HMAS Vampire (D11)

HMAS Vampire, HMAS Onslow, and the HM Bark Endeavour replica on display at the Australian National Maritime Museum
History
Australia
BuilderCockatoo Island Dockyard
Laid down1 July 1953
Launched27 October 1956
Commissioned23 June 1959
Decommissioned13 August 1986
ReclassifiedTraining ship (1980)
Motto"Audamus" (Latin: "Let Us Be Daring")[note 1]
Nickname(s)
Honours and
awards
StatusPreserved as museum ship
General characteristics
Class and typeDaring-class destroyer
Displacement
  • 2,800 tons standard
  • 3,560 tons full load
Length388 ft 11.5 in (118.6 m)
Beam42 ft 11.375 in (13.1 m)
Draught12 ft 9 in (3.9 m)
Propulsion2 × Foster Wheeler boilers, English Electric geared turbines, 2 shafts, 54,000 shp (40,000 kW)
SpeedOver 30 knots (56 km/h; 35 mph)
Range3,700 nautical miles (6,900 km; 4,300 mi) at 20 knots (37 km/h; 23 mph)
Complement20 officers, 300 sailors
Sensors and
processing systems
  • Sonar:
  • Type 170 attack
  • Type 174 search
  • Type 185 submarine detection
  • Radar:
  • Flyplane 3 gunfire director (remove 1970–71)
  • MRS 8 gunfire director (remove 1970–71)
  • 2 × M22 gunfire directors (installed 1970–71)
  • LW-02 air search (installed 1970–71)
  • 8gr-301A surface search and navigation
Armament

HMAS Vampire was the third of three Australian-built Daring-class destroyers serving in the Royal Australian Navy (RAN). One of the first all-welded ships built in Australia, she was constructed at Cockatoo Island Dockyard between 1952 and 1959, and was commissioned into the RAN a day after completion.

Vampire was regularly deployed to South East Asia during her career: she was attached to the Far East Strategic Reserve on five occasions, including during the Indonesia-Malaysia Confrontation, and escorted the troop transport HMAS Sydney on six of the latter's twenty-five transport voyages to South Vietnam. In 1977, the destroyer was assigned to escort the royal yacht HMY Britannia during Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip's visit to Australia. In 1980, Vampire was reclassified as a training ship. The warship remained in service until 1986, when she was decommissioned and presented to the Australian National Maritime Museum for preservation as a museum ship; the largest museum-owned object on display in Australia.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference Shaw25 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ Cassells, The Destroyers, p. 150


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