft LIROD below the STIR 2.4 |
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SATCOM |
The warship has two Decca 1226C navigation radars (fitted on the main mast) and two Thales LIROD-8 electro-optical targeting and acquisition sensor systems.
LIROD is a smaller version of LIOD in which a K-band tracking radar replaces the IR sensor. In LIROD-8, the radar is the K-band monopulse tracker used in Goalkeeper CIWS. LIROD-8 is for automatic optronic tracking of air targets, for surface
targets and against asymmetric tactics such as piracy and insurgency.
It can be used as a tracking channel for the WM25 fire control system. The basic sensor set consists of TV and IR cameras in combination with
an eye-safe laser range-finder. It is a passive sensor, which are
difficult to detect and completely insensitive to ECM.
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Almirante Grau. Photo: Piet Sinke |
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Almirante Grau. Photo: Piet Sinke |
The electronic sensors of the cruiser complete two Thales Target Designation Sights (TDS)
that provides means for optical investigation, target designation and
weapon firing. The TDS systems are located in front of the LIROD sensors. The TDS is equipped with binoculars and the latest
version includes a Laser Range Finder. Bearing and elevation data are
fed into the CMS system but the TDS can also be used for emergency
control of a gun or CIWS system. The importance of the function of the
TDS is re-emphasized against asymmetric tactics such as piracy and
insurgency.
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"Power and Glory", the ship's motto below the SATCOM. Photo: Halcon 24 |
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Almirante Grau's retirement |
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RAMSES's radomes |
The electronic warfare system of the class is the Signaal's I/J-band Reprogrammable Advanced Multimode Shipborne ECM System (RAMSES) or else SLQ-02. The system uses a vertical pair of egg-shaped radomes on each side of the main mast below the DA08 radar. Each EW radome carries an identical Luneberg lens antenna; one of each pair tracks the threat the other jams. The tracking and jamming antennas are well separated so there is no need to pause for look-through while jamming. Each pair operates independently so two targets (one on each side) can be jammed simultaneously. The ship's combat management system is the Signaal SEWACO Foresee PE. The Peruvian Navy has not announced yet the day when the cruiser will be decommissioned.
UPDATE: The ships was decommissioned on September 26th of 2017, after 44 years in service with the Navy of Peru!
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Nice view of the cruiser Almirante Grau. Photo: Precidencia Peru |
Bibliography:
FELICITACIONES AMIGO.
ReplyDeleteCUàL ES TU NACIONALIDAD?
ESTOY SORPRENDIDO POR TU TRABAJO DE INVESTIGACIòN.
GRACIAS.
I am sorry, I am not speaking Spanish. I translated your words though. Thank you very much for your nice comment, I really appreciate it. I think you can easily guess my nationality, from the Photo Galleries and the visiting ships ;-)
DeleteCheers,
D.
Do you know what happen with this ship?..I believe is too big and old for modern navy warfare.
DeleteIt is indeed a vintage large ship but is equipped with modern electronics. It can be useful certainly in naval gunfire support, command station for amphibious operations, show the flag, ceremonial occasions etc. The absence of modern CIWS (and more capable than the two OTO 40mm) and SAM launcher in combination with the huge silhouette of the ship, is a limiting fact for high-intensity operations.
DeleteI would like to join JulioCesar in his congratulations for an excellent review. The question that is causing some concern now is wether to upgrade this ship or acquiere a smaller and newer destroyer with the same cappabilities.
ReplyDeleteThank you a lot!
DeleteIt is a good question. The think is that the Dutch had upgraded much earlier (1988) the ship with many modern sensors while Peruvians upgraded the ship some years later after purchasing it with only missiles and the two OTO Melara 40mm mountings. This ship has served for many many years, her design is old, her systems are old as well (propulsion, main guns), she looks more like a huge target to me in a hostile environment (the mountings cannot cover the ship completely) plus that the ship cannot accommodate helicopter. So, no, this ship cannot serve more years.
For a Latin country this is was a common practice once, huge warships to show the flag, a symbol of power, but today is more like a symbol of the glorious past. I doubt that Peru will replace the ship with a modern destroyer, few countries today acquire such ships, more probably a new multi-mission frigate (if..).
Regards,
D.
The radar antenna that replaced the long-range LW-08 is almost certainly an old (1960's vintage) medium range Plessey AWS-1, probably taken from a retired destroyer. It is a definite downgrade from the LW-08, the only explanation being some sort of insurmountable technical problem with the Dutch radar requiring it's removal.
ReplyDeleteIt isn't an AWS-1. Certainly not. Look the differences in this photo where on the second mast (main mast) it is mounted the new radar http://i.imgur.com/SEcnYMI.jpg. it is completely different.
DeleteGood morning i really appreciated the post and i love it, Thanks for this, cause I'm Peruvian. Can i use your post for fb and a foro for a game about warships.
ReplyDeleteI ma glad you liked it! You can use the post but please not the entire article, a summary of it, main points or parts of it. You will respect my work if you do so.
DeleteD.
Thanks for the great article. I hope that, when they finally do retire the ship, that she'll be preserved as a museum ship.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome! It would be great indeed. Let's hope for that!
DeleteHow does one find out what happened to the ship after it was decommissioned? I am Peruvian and traveling there with my kids in July. My son (all of us!) would love to see it.
ReplyDelete